Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - INTERNATIONAL BUREAUS, CONGRESSES, ETC. › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XV— - INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND AND BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT › § 286e–2
The Secretary of the Treasury may make loans to the International Monetary Fund under Article VII, section 1(i). The law allows loans up to 6,712,000,000 Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) for one purpose, up to the dollar equivalent of 75,000,000,000 SDRs for an expanded New Arrangements to Borrow (NAB), and up to the dollar equivalent of 28,202,470,000 SDRs for another one-time NAB expansion. Loans can only be made with money Congress provides up front. Before any loan is activated, the Secretary must tell Congress that extra resources are needed to prevent or deal with a serious problem in the international monetary system and that the IMF has looked for other funding. Loans must consider the United States’ balance of payments and reserve position. Repayments by the IMF can be reused for new loans unless Congress cancels them. Interest and charges paid to the United States go into the Treasury. The Secretary must consult and report to Congress before agreeing to changes to the NAB and must provide extra certifications before activation. One required certification is that the IMF’s one-year forward commitment capacity (excluding borrowed resources) is expected to fall below 100,000,000,000 SDRs during NAB activation and that activating the NAB is in the United States’ strategic economic interest. The loan authority would have expired five years after December 16, 2009 unless the Secretary certified 60 days before that date (or 60 days before NAB renewal) that certain protections are met; the Secretary must consult the committees 15 days before that certification. The authority also expires on December 31, 2030. “Appropriate congressional committees” means the Senate Committees on Appropriations and Foreign Relations and the House Committees on Appropriations and Financial Services.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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22 U.S.C. § 286e–2
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73