Christine Lagarde, speaking at a news conference to kick off an IMF/World Bank meeting of global financial leaders, told the US to "get its fiscal house in order," a reference to the deadlock over passing spending and debt limit bills.
She said the global economy is in a slow and unbalanced recovery and urged Europe to clean up its banking problems and forge ahead with a banking union.
The US political deadlock has so far dominated the discussion at the Washington meetings. The big concern is that if it goes on for much longer, it could derail a fragile global economic recovery.
This is especially worrying at a time when the IMF and other economic experts are counting on a strengthening US economy to help carry a still-fragile global economic recovery.
The mounting worries about the US mark a shift for the Washington-based IMF. After years fretting about the deep economic crisis in Europe, the focus of most concern is now in the backyard.
