Christine Lagarde Insists She Is 'Not A Candidate' For European Commission President

IMF Chief Lagarde Says Non To Top EU Post
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Christine Lagarde, head of the International Monetary Fund, has insisted that she is 'not a candidate" to be next president of the European Commission, as concerns mount that ex-prime minister of Luxembourg Jean-Claude Juncker could get the job.

Juncker's prospective appointment has reportedly provoked David Cameron to starkly warn that it could lead to the UK leaving the European Union due the resulting instability that it would cause.

Tory MP Brooks Newmark, member of the Treasury select committee, told the Huffington Post UK: "Two years of Juncker as EU chief will be the best asset the Eurosceptics could possibly have in the run up to the referendum in 2017."

Lagarde has been raised by some as a prospective possible alternative to Juncker, however the IMF chief today poured cold water on any expectations, insisting: "I am not a candidate as I have a job, which is rather important."

For good measure, she added: "I have a job and I intend to finish it."

Pressed on if she would accept the European Commission post if persuaded by others, Lagarde refused to be drawn, telling reporters: "You're not going to extract anything else out of me because I think that is a very clear position on my part."

Lagarde's remarks come as she was in London to mark the publication of the IMF's latest assessment of the state of the UK economy, praising it for the "pretty much all good" economic figures.

However, she zeroed in on the UK's "subdued" rate of exporting as a cause for concern, saying: "The export cylinder is one that could fire a little more strongly."

The IMF expressed alarm at the pace of house price growth in the UK, warning: "House price inflation is particularly high in London, and is becoming more widespread. So far, there are few of the typical signs of a credit-led bubble."

"Nonetheless, a steady increase in the size of new mortgages compared with borrower incomes suggests that households are gradually becoming more vulnerable to income and interest rate shocks."

Chancellor George Osborne said earlier today he accepted the IMF's concern, saying that the Bank of England "should not hesitate" to take action to rein in the housing market if it poses a risk to the recovery.

He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "We need to be alert to the build-up of debt in the housing market, we need to be alert when we see house prices rising."

Osborne pointed out that the Bank's Financial Policy Committee to monitor and react to signs of the housing market overheating.

"We have created - this Government, me as Chancellor - the mechanism to deal with that," he said. "We have given the Bank of England the tools to do the job and they should not hesitate to use those tools if they see these developments turning into a risk for the British economy."

He added: "I have a very strong view. We need to keep a close eye on these developments and as and when we think they are a risk to our economy we should act, and I have created the mechanism to do that."

11 Reasons The Bank Of England May Be Ignoring A Housing Bubble
And even world snooker champions...(01 of10)
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Ronnie O'Sullivan says a huge housing bubble (and crash) will happen.Or in his words: "Baby it's coming."
Central London house prices are rising £729 per day(02 of10)
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The average price for a three-bedroom house in central London has increased by £729 a day over the last year, equivalent to a quarter of a million pounds, estate agency Marsh & Parsons said.The estate agent firm said the scale of house price inflation meant that prices rose by 19% since April 2013 to an average of £1.6 million, equivalent to £5,120 a week, or eight times Londoners' £658-a-week median salary.
Single people can't seem to afford to own a property (03 of10)
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Less than one in ten properties in many parts of the UK are affordable to single house-buyers, according to the homeless charity Shelter. Meanwhile, three central London areas are completely unaffordable for couples with children or single people living on average wages: Kensington and Chelsea, Westminster and Camden
This garage was sold for £251,000(04 of10)
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And this tiny Chelsea lawn went for over 80 grand(05 of10)
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This tiny lawn in Chelsea sold this month for £84,000, and it doesn't have planning permission or right of way.
This garden looks a bargain by comparison(06 of10)
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It sold for £53,000 last September - and you can't do anything on it at all
You'll only need save for 30 years to buy a home...(07 of10)
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So says independent research commissioned by Shelter .That boy has already started on his first house...
You might as well move here(08 of10)
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Other Bank of England chiefs are worried...(09 of10)
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Sir Jon Cunliffe, the Bank's deputy governor for financial stability, has warned that it would be "dangerous to ignore the momentum that has built up in the UK housing market."He also said that the housing market was the "brightest light" blinking on the dashboard of financial hazards that the Bank monitors.
Broadbent himself admits he may be wrong(10 of10)
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While arguing that Britain is not showing signs of a housing bubble, Broadbent admitted that it may be easier to spot with hindsight. “Bubbles are things that are things that are far easier to identify after the event than at the time," Broadbent told Radio 4's Today programme. (credit:Reuters )