Difference between revisions of "International Monetary Fund" - New World Encyclopedia

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The '''International Monetary Fund''' ('''IMF''') is a global membership organization founded in 1944 that attempts to insure a stable worldwide financial system by fostering cooperation among its 185 members regarding exchange rates and other monetary issues; facilitating international payments and transfers; reducing the payment imbalances of its members; and providing loans. It also seeks what it terms a balanced growth of international trade, which it maintains will lead to increased employment, income, and production within member countries. Founded under the leadership of [[Harry Dexter White]] of the United States and [[John Maynard Keynes]] of the [[United Kingdom]], it is headquartered in [[Washington, D.C.]], [[United States of America|USA]].
{{Infobox central bank
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{{toc}}
| bank_name = [[image:International Monetary Fund logo.svg|105px]]
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The IMF has often been the subject of criticism from those nations seeking its help for the nature of its austerity requirements for nations receiving IMF support, especially in Latin America during the 1980s. The resolution of the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, while no less painful than those of Latin America in the 1980s, resulting in a much quicker turn around.
| bank_name_in_local = International Monetary Fund
 
| image_1 = IMF.png
 
| image_title_1 = IMF member states
 
| headquarters = [[Washington, D.C.]], [[United States|USA]]
 
| president      = [[Rodrigo Rato]]
 
| leader_title  = [[Chairman]]
 
| bank_of =
 
| currency =
 
| currency_iso =
 
| borrowing_rate = 5.50%
 
| deposit_rate =
 
| website = [http://www.imf.org www.imf.org]
 
| footnotes =
 
| succeeded =
 
}}
 
The '''International Monetary Fund''' ('''IMF''') is an [[international organization]] that oversees the [[global financial system]] by observing [[exchange rate]]s and [[balance of payments]], as well as offering financial and technical assistance. Its headquarters are located in [[Washington, D.C.]], [[United States|USA]].
 
  
== Organization and purpose ==
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==After the War==
[[Image:IMF HQ.jpg|thumb|280px|Headquarter in [[Washington D.C.]]]]
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As [[World War II]] drew to a close, the economies of numerous nations were in disarray, owing not only to the inherent devastation of the war itself, but to years of competitive [[currency devaluation]] that many economists felt contributed to the worldwide [[Great Depression]] of the 1930s.<ref>The Role and Function of the International Monetary Fund, 1985 IMF, Washington, D.C., 1.</ref> At the time, to encourage consumer purchases of domestically produced goods, and limit purchases of foreign imports, a nation would officially lower the exchange rate of its currency against those of other nations, making imports more expensive to its consumers. While this often helped to strengthen the domestic manufacturing sector, it also stoked [[inflation]], and more seriously weakened the economies of other countries, by tightening access to their foreign markets. In international parlance, it was termed a "beggar my neighbor" (or "beggar thy neighbor") approach.<ref>[http://www.economicshelp.org/dictionary/b/beggar-my-neighbour.html Beggar My Neighbour Policy]. Retrieved February 10, 2009</ref> Inevitably, these other countries counteracted by devaluing their own currencies, which led to a spiral of international protectionism, inflation, and global economic decline.
  
The IMF describes itself as "an organization of 185 countries, [[Montenegro]] being the 185th, as of January 18 2007, working to foster global monetary cooperation, secure financial stability, facilitate international trade, promote high employment and sustainable economic growth, and reduce poverty". With the exception of  [[North Korea]], [[Cuba]], [[Andorra]], [[Monaco]], [[Liechtenstein]], [[Tuvalu]], and [[Nauru]], all [[UN member states]] participate directly in the IMF. Some are represented by other member states on a 24-member Executive Board but all member countries are members of the IMF's Board of Governors {{Fact|date=February 2007}}. [[Vatican City]], the [[Republic of China]] (Taiwan), the [[Palestinian Authority]] and the [[Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic]] (Western Sahara) are the non-UN member entities not participating in the IMF, although the Palestinian Authority currently receives IMF technical assistance.
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To bring some order to this essentially chaotic situation, the [[United States]], along with several economically advanced nations, felt the need to supervise, if not directly regulate, the system of international currency exchange.<ref>The Role and Function, 1.</ref>
  
=== History ===
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==Early Years: Official Goals and Policies==
In the [[Great Depression]] of the 1930s, economic activity in the major industrial nations slumped. [[David Ricardo|Ricardian]] [[comparative advantage]] states that all countries gain from trade without restrictions.  It is noteworthy to mention that, although the "size of the pie" is enhanced according to this theory of free trade, improving all industries, when distributional concerns are taken into account, there are always industries that lose out even as others benefit in any given country.  World trade declined sharply, as did [[employment]] and [[living standards]] in many countries.
 
  
As [[World War II]] came to a close, the leading allied countries considered various plans to restore order to international monetary relations, and at the [[Bretton Woods Conference|Bretton Woods conference]] the IMF emerged. The founding members drafted a charter (or Articles of Agreement) of an international institution to oversee the international monetary system and to promote both the elimination of exchange restrictions relating to trade in goods and services, and the stability of exchange rates.
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[[Image:IMF HQ.jpg|thumb|left|Headquarters in [[Washington D.C.]]]]
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Planned during a [[United Nations]] conference of 45 nations in July 1944 (convened in [[Bretton Woods]], New Hampshire), the International Monetary Fund (often referred to as IMF or the Fund) set for itself six international goals. They included promoting international monetary cooperation; facilitating a balanced approach to global trade; promoting foreign exchange stability; helping to establish a multilateral system of payments and transfers; providing resources to its more needy members; and reducing "the magnitude of payment imbalances."<ref>"The IMF at a Glance," Fact Sheet September 2008.</ref>
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It would finance these aims in part by requiring members to contribute funds that could be borrowed by those experiencing a [[balance of payments]] deficit.<ref>Reem Heakal, [http://www.investopedia.com/articles/03/060403.asp "What is the Balance of Paymens?"], Investopedia, Retrieved February 10, 2009; (The balance of payments is the "method countries use to monitor all international monetary transactions at a specific period of time....All trades conducted by both the private and public sectors are accounted for in the BOP in order to determine how much money is going in and out of a country." Receiving money is a credit, and paying money is a debit).</ref> The amount of each country's contribution was (and remains) determined by a quota, largely reflecting the size of the country's domestic economy relative to others. The quota also limits the amount of reserve assets the country can draw down, and determines the weight of its vote. Thus, unlike the [[United Nations General Assembly]], voting rights are not based on a one-country/one-vote system, but on the economic and therefore political strength of the participating nations.
  
The IMF came into existence in December 27, 1945, when the first 29 countries signed its Articles of Agreement. The statutory purposes of the IMF today are the same as when they were formulated in 1944 (''see Box 2'').
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Also, and equally important, the Fund sought to replace the ad hoc system of exchange rates with a system under which any currency would be convertible to the [[U.S. dollar]], based on an established or fixed ratio. Each country had to establish a [[par value]]—a parity relationship—of their currencies to the dollar. In turn, the dollar's value was based on its relationship to gold, which was fixed at $35 per ounce.
  
=== Today === 
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Further, members were required to maintain the market rate of their currencies to within 1 percent of this par value. The aim was to insure that payment for goods and services "would take place freely and that all balances arising out of these transactions would be convertible into other countries [for use in] further current transactions."<ref>Role and Function, 5</ref>
From the end of [[World War II]] until the late-1970s, the capitalist world experienced unprecedented growth in [[real income]]s. (Since then, the integration of [[People's Republic of China|China]] and Eastern and Central [[Europe]] into the capitalist system has added substantially to the growth of the system.) Within the capitalist system, the benefits of growth have not flowed equally to all (either within or among nations) but overall there has been an increase in prosperity that contrasts starkly with the conditions within capitalist countries during the interwar period. The lack of a recurring global depression is probably due to improvements in the conduct of international economic policies that have encouraged the growth of international trade and helped smooth the economic cycle of boom and bust. 
 
   
 
In the decades since World War II, apart from rising prosperity, the world economy and monetary system have undergone other major changes that have increased the importance and relevance of the purposes served by the IMF, but that has also required the IMF to adapt and reform. Rapid advances in technology and communications have contributed to the increasing international integration of markets and to closer linkages among national economies. As a result, financial crises, when they erupt, now tend to spread more rapidly among countries. 
 
  
The IMF's influence in the global economy steadily increased as it accumulated more members. The number of IMF member countries has more than quadrupled from the 44 states involved in its establishment, reflecting in particular the attainment of political independence by many developing countries and more recently the collapse of the Soviet bloc. The expansion of the IMF's membership, together with the changes in the world economy, have required the IMF to adapt in a variety of ways to continue serving its purposes effectively.''
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These official goals were a notable departure from established procedure, marking the first time that nation-states agreed specifically to engage directly in supervising international exchange. According to one scholarly review, at the time "international monetary relations were not considered the province of national governments. Rarely did any entity intervene in foreign exchange markets, and when one did, it was nongovernmental banks such as the [[House of Morgan]] or the still private [[Bank of England]]. There were several attempts at monetary cooperation and collaboration among international private bankers during the late nineteenth century, but it was sporadic....[T]he notion of a permanent international bank to guide global efforts to increase living standards and eliminate global poverty was truly remarkable."<ref>The Encyclopedia of American Foreign Policy, [http://www.americanforeignrelations.com/E-N/International-Monetary-Fund-and-World-Bank.html International Monetary and World Bank], Retrieved February 11, 2009.</ref>
  
During April 2007 [[Ecuador]] announced its intention to withdraw from the IMF, followed by [[Venezuela]] which made this step public on [[April 30, 2007]]. As of June 2007, both countries have continued their membership status.
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The IMF was formally organized on December 27, 1945, when the first 29 countries signed its Articles of Agreement.
  
==Data Dissemination Systems==
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===Initial Impact===
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Notwithstanding its innovative nature, the Fund was not very successful in meeting its goals during its early years. Although it sought to eliminate or largely curtail the practice of multiple exchange rates, "multiple currency practices actually increased among the Fund's membership."<ref> Margaret Garrison deVries,"The IMF in a Changing World: 1945-1985," (Washington, D.C.: IMF, 1986), 24.</ref> Further, provision of financial resources to members was minimal, in large part because the United States' [[Marshall Plan]] was already providing European countries with the resources they needed to resuscitate their economies. Thus, as one official recounting noted, "The impact of the Fund on the policies and its role in providing financial assistance were limited during the late 1940s and the first half of the 1950s."<ref> The Role and Function, Page 5</ref>
  
[[Image:IMF DDS.png|thumb|right|400px|IMF Data Dissemination Systems participants:  {{legend|#ff7f40|IMF member using SDDS}} {{legend|#ff00ff|IMF member, using GDDS}} {{legend|#007f00|IMF member, not using any of the DDSystems}} {{legend|#ffff00|non-IMF entity using SDDS}} {{legend|#ff0000|non-IMF entity using GDDS}} {{legend|#c0c0c0|no interaction with the IMF}}]]
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===SDRs and the Expansion of the Fund===
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But by the late 1950s and early 1960s, drawings from the Fund began to rise. Examples were huge drawings by the [[United Kingdom]] and [[France]] during the [[1956 Suez Crisis]], with both nations experiencing serious losses of revenue when the Suez canal was nationalized by [[Egypt]].<ref> DeVries 1986, 68</ref> At around the same time, concern grew among IMF members that the global supply of official reserve assets—gold, U.S. dollars and other strong currencies—was insufficient to meet the growing demand, fed by a robust volume of international trade. Thus, in July, 1969, the Fund decided to create its own reserve asset, which it refers to as Special Drawing Rights, or SDRs. While not technically a currency, SDRs function to some extent as a currency by allowing nations to temporarily exchange their domestic currencies for them. Later, when the economies and reserves of these borrowing countries improve, they can re-exchange the SDRs they hold for other currencies, which facilitates the goal of international [[currency liquidity]]–a goal newly created by the IMF.<ref> "Special Drawing Rights (SDRs)," International Monetary Fund, "Factsheet," September 2008.</ref> Initially, the value of the SDR was equivalent to nearly 0.89 grams of fine gold, the same rate as the U.S. dollar. (After 1974, the value of the SDR was set on the basis of a basket of currencies, with each currency assigned a weight in accordance with its market value relative to the dollar. Currencies and weights are revised every five years.)<ref> "IMF Yearbook 2008: International Financial Statistics," (Washington, D.C.: IMF) </ref>
  
In 1995, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) began work on data dissemination standards with the view of guiding IMF member countries to disseminate their economic and financial data to the public. The International Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC) endorsed the guidelines for the dissemination standards and they were split into two tiers:  The General Data Dissemination System (GDDS) and the Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS).
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As the extent of drawings grew, so did the IMF's membership (and staff), which in turn led to even more drawings. In 1968 and 1969, drawings amounted to the equivalent of $3.5 billion and $2.5 billion respectively, "the largest annual amounts since the Fund commenced operations in 1947."<ref> DeVries, 89.</ref>
  
The IMF executive board approved the SDDS and GDDS in 1996 and 1997 respectively and subsequent amendments were published in a revised “Guide to the General Data Dissemination System”.  The system is aimed primarily at statisticians and aims to improve many aspects of statistical systems in a country.  It is also part of the World Bank Millennium Development Goals and Poverty Reduction Strategic Papers.
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===Collapse of Bretton-Woods System===
  
The IMF established a system and standard to guide members in the dissemination to the public of their [[economic]] and [[financial]] data. Currently there are two such systems: General Data Dissemination System (GDDS) [http://dsbb.imf.org/Applications/web/gdds/gddshome/] and its [[superset]] Special Data Dissemination System (SDDS) [http://dsbb.imf.org/Applications/web/sddshome/] for those member countries having or seeking access to international [[capital market]]s.
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By the late 1960s, the United States experienced rapidly rising inflation, due in part to the war in [[Vietnam war|Vietnam]] and increased spending on social programs under the [[Great Society]] initiatives of then President [[Lyndon B. Johnson]]. [[Inflation]], by definition, meant that the value of the dollar was declining, so to keep steady the fixed exchange rate—thereby preventing runaway price increases in their own economies—central banks in foreign countries either had to convert their dollars into gold, or increase their purchases of dollars. As the U.S. supply of gold was declining, the banks kept accumulating dollars. "Thus the German, British, French and Japanese, et. al., central banks bought up dollars in great quantities and at the same time continually increased their own domestic money supplies."<ref>Steven M. Suranovic, [http://internationalecon.com/Finance/Fch100/F100-1.php "The Breakup of Bretton-Woods,"] Retrieved February 16, 2009.</ref>
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Ironically, amassing balance of payment surpluses by increasing the money supply also leads to inflation. Pressures on the fixed-rate system increased manifold. Altogether, these pressures "put the sustainability of the system into question."<ref> Suranovic, 3</ref>
  
The primary objective of the GDDS is to encourage IMF member countries to build a framework to improve data quality and increase statistical capacity building. This will involve the preparation of metadata describing current statistical collection practices and setting improvement plans. Upon building a framework, a country can evaluate statistical needs, set priorities in improving the timeliness, transparency, reliability and accessibility of financial and economic data.
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Eventually, on August 15, 1971, then President [[Richard M. Nixon]] announced the suspension of the dollar's convertibility into gold. He also imposed a 10 percent surcharge on all imports, and some domestic price controls to dampen inflation. As a result, in December 1971, the Bretton-Woods agreement was effectively supplanted by the [[Smithsonian Agreement]], under which countries accepted a revaluation of their currencies towards the U.S. dollar (which effectively "devalued" the dollar) "in return for the elimination of the import surcharge." They also increased the market rate margins around the new par value of their currencies from 1 percent to 2.25 percent. Two years later, in March 1973, another dollar outflow led to a shutdown of foreign exchange trading on the [[FOREX]] for three months. After it reopened, "foreign currencies were floating with respect to each other. The [[Bretton Woods system|Bretton-Woods system]] was dead."<ref> Suranovic, 6</ref>
  
Some countries initialy used the GDDS, but lately upgraded to SDDS.
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Soon thereafter, lending to its members became the IMF's principal activity–a far departure from its initial focus on moderating international currency exchange.<ref> DeVries, 118</ref>
  
Some entities that are not itself IMF members also contribute statistical data to the systems:
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==The 1980s==
* {{flagcountry|Palestinian Authority}} - GDDS
 
* {{flagcountry|Hong Kong}} - SDDS
 
* {{flagcountry|EU}} institutions:
 
** the [[European Central Bank]] for the [[Eurozone]] - SDDS
 
** [[Eurostat]] for the whole EU. - SDDS, thus providing data from {{flagcountry|Cyprus}} (not using any DDSystem on its own) and {{flagcountry|Malta}} (using only GDDS on its own)
 
  
== Membership qualifications ==
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The IMF during the 1980s confronted two overarching and related crises: a worldwide [[recession]] during the early part of the decade; and an international [[debt crisis,]] in which poorer nations that had borrowed from the Fund and other sources during the previous decade found themselves increasingly unable to meet repayment obligations worth hundreds of billions of dollars. In August, 1982, "Mexico stunned the financial world by declaring that it could no longer continue to pay its foreign debt."<ref>Enrique R. Carrasco, 2008, [http://www.uiowa.edu/ifdebook/ebook2/contents/part1-V.shtml "The 1980s: The Debt Crisis and the Lost Decade,"] University of Iowa Center for International Finance and Development. Retrieved February 18, 2009</ref>
Any country may apply for membership to the IMF. The application will be considered first by the IMF's Executive Board. After its consideration, the Executive Board will submit a report to the Board of Governors of the IMF with recommendations in the form of a "Membership Resolution." These recommendations cover the amount of [[Quota Share|quota]] in the IMF, the form of payment of the [http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/aa/aa03.htm#1 subscription], and other customary terms and conditions of membership. After the Board of Governors has adopted the "Membership Resolution," the applicant state needs to take the legal steps required under its own law to enable it to sign the IMF's Articles of Agreement and to fulfil the obligations of IMF membership.
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Similar declarations of default were made shortly thereafter by [[Brazil]], [[Argentina]], [[Venezuela]], and [[Chile]], among others.
  
A member's quota in the IMF determines the amount of its subscription, its voting weight, its access to IMF financing, and its allocation of [[Special Drawing Rights|SDR]]s.  A member state cannot unilaterally increase its quota - increases must be approved of by the Executive Board.  For example, in 2001, [[China]] was prevented from increasing its quota as high as it wished, ensuring it remained at the level of the smallest G7 economy ([[Canada]]).<ref name=Barnett_Finnemore>Barnett, Michael and Finnemore, Martha. ''Rules for the World: International Organizations in Global Politics''. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2004.</ref> Since then, its contribution has been allowed to be increased slightly further.
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===Debt Reduction and Structural Adjustment Programs===
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To deal with these crises, especially the debt defaults, the IMF, along with the [[World Bank]], persuaded commercial banks to extend loan repayment periods and offer new loans to debtor nations; in return, the debtors had to agree to "structural adjustment programs." These typically included sharp curtailments of government spending on domestic programs such as health, education and development (to counter budgetary deficits); a tight monetary policy (restrictions on printing money to inhibit inflation); and currency devaluations to increase exports. Later, additional reforms, including privatization of state-owned industries and sharply decreased government regulation of business activities, were proposed.<ref> Carrasco, 2.</ref> Nevertheless, international "debt fatigue" continued, as many debtor nations refused to adhere to the IMF reforms, which they argued would hurt lower income residents through increasing [[unemployment]] and loss of social safety nets.
  
As of 2006, participating nations were discussing changes to the voting formula, to increase equity. [http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5358282]
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===The Brady Plan===
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In 1989, U.S. Treasury Secretary Nicholas F. Brady proposed a new plan, under which commercial banks would lend to debtor nations in exchange for bonds—I.O.U.s—carrying either a below-market interest rate, or a discounted face value. The BMIR bonds facilitated a long term reduction of debt, and the discounted bonds allowed for an immediate reduction. The principal of these bonds would be secured by U.S. Treasury bills.<ref>[http://www.emta.org/emarkets/brady.html "The Brady Plan,"] Emerging Markets Trading Association. Retrieved February 18, 2009.</ref> As a condition for receiving loans on these favorable terms, debtor nations would have to implement, or continue, their domestic reforms.
  
== Assistance and reforms == 
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The impact of The Brady Plan and other IMF programs that require nations to undertake stringent structural reforms in exchange for loans or debt relief have been a source of ongoing debate among observers. Supporters point to a reduction in worldwide debt, diversifying risk, and encouraging many "emerging markets countries to adopt and pursue ambitious economic reform programs."<ref> "The Brady Plan"</ref> Opponents cite declining employment, increasing poverty, and restrictions on the ability of poor nations to utilize fiscal policies to combat economic decline.<ref> See for example, Arthur Macewan, "Economic Debacle in Argentina: The IMF Strikes Again," Dollars and Sense magazine, March/April 2002</ref>
The primary mission of the IMF is to provide financial assistance to countries that experience serious financial difficulties. Member states with [[balance of payments]] problems may request loans and/or organizational management of their national economies. In return, the countries are usually required to launch certain [[structural adjustment program|reforms]], which have often been dubbed the "[[Washington Consensus]]". These reforms are generally required because countries with fixed exchange rate policies can engage in fiscal, monetary, and political practices which may lead to the crisis itself. For example, nations with severe budget deficits, rampant inflation, strict price controls, or significantly over-valued or under-valued currencies run the risk of facing balance of payment crises in their future. Thus, the [[structural adjustment program]]s are at least ostensibly intended to ensure that the IMF is actually helping to prevent financial crises rather than merely funding financial recklessness.  
 
   
 
However, this approach is not without its critics, as described below. Many supporters of the IMF contend that some criticisms are the result of the fact that many people are not familiar with the operations and objectives of the IMF, and blame a lack of transparency within the IMF for this, as well as the dense nature of [[international finance]] in general. Suggestions for improving these understandings have included greater community outreach efforts, tighter accounting standards, possible regulatory oversight, and changes in the organizational structure of the IMF to include fewer economists, whom many fear are attempting to use developing countries as nothing more than lab rats. Some fear, however, that some of these reforms to the IMF itself introduce political considerations rather than economic considerations, many of which may have resulted in the financial crises in the first place. According to [[Ulrich Beck]], the International Monetary Fund is an international risk community combating the threat of a global financial crisis.
 
  
== Criticism ==
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==The 1990s==
The role of the two Bretton Woods institutions has been controversial to some since the late [[Cold War]] period. Critics claim that IMF policy makers deliberately supported capitalistic [[military dictatorship]]s friendly to American and European [[corporation]]s. Critics also claim that the IMF is generally [[apathy|apathetic]] or hostile to their views of [[democracy]], [[human rights]], and [[labor rights]]. The controversy has helped spark the [[anti-globalization movement]]. Others claim the IMF has little power to democratize sovereign states, although that is not its stated objective, which is to advise and promote financial stability. Arguments in favor of the IMF say that economic stability is a precursor to democracy.  
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===The Argentine example===
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Although subject to constant criticism from both the political left and right, the IMF pointed to [[Argentina]] as an example of the benefits in adhering to IMF conditionalities, or structural adjustment reforms, such as privatizing state enterprises, liberalizing foreign trade, pegging the Argentine peso to the U.S. dollar, and tightening restrictions on monetary policy. In its 1996 annual report, the Fund noted with approval that Argentina had "cut wages for higher-paid public employees; and established two trust funds to facilitate the restructuring of private banks and the privatization of provincial banks. As a result...its economy appeared to have stabilized [with billions of dollars flowing back in]; bank credit was beginning to recover; the country had regained access to international credit markets; and international reserves were being rebuilt."<ref> 1996 Annual Report, IMF, Washington, D.C.</ref>
  
Two criticisms from economists have been that financial aid is always bound to so-called "[[Conditionalities]]", including [[Structural Adjustment Program]]s. Conditionalities, it is claimed, retard social stability and hence inhibit the stated goals of the IMF, while Structural Adjustment Programs lead to an increase in poverty in recipient countries.<ref name=Hertz>Hertz, Noreena. ''The Debt Threat''. New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 2004.</ref>
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====From Boom to Bust====
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As noted by the Fund's Independent Evaluation Office (IEO) in 2003, Argentina—and by implication the IMF—"had been widely praised for its achievements in stabilization, economic growth and market-oriented reforms under IMF-supported programs."<ref> [http://www.imf.org/External/NP/ieo/2003/arg/070403.pdf "The Role of the IMF in Argentina], 1991-2002," July 2003, Independent Evaluation Office, IMF, Washington, D.C. Retrieved February 18, 2009.</ref> The IEO also noted that Argentina's hyperinflation of the previous decade had been checked, and that its economy had begun to grow at an average annual rate of six percent.
  
Typically the IMF and its supporters advocate a [[Keynesian economics|Keynesian]] approach. As such, adherents of [[supply-side economics]] generally find themselves in open disagreement with the IMF. The IMF frequently advocates currency [[devaluation]], criticized by proponents of supply-side economics as [[inflation]]ary. Secondly they link higher taxes under "[[austerity]] programmes" with [[economic contraction]].
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But that changed dramatically as the decade drew to a close. In 1998, Argentina once again found itself in recession; a few years later, in 2001-2, its economy plummeted. Consequently the IEO's report went on to acknowledge "the eventual collapse of the convertibility regime and the associated adverse economic and social consequences for the country."<ref> "The Role of the IMF in Argentina"</ref> (The IEO was also concerned that the reputation of the IMF was in peril.)
  
Currency devaluation is recommended by the IMF to the governments of poor nations with struggling economies. Supply-side economists claim these Keynesian IMF policies are destructive to economic prosperity.
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Other observations were more scathing. "[A]s the economy continued to spiral downward, the inflow of dollars slowed, forcing the [Argentine] currency board to restrict the country's money supply even further. And still worse, in the late 1990s, the U.S. dollar appreciated against other currencies, which meant (because of the one-to-one rule) that the peso also increased in value. As a result, the price of Argentine exports rose, further weakening world demand for Argentina's goods."<ref> Macewan, 2.</ref> Another review noted that "many countries [are] required by IMF to pursue tight monetary policy (higher interest rates) and tight fiscal policy to reduce the budget deficit and strengthen exchange rates. However, these policies caused a minor slowdown to turn into a serious recession with mass unemployment [in Asia]. In 2001, Argentina was forced into a similar policy of fiscal restraint. This led to a decline in investment in public services which arguably damaged the economy."<ref>[http://www.economicshelp.org/dictionary/i/imf-criticism.html "Criticism of IMF,"] Economics Help. Retrieved February 19, 2009.</ref>
  
That said, the IMF sometimes advocates "austerity programmes," increasing [[tax]]es even when the economy is weak, in order to generate government revenue and balance [[budget deficit]]s, which is the opposite of Keynesian policy. These policies were criticised by [[Joseph E. Stiglitz]], former chief economist and Senior Vice President at the World Bank, in his book [[Globalization and Its Discontents]].<ref name=Stiglitz>Stiglitz, Joseph. ''Globalization and its Discontents''. New York: WW Norton & Company, 2002.</ref> He argued that by converting to a more Monetarist approach, the fund no longer had a valid purpose, as it was designed to provide funds for countries to carry out Keynesian reflations.
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Not all the criticism, however, was from the left of the political spectrum. Conservatives argued that IMF funding causes problems not because it imposes austerity measures, but because it promotes the government interventionist policies of [[John Maynard Keynes]], an IMF founder. And a news story, covering a report prepared by the IMF itself, noted that "the study helps rebut criticism that the Fund insists on excessive austerity in developing countries. In Argentina's case, the report concluded that officials were too lenient."<ref> Paul Blustein, "IMF Says Its Policies Crippled Argentina: Internal Audit Finds Warnings Were Ignored," Washington Post, July 30, 2004.</ref>  
  
Complaints are also directed toward [[International Monetary Fund gold reserve]] being undervalued. At its inception in 1945, the IMF pegged gold at 35 [[US dollars]] per [[troy weight|Troy ounce]] of gold. In 1973 the Nixon administration lifted the fixed asset value of gold in favour of a world market price.  Hence the fixed exchange rates of currencies tied to gold were switched to a [[floating rate]], also based on market price and exchange. This largely came about because ''[[Petrodollar]]s'' outside the United States were more than could be backed by the gold at [[Fort Knox]] under the fixed exchange rate system. The fixed rate system only served to limit the amount of assistance the organization could use to help debt-ridden countries. Current IMF rules prohibit members from linking their currencies to gold.
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With the shift in its lending focus from developed countries during its first decades, to developing countries in the 1980s, and in response to a barrage of criticisms in the 1990s that its structural adjustment reforms and other conditions for loan acceptance were actually intensifying domestic economic crises, the IMF during the decade "began to take issues such as poverty into account and developed funding programs to protect vulnerable populations during adjustment periods."<ref> Nicole Wendt, Samantha Sheppard, and Maria Weidner, [www.uiowa.edu/ifdebook/ebook2/contents/part2-III.shtml "The World Bank & IMF Respond to Criticisms,"] Unversity of Iowa Center for International Finance and Development. Retrieved February 27, 2009. </ref> The Fund also increased its technical assistance on social safety nets, and began to "coordinate with other multilateral organizations such as the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) and the International Labor Organization (ILO)" on minimizing adverse effects of conditionalities on vulnerable populations.<ref> Wendt et.al.</ref>
  
[[Argentina]], which had been considered by the IMF to be a model country in its compliance to policy proposals by the Bretton Woods institutions, experienced a catastrophic economic crisis in 2001 , which some believe to have been caused by IMF-induced budget restrictions &mdash; which undercut the government's ability to sustain national infrastructure even in crucial areas such as health, education, and security &mdash; and [[privatization]] of strategically vital national resources.{{Fact|date=April 2007}} (Others attribute the crisis to Argentina's maldesigned fiscal federalism, which caused subnational spending to increase rapidly.<ref>Stephen Webb, "Argentina: Hardening the Provincial Budget Constraint," in Rodden, Eskeland, and Litvack (eds.), ''Fiscal Decentralization and the Challenge of Hard Budget Constraints'' (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2003).</ref>) The crisis added to widespread hatred of this institution in Argentina and other South American countries, with many blaming the IMF for the region's economic problems.<ref>http://www.serendipity.li/hr/imf_and_dollar_system.htm</ref> The current &mdash; as of early 2006 &mdash; trend towards moderate left-wing governments in the region and a growing concern with the development of a regional economic policy largely independent of big business pressures has been ascribed to this crisis.
+
====Data Improvement====
 +
On another front, In 1995, the Fund began work on data dissemination standards to help IMF member countries improve the quality and dissemination of their economic and financial data. Guidelines for the dissemination standards, which consisted of the General Data Dissemination System (GDDS) and the Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS), were approved by the executive board in 1996 and 1997.<ref>[http://dsbb.imf.org/Applications/web/gdds/gddshome/ General Data Dissemination System] (GDDS) and its [[superset]] [http://dsbb.imf.org/Applications/web/sddshome/ Special Data Dissemination System] (SDDS), for those member countries having or seeking access to international [[capital markets]]. Retrieved February 28, 2009.</ref>
  
Another example of where IMF Structural Adjustment Programmes aggravated the problem was in [[Kenya]]. Before the IMF got involved in the country, the Kenyan central bank oversaw all currency movements in and out of the country. The IMF mandated that the Kenyan central bank had to allow easier currency movement. However, the adjustment resulted in very little foreign investment, but allowed [[Kamlesh Manusuklal Damji Pattni]], with the help of corrupt government officials, to siphon off billions of [[Kenyan shilling]]s in what came to be known as the [[Goldenberg scandal]], leaving the country worse off than it was before the IMF reforms were implemented.
+
==Today: Reforms and Concerns==
  
Overall the IMF success record is perceived as limited.  While it was created to help stabilize the global economy, since 1980 critics claim over 100 countries (or reputedly most of the Fund's membership) have experienced a banking collapse that they claim have reduced GDP by four percent or more, far more than at any time in Post-Depression history. The considerable delay in the IMF's response to any crisis, and the fact that it tends to only respond to rather than prevent them, has led many economists to argue for reform. In 2006, an IMF reform agenda called the Medium Term Strategy was widely endorsed by the institution's member countries. The agenda includes changes in IMF governance to enhance the role of developing countries in the institution's decision-making process and steps to deepen the effectiveness of its core mandate, which is known as economic surveillance or helping member countries adopt macroeconomic policies that will sustain global growth and reduce poverty. On June 15, 2007, the Executive Board of the IMF adopted the 2007 Decision on Bilateral Surveillance, a landmark measure that replaced a 30-year-old decision of the Fund's member countries on how the IMF should analyse economic outcomes at the country level.  
+
At present, the IMF continues its concern with both foreign exchange issues and "surveillance," or oversight of macroeconomic policies of poorer nations. Its 2008 annual report noted that its governors voted "to give more weight to low-income countries" in the Fund's decision making, and encouraged members to "avoid exchange rate manipulation for specific purposes."<ref> 2008 Annual Report, IMF, Washington, D.C.</ref>.  
  
Whatever the feelings people in the Western world have for the IMF, research by the [[Pew Research Center]] shows that more than 60 percent of Asians and 70 percent of Africans feel that the IMF and the [[World Bank]] have a ''positive'' effect on their country.<ref>http://people-press.org/reports/pdf/185topline.pdf</ref> This may largely be due to the fact that the media and textbooks in developing countries' schools describe the IMF as having a positive role in their countries, despite claims that there has been an increase in poverty, increase in the debt-burden, and a reduction of economic growth that IMF opponents argue its policies have resulted in.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} In 2005, the IMF was the first multilateral financial institution to implement a sweeping debt-relief program for the world's poorest countries known as the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative. By year-end 2006, 23 countries mostly in sub-Saharan Africa and Central America had received total relief of debts owed the IMF.  
+
Efforts to offer more of a say to developing countries had been made earlier in the decade. In 2006, an IMF reform agenda called the Medium Term Strategy was widely endorsed by the institution's member countries. The agenda includes changes in IMF governance to enhance the role of developing countries in the institution's decision-making process, and steps to deepen the effectiveness of its core mandate (of economic surveillance) or helping member countries adopt macroeconomic policies that will sustain global growth and reduce poverty. On June 15, 2007, the Executive Board of the IMF adopted the 2007 Decision on Bilateral Surveillance, a landmark measure that replaced a 30-year-old decision of the Fund's member countries on how the IMF should analyze economic outcomes at the country level.
 +
<ref>IMF Factsheet - June 2007, [http://www.imf.org/external/np/exr/facts/surv07.htm "IMF Surveillance—The 2007 Decision on Bilateral Surveillance"], Retrieved February 19, 2009.</ref>
  
The documentary ''[[Life and Debt]]'' deals with the IMF's policies' influence on [[Jamaica]] and its economy from a critical point of view. In 1978, one year after Jamaica first entered a borrowing relationship with the IMF, the Jamaican dollar was still worth more on the open exchange than the US dollar; by 1995, when Jamaica terminated that relationship, the Jamaican dollar had eroded to less than USD 2 cents. Such observations lead to skepticism that IMF involvement is necessarily helpful to a third world economy.
+
As the 2000 decade draws to a close, the Fund appears increasingly concerned with the current worldwide economic recession.<ref> See, for example, Antonio Spilimbergo, Steve Symanski, Oliver Blanchard, Carlo Cottarelli, "Fiscal Polity for the Crisis," IMF staff note, December 29, 2008: "The current crisis, which started in the housing and financial sectors, has now led to a strong fall in aggregate demand. There are indications that this fall could be larger than in any period since the Great Depression."</ref>
  
== Past managing directors == 
+
Internally, faced with a shortfall in revenue, the Fund's executive board in 2008 agreed to sell part of its gold reserves. Also, on April 27, 2008, IMF Managing Director [[Dominique Strauss-Kahn]] welcomed the board's decision to propose a new framework for the fund, designed to close a projected $400 million budget deficit over the next few years. The budget proposal includes sharp spending cuts of $100 million until 2011 that will include up to 380 staff dismissals.<ref>[http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/pr/2008/pr0874.htm IMF Press Release No. 08/74], April 7, 2008, Retrieved February 19, 2009.</ref>
An unwritten rule establishes that the IMF's managing director must be European and that the president of the [[World Bank]] must be from the [[United States]]. This established practice is now increasingly being questioned and competition for these two posts may soon open up to include other qualified candidates from any part of the world. Executive Directors, who confirm the managing director are voted in by Finance Ministers from countries they represent. The First Deputy Managing Director of the IMF, the second-in-command, has traditionally been (and is today) an American.
 
  
The IMF is for the most part controlled by the major [[Western Powers]], with voting rights on the Executive board based on a quota derived from a monetary stake in the institution. Rarely does the board vote and pass issues contradicting the will of the US or Europeans. There have been some exceptions in the past. Dr. Mohamed Finaish from Libya, the Executive Director representing the majority of the Arab World and Pakistan, was a tireless defender{{Fact|date=June 2007}} of the developing nations' rights at the IMF. He stood steadfast in his beliefs and principles{{Fact|date=June 2007}} for fourteen years until his defeat in the 1992 elections to an Egyptian IMF Staff Member. <!-- removed "IMF may lead to a lower standard of living" no citation, does not fit with section —>
+
==Criticisms==
 +
During the last two decades, the IMF has engendered a sustained volume of both criticism and defense. As summarized in a recent collection of essays, defenders of the IMF include "Most economists, finance officials and central bankers [who] agree that the benefits of global, market-based integration can more than ofset the costs for the poorest countries and the poor within countries." The opposite view is espoused by numerous social activists. "Most social activists [who], in contrast, emphasize that so far potential has not been realized...those activists see [the IMF and other international financial institutions] as undemocratic. They see the overall system as controlled by corporate and financial insiders, not by the world's median income voter."<ref> Nancy Birdsall, "Why It Matters Who Runs the IMF and the World Bank," in Gustav Ranis, et. al. (eds), 2006, "Globalization and the Nation State," (London and New York: Routledge Taylore and Francis Group), 429 </ref>
  
Mr [[Rodrigo Rato]] became the ninth Managing Director of the IMF on June 7, 2004 and he is expected to resign his post in October, 2007, citing personal reasons. His replacement will once again come from Europe.
+
===Conditionalities===
 +
Terms set by the IMF for countries, especially developing nations, to receive funds, are a major target of critics. Among the most prominent, by virtue of his reputation, is [[Joseph E. Stiglitz]], [[Nobel Laureate]] in economics and former chief economist at the World Bank. "IMF strutural adjustment policies—the policies designed to help a country adjust to crises as well as more persistent imbalances—led to hunger and riots in many countries; and even when results were not so dire, even when they managed to eke out some growth for a while, often the benefits went disproportionally to the better off, with those at the bottom sometimes facing greater poverty....The IMF's insistence on developing countries maintaining tight monetary policies has led to interest rates that would make job creation impossible even in the best of circumstances."<ref> Joseph E. Stiglitz, 2002, "Globalization and Its Discontents," (New York: WW Norton), pages xii and 17 </ref>
  
EU ministers agreed on the candidacy of [[Dominique Strauss-Kahn]] as managing director of the IMF at the [http://www.consilium.europa.eu/cms3_applications/applications/newsroom/loadDocument.ASP?cmsID=221&LANG=en&directory=en/ecofin/&fileName=95233.pdf Economic and Financial Affairs Council] meeting in Brussels on 10 July 2007.
+
===Power Imbalance===
 +
The unequal power relationships among IMF members—whose votes are determined largely by economic wealth, as specified by the Fund's quota system—is another focus of critics. For example, the unilateral actions of the United States in the early 1970s with regard to its suspension of the dollar's convertibility into gold underscores the charge that, in practice "the initial [Bretton-Woods] scheme, as well as its subsequent development and ultimate demise, were directly dependent on the preferences and policies of its most powerful member, the United States."<ref> [http://www.polsci.ucsb.edu/faculty/cohen/inpress/bretton.html Benjamin Cohen, "Bretton Woods System,"] prepared for the Routledge Encyclopedia of International Political Economy. Retrieved February 16, 2009. </ref>
  
 +
===Dictatorships===
 +
Support of military dictatorships, especially during the [[Cold War]] period, was yet another focus of critics, who cited such undemocratic regimes as Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, El Salvador, Ethiopia, and Haiti, among others, as IMF recipients.<ref>[http://www.jubileeresearch.org/analysis/reports/dictatorsreport.htm "Dictators and debt,"] Jubilee 2000. Retrieved February 27, 2009.</ref> In 1949 the [[United Nations General Assembly]] passed a technical assistance act that required all international funds to go through states rather than to individual borrowers. This caused and supported the consolidation of power in receiving countries, sometimes as the result of a military ''coup'', and international funds were often used to prop up dictatorships. Critics of this practice argued that this created a structural [[imperialism]], theorizing that the donor countries represented the "center" and the receiving countries the "periphery," viewing these dictators as extensions of the center in the periphery.
  
{| class="wikitable"
+
===Moral Hazard===
|-
 
! Dates
 
! Name
 
! Country
 
|-
 
|[[May 6]], [[1946]] - [[May 5]], [[1951]]
 
|[[Camille Gutt]]
 
|[[Belgium]]
 
|-
 
|[[August 3]], [[1951]] - [[October 3]], [[1956]]
 
|[[Ivar Rooth]]
 
|[[Sweden]]
 
|-
 
|[[November 21]], [[1956]] - [[May 5]], [[1963]]
 
|[[Per Jacobsson]]
 
|[[Sweden]]
 
|-
 
|[[September 1]], [[1963]] - [[August 31]], [[1973]]
 
|[[Pierre-Paul Schweitzer]]
 
|[[France]]
 
|-
 
|[[September 1]], [[1973]] - [[June 16]], [[1978]]
 
|[[Johannes Witteveen]]
 
|[[Netherlands]]
 
|-
 
|[[June 17]], [[1978]] - [[January 15]], [[1987]]
 
|[[Jacques de Larosière]]
 
|[[France]]
 
|-
 
|[[January 16]], [[1987]] - [[February 14]], [[2000]]
 
|[[Michel Camdessus]]
 
|[[France]]
 
|-
 
|[[May 1]], [[2000]] - [[March 4]], [[2004]]
 
|[[Horst Köhler]]
 
|[[Germany]]
 
|-
 
|[[June 7]], [[2004]] - present
 
|[[Rodrigo Rato]]
 
|[[Spain]]
 
|}
 
  
==Footnotes==
+
Conservative critics of The IMF often refer to the "moral hazard" of an international financial institution "bailing out" an economy that is suffering because of its own failed policies. "Bailouts encourage reckless lending, their critics say, because lenders are led to believe that if things go wrong the IMF will rescue them," according to one observer.<ref>[http://www.cepr.org/press/Geneva_Report2.htm, "Can the Moral Hazard of IMF Bailouts be Reduced?"] 1998, Centre for Economic Policy Research. Retrieved February 19, 2009.</ref> Another source noted that, "Taken together, there is considerable evidence that the insurance provided by the Fund leads to moral hazard with investors in bond markets."
{{reflist}}
+
<ref>Axel Dreher, [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=505782 "Does the IMF Cause Moral Hazard? A Critical Review of the Evidence,"] Swiss Economic Institute. Retrieved February 19, 2009.</ref>
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==
 
* [[Third world debt]]
 
* [[Third world debt]]
 
* [[Economics]]   
 
* [[Economics]]   
* [[Special Drawing Rights]] 
 
 
* [[Development aid]]
 
* [[Development aid]]
* [[Bretton Woods Institutions]]
 
 
* [[Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development]]
 
* [[Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development]]
* [[Globalization and Its Discontents]]
 
* [[Bancor]]
 
* [[Bank for International Settlements]] 
 
 
* [[World Bank]]
 
* [[World Bank]]
 
* [[Inter-American Development Bank]]
 
* [[Inter-American Development Bank]]
 +
* [[Bretton Woods system]]
  
== External links ==  
+
==Notes==
 +
{{reflist|2}}
  
 +
== References == 
 +
*{{cite book |title= Helping the Poor? The IMF and Low-Income Countries|author=Akkerman, Age and Jan Joost Teunissen (eds.)|year=2005 |publisher=FONDAD |isbn=9074208258}}
 +
*{{cite book |url=http://econwpa.wustl.edu/eps/if/papers/0207/0207003.pdf |title=The Development and Implementation of IMF and World Bank Conditionality|author=Dreher, Axel |year=2002 |publisher=HWWA |id=ISSN 1616-4814 }}
 +
*{{cite journal |author=Dreher, Axel |year=2004 |title=A Public Choice Perspective of IMF and World Bank Lending and Conditionality |journal=Public Choice |volume=119 |issue=3–4 |pages=445–464 |doi=10.1023/B:PUCH.0000033326.19804.52 <!--Retrieved from CrossRef by DOI bot—>}} {{ISSN|0048-5829}}
 +
*{{cite journal |author=Dreher, Axel |year=2004 |title=The Influence of IMF Programs on the Re-election of Debtor Governments |journal=Economics & Politics |volume=16 |issue=1 |pages=53–75 |doi=10.1111/j.1468-0343.2004.00131.x <!--Retrieved from CrossRef by DOI bot—>}} {{ISSN|0954-1985}}
 +
*{{cite journal |author=Dreher, Axel |year=2003 |title=The Influence of Elections on IMF Programme Interruptions |journal=The Journal of Development Studies |volume=39 |issue=6 |pages=101–120 |doi=10.1080/00220380312331293597 <!--Retrieved from CrossRef by DOI bot—>}} {{ISSN|0022-0388}}
 +
* Driscoll, David D. [http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/exrp/differ/differ.htm The IMF and The World Bank: How do they differ?]. Washington: International Monetary Fund 1995. ISBN 9781557754059
 +
* George, S. 1988. ''A Fate Worse Than Debt''. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780802110152
 +
* Hancock, G. 1991. ''Lords of Poverty: The Free-Wheeling Lifestyles, Power, Prestige and Corruption of the Multi-billion Dollar Aid Business''. London: Mandarin. ISBN 9780333439623
 +
* Markwell, Donald 2006. ''John Maynard Keynes and International Relations: Economic Paths to War and Peace'', Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198292364
 +
* Palast, Greg. ''[[The Best Democracy Money Can Buy]]''. London; Sterling, Va.: Pluto Press, 2002. ISBN 9780745318462
 +
* Rapkin, David P. and Jonathan R. Strand. 2005. “Developing Country Representation and Governance of the International Monetary Fund,” ''World Development'' 33, 12: 1993-2011. {{ISSN|0305-750X}}
 +
* Rivalries between IMF and [[IBRD]], "[http://www.economist.com/finance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=8786132 Sister-talk]," ''The Economist'' (2007-03-01) {{ISSN|0013-0613}}
 +
* Strand, Jonathan R and David P. Rapkin (2005) “Voting Power Implications of a Double Majority Voting Procedure in the IMF’s Executive Board,” in ''Reforming the Governance of the IMF and World Bank'', Ariel Buira, ed, London: Anthem Press. ISBN 9781843312116
 +
* [[John Williamson (economist)|Williamson, John]]. (August 1982). ''The Lending Policies of the International Monetary Fund'', Policy Analyses in International Economics 1, Washington D.C., [[Peterson Institute for International Economics|Institute for International Economics]]. ISBN 9780881320008
 +
 +
== External links ==
 +
All links retrieved March 4, 2018.
 
* [http://www.imf.org International Monetary Fund website]
 
* [http://www.imf.org International Monetary Fund website]
* [http://www.augustreview.com/index.php?module=pagesetter&func=viewpub&tid=4&pid=10 Global Banking: The International Monetary Fund]
 
 
* [http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/index.htm Finance & Development - A quarterly magazine of the IMF]
 
* [http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/index.htm Finance & Development - A quarterly magazine of the IMF]
 
* [http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/ar/ Annual Reports of the Executive Board]
 
* [http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/ar/ Annual Reports of the Executive Board]
Line 178: Line 137:
 
* [http://www.economist.com/opinion/displayStory.cfm?story_id=2941379 Kenneth Rogoff - The sisters at 60]
 
* [http://www.economist.com/opinion/displayStory.cfm?story_id=2941379 Kenneth Rogoff - The sisters at 60]
 
* [http://www.serendipity.li/hr/imf_and_dollar_system.htm How the IMF Props Up the Dollar System]
 
* [http://www.serendipity.li/hr/imf_and_dollar_system.htm How the IMF Props Up the Dollar System]
* [http://web.gc.cuny.edu/eusc/activities/paper/schwartz.htm ''IMF’s Origins as a Blueprint for Its Future'', Anna J. Schwartz, National Bureau of Economic Research]
+
* [http://www.cepr.net/documents/publications/imf_forecasting_2007_04.pdf Political Forecasting? The IMF’s Flawed Growth Projections for Argentina and Venezuela] by David Rosnick and Mark Weisbrot, Center for Economic and Policy Research
* [http://www.uiowa.edu/ifdebook/ Center for International Finance & Development] University of Iowa research center, includes a 300 page E-book on the IMF and World Bank.
+
 
* [http://www.cepr.net/documents/publications/imf_forecasting_2007_04.pdf Political Forecasting? The IMF’s Flawed Growth Projections for Argentina and Venezuela] by David Rosnick and Mark Weisbrot, [[Center for Economic and Policy Research]]
+
 
* [http://www.dollarsandsense.org/archives/1999/0799dollar.html What's the difference between the IMF and the World Bank?] by economist Arthur MacEwan, in [[Dollars & Sense]] magazine
 
*[http://www.knology.net/~bilrum/Paul_Prohibit_BanksA.rtf <i>"Monetary Freedom Act"</i>] HR 391, by Congressman Ron Paul, 1981
 
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bretton_Woods_Project ''Bretton Woods Project''] Critical voices on the World Bank and IMF
 
  
== References == 
 
*{{ cite book | title=[http://www.fondad.org/publications/helpingpoor/contents.htm Helping the Poor? The IMF and Low-Income Countries]| author=Jan Joost Teunissen and Age Akkerman (eds.)| year=2005 | publisher=FONDAD | id=ISBN-10: 90-74208-25-8}}
 
*{{ cite book | title=[http://econwpa.wustl.edu/eps/if/papers/0207/0207003.pdf The Development and Implementation of IMF and World Bank Conditionality]| author=Axel Dreher | year=2002 | publisher=HWWA | id=ISSN 1616-4814 }}
 
* Dreher, Axel (2004), A Public  Choice Perspective of IMF and World Bank Lending and Conditionality, ''Public Choice'' 119, 3-4: 445-464.
 
*Dreher, Axel (2004), The Influence of IMF Programs on the Re-election of Debtor Governments, ''Economics & Politics'' 16, 1: 53-75
 
*Dreher, Axel (2003), The Influence of Elections on IMF Programme Interruptions, ''The Journal of Development Studies'' 39,6: 101-120.
 
* ''[[The Best Democracy Money Can Buy]]'' by [[Greg Palast]] (2002)
 
* The IMF and The World Bank: How do they differ?[http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/exrp/differ/differ.htm] by David D. Driscoll
 
* Rivalries between IMF and [[IBRD]], "Sister-talk", The Economist 3/3/07 [http://www.economist.com/finance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=8786132]
 
* George, S. (1988). A Fate Worse Than Debt. London: Penguin Books.
 
* Hancock, G. (1991). Lords of Poverty: The Free-Wheeling Lifestyles, Power, Prestige and Corruption of the Multi-billion Dollar Aid Business. London: Mandarin.
 
 
{{Trade}}
 
{{Trade}}
{{Central Bank}}
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{{Central banks}}
{{step|[[Bretton Woods system]]|}}
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{{Supranationalism/World government topics|state=autocollapse}}
  
[[Category:History and biography]]
+
{{credit|International_Monetary_Fund|261985519|1997_Asian_Financial_Crisis|270085888}}
[[Category:Politics and social science]]
 
  
{{credit|148355473}}
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[[Category:History]]
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[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
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[[Category:Economics]]

Latest revision as of 12:59, 7 February 2023


The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is a global membership organization founded in 1944 that attempts to insure a stable worldwide financial system by fostering cooperation among its 185 members regarding exchange rates and other monetary issues; facilitating international payments and transfers; reducing the payment imbalances of its members; and providing loans. It also seeks what it terms a balanced growth of international trade, which it maintains will lead to increased employment, income, and production within member countries. Founded under the leadership of Harry Dexter White of the United States and John Maynard Keynes of the United Kingdom, it is headquartered in Washington, D.C., USA.

The IMF has often been the subject of criticism from those nations seeking its help for the nature of its austerity requirements for nations receiving IMF support, especially in Latin America during the 1980s. The resolution of the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, while no less painful than those of Latin America in the 1980s, resulting in a much quicker turn around.

After the War

As World War II drew to a close, the economies of numerous nations were in disarray, owing not only to the inherent devastation of the war itself, but to years of competitive currency devaluation that many economists felt contributed to the worldwide Great Depression of the 1930s.[1] At the time, to encourage consumer purchases of domestically produced goods, and limit purchases of foreign imports, a nation would officially lower the exchange rate of its currency against those of other nations, making imports more expensive to its consumers. While this often helped to strengthen the domestic manufacturing sector, it also stoked inflation, and more seriously weakened the economies of other countries, by tightening access to their foreign markets. In international parlance, it was termed a "beggar my neighbor" (or "beggar thy neighbor") approach.[2] Inevitably, these other countries counteracted by devaluing their own currencies, which led to a spiral of international protectionism, inflation, and global economic decline.

To bring some order to this essentially chaotic situation, the United States, along with several economically advanced nations, felt the need to supervise, if not directly regulate, the system of international currency exchange.[3]

Early Years: Official Goals and Policies

Headquarters in Washington D.C.

Planned during a United Nations conference of 45 nations in July 1944 (convened in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire), the International Monetary Fund (often referred to as IMF or the Fund) set for itself six international goals. They included promoting international monetary cooperation; facilitating a balanced approach to global trade; promoting foreign exchange stability; helping to establish a multilateral system of payments and transfers; providing resources to its more needy members; and reducing "the magnitude of payment imbalances."[4] It would finance these aims in part by requiring members to contribute funds that could be borrowed by those experiencing a balance of payments deficit.[5] The amount of each country's contribution was (and remains) determined by a quota, largely reflecting the size of the country's domestic economy relative to others. The quota also limits the amount of reserve assets the country can draw down, and determines the weight of its vote. Thus, unlike the United Nations General Assembly, voting rights are not based on a one-country/one-vote system, but on the economic and therefore political strength of the participating nations.

Also, and equally important, the Fund sought to replace the ad hoc system of exchange rates with a system under which any currency would be convertible to the U.S. dollar, based on an established or fixed ratio. Each country had to establish a par value—a parity relationship—of their currencies to the dollar. In turn, the dollar's value was based on its relationship to gold, which was fixed at $35 per ounce.

Further, members were required to maintain the market rate of their currencies to within 1 percent of this par value. The aim was to insure that payment for goods and services "would take place freely and that all balances arising out of these transactions would be convertible into other countries [for use in] further current transactions."[6]

These official goals were a notable departure from established procedure, marking the first time that nation-states agreed specifically to engage directly in supervising international exchange. According to one scholarly review, at the time "international monetary relations were not considered the province of national governments. Rarely did any entity intervene in foreign exchange markets, and when one did, it was nongovernmental banks such as the House of Morgan or the still private Bank of England. There were several attempts at monetary cooperation and collaboration among international private bankers during the late nineteenth century, but it was sporadic....[T]he notion of a permanent international bank to guide global efforts to increase living standards and eliminate global poverty was truly remarkable."[7]

The IMF was formally organized on December 27, 1945, when the first 29 countries signed its Articles of Agreement.

Initial Impact

Notwithstanding its innovative nature, the Fund was not very successful in meeting its goals during its early years. Although it sought to eliminate or largely curtail the practice of multiple exchange rates, "multiple currency practices actually increased among the Fund's membership."[8] Further, provision of financial resources to members was minimal, in large part because the United States' Marshall Plan was already providing European countries with the resources they needed to resuscitate their economies. Thus, as one official recounting noted, "The impact of the Fund on the policies and its role in providing financial assistance were limited during the late 1940s and the first half of the 1950s."[9]

SDRs and the Expansion of the Fund

But by the late 1950s and early 1960s, drawings from the Fund began to rise. Examples were huge drawings by the United Kingdom and France during the 1956 Suez Crisis, with both nations experiencing serious losses of revenue when the Suez canal was nationalized by Egypt.[10] At around the same time, concern grew among IMF members that the global supply of official reserve assets—gold, U.S. dollars and other strong currencies—was insufficient to meet the growing demand, fed by a robust volume of international trade. Thus, in July, 1969, the Fund decided to create its own reserve asset, which it refers to as Special Drawing Rights, or SDRs. While not technically a currency, SDRs function to some extent as a currency by allowing nations to temporarily exchange their domestic currencies for them. Later, when the economies and reserves of these borrowing countries improve, they can re-exchange the SDRs they hold for other currencies, which facilitates the goal of international currency liquidity–a goal newly created by the IMF.[11] Initially, the value of the SDR was equivalent to nearly 0.89 grams of fine gold, the same rate as the U.S. dollar. (After 1974, the value of the SDR was set on the basis of a basket of currencies, with each currency assigned a weight in accordance with its market value relative to the dollar. Currencies and weights are revised every five years.)[12]

As the extent of drawings grew, so did the IMF's membership (and staff), which in turn led to even more drawings. In 1968 and 1969, drawings amounted to the equivalent of $3.5 billion and $2.5 billion respectively, "the largest annual amounts since the Fund commenced operations in 1947."[13]

Collapse of Bretton-Woods System

By the late 1960s, the United States experienced rapidly rising inflation, due in part to the war in Vietnam and increased spending on social programs under the Great Society initiatives of then President Lyndon B. Johnson. Inflation, by definition, meant that the value of the dollar was declining, so to keep steady the fixed exchange rate—thereby preventing runaway price increases in their own economies—central banks in foreign countries either had to convert their dollars into gold, or increase their purchases of dollars. As the U.S. supply of gold was declining, the banks kept accumulating dollars. "Thus the German, British, French and Japanese, et. al., central banks bought up dollars in great quantities and at the same time continually increased their own domestic money supplies."[14] Ironically, amassing balance of payment surpluses by increasing the money supply also leads to inflation. Pressures on the fixed-rate system increased manifold. Altogether, these pressures "put the sustainability of the system into question."[15]

Eventually, on August 15, 1971, then President Richard M. Nixon announced the suspension of the dollar's convertibility into gold. He also imposed a 10 percent surcharge on all imports, and some domestic price controls to dampen inflation. As a result, in December 1971, the Bretton-Woods agreement was effectively supplanted by the Smithsonian Agreement, under which countries accepted a revaluation of their currencies towards the U.S. dollar (which effectively "devalued" the dollar) "in return for the elimination of the import surcharge." They also increased the market rate margins around the new par value of their currencies from 1 percent to 2.25 percent. Two years later, in March 1973, another dollar outflow led to a shutdown of foreign exchange trading on the FOREX for three months. After it reopened, "foreign currencies were floating with respect to each other. The Bretton-Woods system was dead."[16]

Soon thereafter, lending to its members became the IMF's principal activity–a far departure from its initial focus on moderating international currency exchange.[17]

The 1980s

The IMF during the 1980s confronted two overarching and related crises: a worldwide recession during the early part of the decade; and an international debt crisis, in which poorer nations that had borrowed from the Fund and other sources during the previous decade found themselves increasingly unable to meet repayment obligations worth hundreds of billions of dollars. In August, 1982, "Mexico stunned the financial world by declaring that it could no longer continue to pay its foreign debt."[18] Similar declarations of default were made shortly thereafter by Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela, and Chile, among others.

Debt Reduction and Structural Adjustment Programs

To deal with these crises, especially the debt defaults, the IMF, along with the World Bank, persuaded commercial banks to extend loan repayment periods and offer new loans to debtor nations; in return, the debtors had to agree to "structural adjustment programs." These typically included sharp curtailments of government spending on domestic programs such as health, education and development (to counter budgetary deficits); a tight monetary policy (restrictions on printing money to inhibit inflation); and currency devaluations to increase exports. Later, additional reforms, including privatization of state-owned industries and sharply decreased government regulation of business activities, were proposed.[19] Nevertheless, international "debt fatigue" continued, as many debtor nations refused to adhere to the IMF reforms, which they argued would hurt lower income residents through increasing unemployment and loss of social safety nets.

The Brady Plan

In 1989, U.S. Treasury Secretary Nicholas F. Brady proposed a new plan, under which commercial banks would lend to debtor nations in exchange for bonds—I.O.U.s—carrying either a below-market interest rate, or a discounted face value. The BMIR bonds facilitated a long term reduction of debt, and the discounted bonds allowed for an immediate reduction. The principal of these bonds would be secured by U.S. Treasury bills.[20] As a condition for receiving loans on these favorable terms, debtor nations would have to implement, or continue, their domestic reforms.

The impact of The Brady Plan and other IMF programs that require nations to undertake stringent structural reforms in exchange for loans or debt relief have been a source of ongoing debate among observers. Supporters point to a reduction in worldwide debt, diversifying risk, and encouraging many "emerging markets countries to adopt and pursue ambitious economic reform programs."[21] Opponents cite declining employment, increasing poverty, and restrictions on the ability of poor nations to utilize fiscal policies to combat economic decline.[22]

The 1990s

The Argentine example

Although subject to constant criticism from both the political left and right, the IMF pointed to Argentina as an example of the benefits in adhering to IMF conditionalities, or structural adjustment reforms, such as privatizing state enterprises, liberalizing foreign trade, pegging the Argentine peso to the U.S. dollar, and tightening restrictions on monetary policy. In its 1996 annual report, the Fund noted with approval that Argentina had "cut wages for higher-paid public employees; and established two trust funds to facilitate the restructuring of private banks and the privatization of provincial banks. As a result...its economy appeared to have stabilized [with billions of dollars flowing back in]; bank credit was beginning to recover; the country had regained access to international credit markets; and international reserves were being rebuilt."[23]

From Boom to Bust

As noted by the Fund's Independent Evaluation Office (IEO) in 2003, Argentina—and by implication the IMF—"had been widely praised for its achievements in stabilization, economic growth and market-oriented reforms under IMF-supported programs."[24] The IEO also noted that Argentina's hyperinflation of the previous decade had been checked, and that its economy had begun to grow at an average annual rate of six percent.

But that changed dramatically as the decade drew to a close. In 1998, Argentina once again found itself in recession; a few years later, in 2001-2, its economy plummeted. Consequently the IEO's report went on to acknowledge "the eventual collapse of the convertibility regime and the associated adverse economic and social consequences for the country."[25] (The IEO was also concerned that the reputation of the IMF was in peril.)

Other observations were more scathing. "[A]s the economy continued to spiral downward, the inflow of dollars slowed, forcing the [Argentine] currency board to restrict the country's money supply even further. And still worse, in the late 1990s, the U.S. dollar appreciated against other currencies, which meant (because of the one-to-one rule) that the peso also increased in value. As a result, the price of Argentine exports rose, further weakening world demand for Argentina's goods."[26] Another review noted that "many countries [are] required by IMF to pursue tight monetary policy (higher interest rates) and tight fiscal policy to reduce the budget deficit and strengthen exchange rates. However, these policies caused a minor slowdown to turn into a serious recession with mass unemployment [in Asia]. In 2001, Argentina was forced into a similar policy of fiscal restraint. This led to a decline in investment in public services which arguably damaged the economy."[27]

Not all the criticism, however, was from the left of the political spectrum. Conservatives argued that IMF funding causes problems not because it imposes austerity measures, but because it promotes the government interventionist policies of John Maynard Keynes, an IMF founder. And a news story, covering a report prepared by the IMF itself, noted that "the study helps rebut criticism that the Fund insists on excessive austerity in developing countries. In Argentina's case, the report concluded that officials were too lenient."[28]

With the shift in its lending focus from developed countries during its first decades, to developing countries in the 1980s, and in response to a barrage of criticisms in the 1990s that its structural adjustment reforms and other conditions for loan acceptance were actually intensifying domestic economic crises, the IMF during the decade "began to take issues such as poverty into account and developed funding programs to protect vulnerable populations during adjustment periods."[29] The Fund also increased its technical assistance on social safety nets, and began to "coordinate with other multilateral organizations such as the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) and the International Labor Organization (ILO)" on minimizing adverse effects of conditionalities on vulnerable populations.[30]

Data Improvement

On another front, In 1995, the Fund began work on data dissemination standards to help IMF member countries improve the quality and dissemination of their economic and financial data. Guidelines for the dissemination standards, which consisted of the General Data Dissemination System (GDDS) and the Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS), were approved by the executive board in 1996 and 1997.[31]

Today: Reforms and Concerns

At present, the IMF continues its concern with both foreign exchange issues and "surveillance," or oversight of macroeconomic policies of poorer nations. Its 2008 annual report noted that its governors voted "to give more weight to low-income countries" in the Fund's decision making, and encouraged members to "avoid exchange rate manipulation for specific purposes."[32].

Efforts to offer more of a say to developing countries had been made earlier in the decade. In 2006, an IMF reform agenda called the Medium Term Strategy was widely endorsed by the institution's member countries. The agenda includes changes in IMF governance to enhance the role of developing countries in the institution's decision-making process, and steps to deepen the effectiveness of its core mandate (of economic surveillance) or helping member countries adopt macroeconomic policies that will sustain global growth and reduce poverty. On June 15, 2007, the Executive Board of the IMF adopted the 2007 Decision on Bilateral Surveillance, a landmark measure that replaced a 30-year-old decision of the Fund's member countries on how the IMF should analyze economic outcomes at the country level. [33]

As the 2000 decade draws to a close, the Fund appears increasingly concerned with the current worldwide economic recession.[34]

Internally, faced with a shortfall in revenue, the Fund's executive board in 2008 agreed to sell part of its gold reserves. Also, on April 27, 2008, IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn welcomed the board's decision to propose a new framework for the fund, designed to close a projected $400 million budget deficit over the next few years. The budget proposal includes sharp spending cuts of $100 million until 2011 that will include up to 380 staff dismissals.[35]

Criticisms

During the last two decades, the IMF has engendered a sustained volume of both criticism and defense. As summarized in a recent collection of essays, defenders of the IMF include "Most economists, finance officials and central bankers [who] agree that the benefits of global, market-based integration can more than ofset the costs for the poorest countries and the poor within countries." The opposite view is espoused by numerous social activists. "Most social activists [who], in contrast, emphasize that so far potential has not been realized...those activists see [the IMF and other international financial institutions] as undemocratic. They see the overall system as controlled by corporate and financial insiders, not by the world's median income voter."[36]

Conditionalities

Terms set by the IMF for countries, especially developing nations, to receive funds, are a major target of critics. Among the most prominent, by virtue of his reputation, is Joseph E. Stiglitz, Nobel Laureate in economics and former chief economist at the World Bank. "IMF strutural adjustment policies—the policies designed to help a country adjust to crises as well as more persistent imbalances—led to hunger and riots in many countries; and even when results were not so dire, even when they managed to eke out some growth for a while, often the benefits went disproportionally to the better off, with those at the bottom sometimes facing greater poverty....The IMF's insistence on developing countries maintaining tight monetary policies has led to interest rates that would make job creation impossible even in the best of circumstances."[37]

Power Imbalance

The unequal power relationships among IMF members—whose votes are determined largely by economic wealth, as specified by the Fund's quota system—is another focus of critics. For example, the unilateral actions of the United States in the early 1970s with regard to its suspension of the dollar's convertibility into gold underscores the charge that, in practice "the initial [Bretton-Woods] scheme, as well as its subsequent development and ultimate demise, were directly dependent on the preferences and policies of its most powerful member, the United States."[38]

Dictatorships

Support of military dictatorships, especially during the Cold War period, was yet another focus of critics, who cited such undemocratic regimes as Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, El Salvador, Ethiopia, and Haiti, among others, as IMF recipients.[39] In 1949 the United Nations General Assembly passed a technical assistance act that required all international funds to go through states rather than to individual borrowers. This caused and supported the consolidation of power in receiving countries, sometimes as the result of a military coup, and international funds were often used to prop up dictatorships. Critics of this practice argued that this created a structural imperialism, theorizing that the donor countries represented the "center" and the receiving countries the "periphery," viewing these dictators as extensions of the center in the periphery.

Moral Hazard

Conservative critics of The IMF often refer to the "moral hazard" of an international financial institution "bailing out" an economy that is suffering because of its own failed policies. "Bailouts encourage reckless lending, their critics say, because lenders are led to believe that if things go wrong the IMF will rescue them," according to one observer.[40] Another source noted that, "Taken together, there is considerable evidence that the insurance provided by the Fund leads to moral hazard with investors in bond markets." [41]

See also

  • Third world debt
  • Economics
  • Development aid
  • Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
  • World Bank
  • Inter-American Development Bank
  • Bretton Woods system

Notes

  1. The Role and Function of the International Monetary Fund, 1985 IMF, Washington, D.C., 1.
  2. Beggar My Neighbour Policy. Retrieved February 10, 2009
  3. The Role and Function, 1.
  4. "The IMF at a Glance," Fact Sheet September 2008.
  5. Reem Heakal, "What is the Balance of Paymens?", Investopedia, Retrieved February 10, 2009; (The balance of payments is the "method countries use to monitor all international monetary transactions at a specific period of time....All trades conducted by both the private and public sectors are accounted for in the BOP in order to determine how much money is going in and out of a country." Receiving money is a credit, and paying money is a debit).
  6. Role and Function, 5
  7. The Encyclopedia of American Foreign Policy, International Monetary and World Bank, Retrieved February 11, 2009.
  8. Margaret Garrison deVries,"The IMF in a Changing World: 1945-1985," (Washington, D.C.: IMF, 1986), 24.
  9. The Role and Function, Page 5
  10. DeVries 1986, 68
  11. "Special Drawing Rights (SDRs)," International Monetary Fund, "Factsheet," September 2008.
  12. "IMF Yearbook 2008: International Financial Statistics," (Washington, D.C.: IMF)
  13. DeVries, 89.
  14. Steven M. Suranovic, "The Breakup of Bretton-Woods," Retrieved February 16, 2009.
  15. Suranovic, 3
  16. Suranovic, 6
  17. DeVries, 118
  18. Enrique R. Carrasco, 2008, "The 1980s: The Debt Crisis and the Lost Decade," University of Iowa Center for International Finance and Development. Retrieved February 18, 2009
  19. Carrasco, 2.
  20. "The Brady Plan," Emerging Markets Trading Association. Retrieved February 18, 2009.
  21. "The Brady Plan"
  22. See for example, Arthur Macewan, "Economic Debacle in Argentina: The IMF Strikes Again," Dollars and Sense magazine, March/April 2002
  23. 1996 Annual Report, IMF, Washington, D.C.
  24. "The Role of the IMF in Argentina, 1991-2002," July 2003, Independent Evaluation Office, IMF, Washington, D.C. Retrieved February 18, 2009.
  25. "The Role of the IMF in Argentina"
  26. Macewan, 2.
  27. "Criticism of IMF," Economics Help. Retrieved February 19, 2009.
  28. Paul Blustein, "IMF Says Its Policies Crippled Argentina: Internal Audit Finds Warnings Were Ignored," Washington Post, July 30, 2004.
  29. Nicole Wendt, Samantha Sheppard, and Maria Weidner, [www.uiowa.edu/ifdebook/ebook2/contents/part2-III.shtml "The World Bank & IMF Respond to Criticisms,"] Unversity of Iowa Center for International Finance and Development. Retrieved February 27, 2009.
  30. Wendt et.al.
  31. General Data Dissemination System (GDDS) and its superset Special Data Dissemination System (SDDS), for those member countries having or seeking access to international capital markets. Retrieved February 28, 2009.
  32. 2008 Annual Report, IMF, Washington, D.C.
  33. IMF Factsheet - June 2007, "IMF Surveillance—The 2007 Decision on Bilateral Surveillance", Retrieved February 19, 2009.
  34. See, for example, Antonio Spilimbergo, Steve Symanski, Oliver Blanchard, Carlo Cottarelli, "Fiscal Polity for the Crisis," IMF staff note, December 29, 2008: "The current crisis, which started in the housing and financial sectors, has now led to a strong fall in aggregate demand. There are indications that this fall could be larger than in any period since the Great Depression."
  35. IMF Press Release No. 08/74, April 7, 2008, Retrieved February 19, 2009.
  36. Nancy Birdsall, "Why It Matters Who Runs the IMF and the World Bank," in Gustav Ranis, et. al. (eds), 2006, "Globalization and the Nation State," (London and New York: Routledge Taylore and Francis Group), 429
  37. Joseph E. Stiglitz, 2002, "Globalization and Its Discontents," (New York: WW Norton), pages xii and 17
  38. Benjamin Cohen, "Bretton Woods System," prepared for the Routledge Encyclopedia of International Political Economy. Retrieved February 16, 2009.
  39. "Dictators and debt," Jubilee 2000. Retrieved February 27, 2009.
  40. "Can the Moral Hazard of IMF Bailouts be Reduced?" 1998, Centre for Economic Policy Research. Retrieved February 19, 2009.
  41. Axel Dreher, "Does the IMF Cause Moral Hazard? A Critical Review of the Evidence," Swiss Economic Institute. Retrieved February 19, 2009.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Akkerman, Age and Jan Joost Teunissen (eds.) (2005). Helping the Poor? The IMF and Low-Income Countries. FONDAD. ISBN 9074208258. 
  • Dreher, Axel (2002). The Development and Implementation of IMF and World Bank Conditionality. HWWA. ISSN 1616-4814. 
  • Dreher, Axel (2004). A Public Choice Perspective of IMF and World Bank Lending and Conditionality. Public Choice 119 (3–4): 445–464. ISSN 0048-5829
  • Dreher, Axel (2004). The Influence of IMF Programs on the Re-election of Debtor Governments. Economics & Politics 16 (1): 53–75. ISSN 0954-1985
  • Dreher, Axel (2003). The Influence of Elections on IMF Programme Interruptions. The Journal of Development Studies 39 (6): 101–120. ISSN 0022-0388
  • Driscoll, David D. The IMF and The World Bank: How do they differ?. Washington: International Monetary Fund 1995. ISBN 9781557754059
  • George, S. 1988. A Fate Worse Than Debt. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780802110152
  • Hancock, G. 1991. Lords of Poverty: The Free-Wheeling Lifestyles, Power, Prestige and Corruption of the Multi-billion Dollar Aid Business. London: Mandarin. ISBN 9780333439623
  • Markwell, Donald 2006. John Maynard Keynes and International Relations: Economic Paths to War and Peace, Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198292364
  • Palast, Greg. The Best Democracy Money Can Buy. London; Sterling, Va.: Pluto Press, 2002. ISBN 9780745318462
  • Rapkin, David P. and Jonathan R. Strand. 2005. “Developing Country Representation and Governance of the International Monetary Fund,” World Development 33, 12: 1993-2011. ISSN 0305-750X
  • Rivalries between IMF and IBRD, "Sister-talk," The Economist (2007-03-01) ISSN 0013-0613
  • Strand, Jonathan R and David P. Rapkin (2005) “Voting Power Implications of a Double Majority Voting Procedure in the IMF’s Executive Board,” in Reforming the Governance of the IMF and World Bank, Ariel Buira, ed, London: Anthem Press. ISBN 9781843312116
  • Williamson, John. (August 1982). The Lending Policies of the International Monetary Fund, Policy Analyses in International Economics 1, Washington D.C., Institute for International Economics. ISBN 9780881320008

External links

All links retrieved March 4, 2018.


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