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Decade After Meltdown IMF Less Relevant in Asia
BANGKOK - As the Asian financial crisis struck 10 years ago, beginning in Thailand and then spreading rapidly to eight other economies in the region, the desperate call for help was answered from the West.
In rode the International Monetary Fund (IMF) with the customary swagger of a powerful moneylender. For the next two years, the Fund supplied over 38 billion US dollars in loans to the affected countries, according to available reports.
This financial bailout and other economic prescriptions to the affected countries such as Indonesia, South Korea and Thailand were given on conditions that the Washington D.C.-based international financial institution (IFI) thought was best, including strict austerity measures.
But times have changed. A meeting on Monday in Manila, hosted by the Asian Development Bank (AsDB), conveyed the tone of contempt with which finance and economic officials from the affected countries now view the IMF.
It is a view built around the region's rapid economic recovery over the past decade and its abundant foreign reserves to stave off a repetition of a similar crisis. The officials from Thailand, Malaysia, South Korea and the Philippines who spoke at the meeting are also warming up to the idea of an Asian Monetary Fund created through regional financial cooperation as an alternative to the IMF.
''Looking ahead, we need to take responsibility. Asia now needs to be the one to manage the global financial system,'' said Thai Finance Minister Chalongphob Sussangkarn, according to Reuters news agency. ''We cannot let debtor nations manage the global financial system. The International Monetary Fund is more like a debtor monetary organisation, we need a creditor monetary organisation.''
Long-time critics of the IMF are hardly surprised by the hostility leading financial and economic players in the region still harbour towards this IFI. ''This is to be expected since the IMF positioned itself on the wrong side of the Asian financial crisis. Its solutions made the situation worst,'' Walden Bello, executive director of Focus on the Global South, a Bangkok-based regional think tank, told IPS. ''The IMF lost its legitimacy and relevance in the region as a result.''
Among the IMF's solutions were the financial packages aimed to save foreign banks and speculative creditors who took a beating as economies contracted than to help the local people, who were the worst affected, added Bello. ''The IMF also used the crisis to push through economic liberalisation policies that it and its backers in the U.S. failed to achieve earlier in these Asian economies.''
''The IMF's policies after the crisis caused much damage in Indonesia,'' said Donatus Marut, executive director of the International NGO Forum on Indonesian Development (INFID). ''They were more interested in privatising state enterprises without thinking about the cost to people.''
''People are still very angry with the IMF and its policies,'' he added during a telephone interview from Jakarta, where his non-governmental organisation (NGO) is based. ''The IMF's prescription for economic reform created massive unemployment.''
Such views were mirrored in the commentaries that appeared this week in the region's press. The IMF's multi-billion dollar rescue packages, ''with their excessive policies,'' exacerbated the problem, argued The Jakarta Post in an editorial. ''In Indonesia, the number of poor people jumped from 34 million in 1996 to almost 50 million in 1998.''
Even renowned experts like Joseph Stiglitz have not spared the IMF during this 10th anniversary of the financial crisis. ''The IMF and the US Treasury marched in, took away economic sovereignty and demanded policies intended to enhance repayments to Western creditors, which plunged (the affected Asian) economies into deep recessions and depressions,'' the Nobel laureate in economics wrote in a commentary that appeared Monday in The Nation, an English-language daily in Thailand.
Till the crisis, which began on Jul. 2, 1997, the affected countries had ridden a wave of prosperity and growth that earned them names such as the ''Asian Tiger economies'' or being known as the ''Asian miracle.'' But when Thailand floated its currency, the baht, after having pegged it to the U.S. dollar for years, its value sank dramatically. This financial flu spread to Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan, among others. Some currencies lost over 50 percent in values, while some economies contracted by 13 percent soon after the crisis.
Working women in countries like South Korea, Thailand and Indonesia were among the worst hit as companies went bankrupt, according to the International Labour Organisation. These women were among the first to be retrenched, lose social welfare from the state or, if hired later, were only taken back as part-time, contractual labour.
The cold stares that the IMF is receiving this month adds to a growing trend pointing to its irrelevance in the developing world, says Bello, of Focus on the Global South. ''Countries are looking for other sources of finance than the IMF. China has emerged as a major player.''
This shift away from an IFI set up 60 years ago to give loans to countries struggling with financial problems was brought to relief by the end of 2006. Rather than borrowing from it, more developing countries are paying back past loans. From lending over 100 billion U.S. dollars annually up to four year ago, the IMF was reported to have given 20 billion dollars in loans annually in the years since.
Copyright © 2007 IPS-Inter Press Service.
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6 Comments so far
Show AllIMF and World Bank are corporate front for stealing a country's resources....
An IMF wet dream; a country in financial trouble.
Now when they come to bail them out they will rewrite their laws for them!
Every banker knows, someone in need makes the best customer and if you can keep them in need they will give you no problems.
But Asians play the money game very well and now they are challenging IMF! Will they be more humane than the IMF?
"Imagine if the American people were to step forward and insist that Coca Cola, Nike and McDonalds guarantee that no one in the world would ever go without sufficient water, clothes or food. These organizations could do this. They have the resources available. If they made that commitment, then all of their competitors would have to make the same commitment.
"This empire we have created has a unique aspect. It has been created primarily by a country that has very high ideals and moral standards, and compassionate people who believe in government of the people, for the people, and by the people. They believe that everybody has the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That is written in our most sacred documents. But instead, we have gotten government of the corporations, by the corporations, and for the corporations. We have created these systems that reach to every remote corner of the planet, but I think therein lies the hope. A Marshall Plan for the whole world, or using the World Bank or the IMF to reach out to the whole world, these are very distinct possibilities. That may ultimately be the outcome of 9/11. Perhaps it is going to take us a few years, but we will come around to understanding that we really need now to set our hearts and souls and minds to solving these kinds of problems."
John Perkins
excerpted from: Interview with John Perkins
by Cher Gilmore
http://www.shareintl.org/magazine/old_issues/2005/apr_05.htm
I was glad to see the above quote from John Perkins. If readers of this article have not read Perkin's book "Confessionf of an Economic Hitman" (now in paperback) or his newest book "The Secret History of the American Empire" I urge you to rush out to the library and get a copy. "Hitman" was fascinating - reading like a John LeCarre novel but all non-fiction. The new book is even more devastating. All Americans should know what our corporatocracy is doing in our name. Only then can we put a stop to it.
Adolf Hitler did not die during WW2. The heart and soul of Adolf was buried into the corporate body of the godless Institutions of the IMF and the World Bank, who use the cold blooded capitalistic fascisim toward the third world in a evil and a mean way who's international economic policies would put a smile on Hitlers face. If only Adolf Hitler had tried to conquer the world by using international trade organization to drive all of his enemies into economic slavery. He could have conqured Europe for pennies on the dollar by forcing privatization of all the state natural resoucres. He could have gotten it all without firing a shot! War is coming to the world. The people are getting tired of being told to eat cake, so some CEO can make $240 million dollars a year for cutting our throats in the name of Sataans free enter prize system.
I cannot wait for the dollar to be replaced as the world's reserve currency; that is the only thing that may make Americans wake up. Starving and job losses to come will hit hard and the presidential prerogative will be martial law. Americans let this happen in not demanding the repeal of the Patriot Act, which in its legal form, is anything but patriotic, but the real problem for constitutional preservation is the loss of the Posse Commitus Act. Incurious George is able to declare a national emergency at his own discretion and need not consult Congress. Congress is becoming completely superfluous and powerless under directives and bills like these. Yes, Virginia, there is and are government conspiracies and even Watergate paled in comparison to the current regime.