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The IMF's Misguided New Mission
The IMF wants to expand its role in the global economy and be the world's lender of last resort. We shouldn't give it more power
In Istanbul for the annual meeting of the IMF, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the managing director, said: "Given the costs associated with reserves accumulation, there is clearly a need for reliable emergency financing and hence for a global lender of last resort. The Fund has the potential to serve as an effective and reliable provider of such insurance."
Strauss-Kahn is correct to point out that developing countries pay a substantial price for accumulating foreign exchange reserves in order to "self-insure" against a financial crisis. But can the IMF play this role of a world's central banker?
Contrary to much news reporting, the IMF has not historically played the role that a national central bank plays as lender of last resort. The US Federal Reserve, for example, provides liquidity to the financial system in a time of crisis, in order to prevent a more generalised collapse – as it did with hundreds of billions of dollars in a series of interventions after the collapse of Lehman Brothers last year.
But the IMF did not play this role in the major developing-country financial crises that preceded this most recent one: eg the east Asian financial crises of 1997-98, or the Argentine crisis of 2001-2002. More often it has tried to assist foreign creditors in collecting their debt, as in the above mentioned crises, as well as attaching various, often unpopular and sometimes harmful conditions to its lending.
To its credit, the Fund has this year made available for borrowing some $283bn to all member countries. While most of this is allocated to the rich countries who will not need or use it, a substantial part will go to developing countries, with some $20bn to low-income countries (although most of the latter cannot really afford to take on more debt). This move is unprecedented in IMF history, since the loans are without conditions, and it does bring the IMF closer to the central bank function of lender of last resort, providing liquidity during a deep world recession.
But the problem remains that most of the IMF's lending is not of this type. My colleagues and I looked at 41 countries that have current loan agreements with the IMF. We found that in 31 of those countries, the agreements had imposed what economists call pro-cyclical macroeconomic policies. That is, as these countries' economies were slowing sharply or falling into recession, the agreements called for tightening fiscal policy (eg cutting spending) or tightening monetary policy (raising interest rates or curtailing money supply growth).
These are policies that we in the US or other rich countries would not adopt in a downturn (witness the 11.2% of GDP budget deficit in the US and near-zero policy interest rates). Nor does the IMF recommend such policies in the high-income countries.
In a number of countries, the IMF made such recommendations on the basis of projections that underestimated the impact of the world recession on developing-country economies, and in some cases the recommendations were subsequently changed. Still, there was damage done, and if it was just based on forecasting errors then there were way too many of them.
IMF spokesperson Bill Murray reacted angrily to the criticism: "The main point of this report is that growth forecasts were too optimistic when programmes were designed, leading to excessively tight fiscal and monetary policies. Reality is quite the opposite." While there may be some room for disagreement on a particular country's policies, it is hard to see what he gains by denying the Fund's forecasting errors, which are a matter of public record and documented with links in the paper.
The Fund has privately told others that its policies should be judged not on whether they made the downturn worse in borrowing countries, but on whether these countries would have been even worse off if they didn't get any aid at all. This seems too low a bar. If you go to a doctor with an badly infected foot, and he saves your life by amputating it, you are better off as a result of the treatment. But if you could have been cured by available antibiotics, this is not competent medicine.
And in some countries – for example Latvia, where the IMF projects a GDP decline of 18% this year – the people probably would have been better off refusing aid and allowing the currency to devalue. Current policy, supported by the IMF and EU, is dedicated to maintaining the country's fixed, overvalued exchange rate. This is very important to western European creditor banks, who have loaned enormous amounts in euros to Latvia and other central and eastern European countries.
Maintaining the exchange rate means that the country's current account deficit must be adjusted through shrinking the economy (and therefore imports) and real wages. This is the same mistake that the Fund supported in Argentina in its deep recession from 1999-2002. After the peso collapsed and Argentina defaulted on most of its foreign debt, the economy contracted for just three months before entering a six-year period of rapid (more than 60%) growth.
The IMF now also hopes to play a greater role in monitoring the economic policies of all countries – high-income as well as low- and middle-income – and this is something that is more likely to materialise in the near future. But the Fund missed the two biggest asset bubbles in the world history: the US stock market bubble of the late 1990s and the more recent housing bubble, both of which caused recessions when they burst (the latter being our worst recession since the Great Depression).
Given this track record and the long, continuing history of imposing inappropriate macroeconomic policies on developing countries, should the IMF be given more power – as is currently being proposed – to help decide when governments should reverse their current expansionary policies and shift to tighter macroeconomic policies as the world economic recovers?
Macroeconomic policy is just one area where the IMF influences growth and development in low- and middle-income countries, through its loan agreements and more importantly through its role as gatekeeper for other sources of credit. It also influences policy in the areas of trade, financial liberalisation, privatisation of state-owned enterprises, the size and role of the public sector and more. Does anyone think that South Korea – which was as poor as Ghana in 1960 but now has living standards on a par with some western European countries – would have succeeded if it had been under IMF/ World Bank tutelage during these decades?
To be fair, the IMF is controlled by the governments of the rich countries, with the US Treasury department as its most important overseer. But that is exactly the problem: These governments are just beginning to acknowledge some of the failures of neoliberal policies in their own countries, although they are still quite far from reforming them.
They have not even recognised the failure of their policies in the rest of the world, despite the long-term growth and development failure in the vast majority of low- and middle-income countries. Concentrated, unaccountable power is generally bad. It's even worse when it is also misguided.
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13 Comments so far
Show AllIMF?
are they kidding? they'r the SNAKE OIL salesmen that DESTROYED the economies of Argentina and other south american countries and the Southeast asian nations with their "prescriptions for economic stability and progress".
OFF with their heads!
they are USELESS PARASITES.
long ago -- i had a HUGE, 2-day going argument that was so bitter, with a cousin of mine who happened to work for the philippine government in representing it to the IMF and World Bank - to "renegotiate terms" ....
i was so critical of what they were doing or allowing - although I understood that there was little poor countries could do under the IMF US led Regime.
but still -- i was adamant to my cousin telling her "what you folks DO - with all your accounting and talk about feasibility and that kind of mumbo-jumbo ...IS the problem...the IMF creates POVERTY rather than prosperity for the sake of the Washington folks . ADMIT IT".
i am CERTAIN that she remembers the points i made - where i predicted that there would be MORE economic collapse BECAUSE of IMF "prescriptions"...
and that i've been proven right.
Sioux Rose
It's all about priorities.
Does the IMF want to HELP those countries, or HELP itself (via its elite "clientele") to the resources of those nations in genuine need of assistance. Naomi Klein made crystal clear THE answer. Mostly everything else is window-dressing.
Agreed. The IMF is a mechanism to extend empire with reduced military and administrative involvement, the better to centralize control.
John Perkins' experiences on this front are interesting.
JOHN Perkins specifically named the IMF as an arm of the "washington consensus" of "our american empire project"
since HE was involved in the shenanigans - in southeast asia, middle east, south american and africa. pushing EXACTLY the kind of "economic prescriptions" this IMF - with its umbilical attachment to washington - pushes.
now - it's trying to reconstitute itself - the way Wal-mart calls itself "labor friendly"...
We need restraints on power accumulation as the author indicates but he should also indicate that we don't need credit. It is power accumulation that creates the illusion that people need credit. You can build an economy and society without credit or fossil fuel. This will create a more sensible allocation of resources. For example instead of 10,000 ice cream flavors to chose from you get affordable healthcare. Sensibility stems from disciplined moderation in our consumption of the opiates, such as credit and fossil fuel. Over-indulgence in the opiates leads to poor decisions, ignorance and delusional dependence, or addiction, enslavement (e.g. to IMF policies), and ethical, social, spiritual dysfunction. There happens to be great alternatives to credit and fossil fuel. Can you imagine them?
Strauss-Kahn is another Madoff, except he's in charge of an international institution specifically chartered to shake down the countries that can't defend themselves.
Strauss-Kahn is a very influencial member of the french socialist party...He is one of the reasons i will never, ever again vote socialist in France elections !!!
Thank you, Mike Weisbrot and Common Dreams:
The Guardian/UK is an excellent source for the facts on the U.S. government's dealings.
Naomi Klein's book "The Rise of Disaster Capitalism" documents the IMF's strategic takeovers of other countries' resources as well.
As Mark states: ".. as these countries' economies were slowing sharply or falling into recession, the agreements called for tightening fiscal policy (eg cutting spending) or tightening monetary policy (raising interest rates or curtailing money supply growth)".
THIS IS THE IMF'S STRATEGIC PLANNING TO BRING THE COUNTRIES TO THEIR KNEES.
"privatisation of state-owned enterprises"
PRIVATIZATION IS THE GOAL.
"the IMF is controlled by the governments of the rich countries, with the US Treasury department as its most important overseer."
THE U.S. RUNS THE IMF AS A FRONT.
"They have not even recognised the failure of their policies in the rest of the world, despite the long-term growth and development failure in the vast majority of low- and middle-income countries".
HERE I THINK MARK GIVES THE U.S. (IMF) TOO MUCH LEEWAY.
THEIR INTENTION IS TO CRASH THE COUNTRIES' ECONOMY, THEN TAKE OVER THEIR RESOURCES.
i posted this in "WAR of the WORLDS" thread: but is relevant here too:
================
WHAT is IRONIC about the USA now initiating Trade protectionism against Developing countries?
oh wait :
as HENRY CK LIU of asiatimesonline long ago said:
"THE USA is REALLY the world's main Protectionaist Nation, Pretending to be Free Trade".
======================
Climate protectionism on the rise
By Martin Khor
A new and dangerous form of trade and technology protectionism is fast emerging in the name of climate change, and it is poisoning North-South relations in the two negotiating arenas on climate change and on trade.
There are clear signs that some developed countries, especially the United States, are preparing to use unilateral trade measures, such as imposing tariffs, taxes or charges on the products of developing countries, on the grounds of combating climate change.
A bill passed recently by the US House of Representatives gives the US president authority to impose financial charges (or taxes) on some imports coming from developing countries that in the US
view are not taking enough action to curb their greenhouse gas emissions.
The US House of Representatives has also sought protectionism against technology transfer through three bills it has adopted that prevent US negotiators in the UN Climate Change Convention from agreeing to any relaxation in the rules or enforcement of intellectual property. There are signs that other developed countries, including in Europe, are also preparing the grounds for climate-linked protectionism.
The developing countries are starting to oppose these moves. Indian political leaders protested to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton about the threat of US carbon tariffs during her recent visit. China's Commerce Ministry has also criticized the protection element in the US climate bill.
Most importantly, the developing countries have taken up the issue at the climate talks leading up to Copenhagen. On August 13, the Group of 77 countries and China made a statement at the Bonn climate talks, warning developed countries not to adopt unilateral trade-restrictive measures, as these would contravene the Climate Change Convention's provisions.
India also proposed text for the outcome of the upcoming Copenhagen climate meeting that developed countries "shall not resort to any form of unilateral measures including countervailing border measures, against goods and services imported from developing countries on grounds of protection and stabilization of climate".
The text listed many provisions of the Convention that would be violated if such measures are taken. This was supported by many countries, including China, Argentina, Brazil, Singapore, South Africa, Saudi Arabia, and by the G-77 and China's statement.
In Geneva, many developing country diplomats are increasingly concerned about the likelihood of the United States and other developed countries making use of either tariffs or financial charges on imports of developing countries. Imposing extra tariffs or financial charges on imports on the basis of how the products are produced ("process and production methods", or PPMs in technical jargon) is very controversial.
It has been rejected by developing countries at the World Trade Organization (WTO) since 1996 as a form of protectionism, which they say will unfairly curb developing countries' exports. They also argue that it is against the rules of the WTO.
Many developed countries however have wanted to make use of trade measures on environmental grounds. They are preparing the case that trade measures linked to PPMs are legitimate, or else climate-linked trade measures are allowed under the general exception for the environment under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT).
Developing countries claim that linking trade measures to climate and the environment are unjust because they have lower technological capacity and thus cannot match the developed countries. Developing countries should instead be assisted through technology transfer, but the intellectual property rights regime (especially the TRIPS intellectual property rights agreement of the WTO) is an obstacle, and now the US Congress is proclaiming that the US administration cannot allow relaxation of the intellectual property rules.
If climate protection is allowed, it will also open the floodgates to all kinds of protection by blocking developing country products on the basis of how they are made.
This "mother of new trade protection" is coming at a time of economic recession when world leaders have piously proclaimed they will not resort to trade protection. The climate-trade issue is thus explosive, and is opening a Pandora's box that threatens to contaminate the negotiations in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change as well as the WTO.
Before the situation deteriorates, developed countries should re-consider their moves on this issue, restrain the climate-protection forces in their society, and commit instead to a "fair game".
Martin Khor is Executive Director of the South Centre. He can be contacted at: director@southcentre.org. For further reading on Climate Protectionism, check out this special edition of the South Centre bulletin.
(Published with permission of the Global Policy Innovations program at the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs.
(Copyright 2009 Global Policy Innovations.)
UN treaty melts into climate sideshow (Sep 12, '09)
Businesses cold to climate change (Jan 30, '09)
Climate change matters; does the UN? (Dec 3, '08)
I guess the ONE thing that describes American "way" is:
RIG A GAME IN YOUR FAVOR, IMPOSE IT ON OTHERS TO PLAY by YOUR RULES....and THEN when you are LOSING at YOUR own game -- CHANGE the rules!!! and BLAME the OTHERS !
"The US Federal Reserve, for example, provides liquidity to the financial system in a time of crisis, in order to prevent a more generalised collapse – as it did with hundreds of billions of dollars in a series of interventions after the collapse of Lehman Brothers last year."
And, that was damn nice of them. Whose money did they use?
Generally, I read anything by Mark Weisbrot posts to CD and every once in awhile when atimes.com is not on vacation I try to catch up on Henry CK Liu on the nature of dollar hegemony as a form of Imperialism. Etc. The list is fairly long.
The international system based on dollar hegemony as leverage on the mideast oil-producing countries (Bretton-Woods, 1944, New Hampshire, when the Allies knew the Axis Powers were gonna lose) is now in Entropic decline, and could fail rapidly. It is not merely a matter of the Economics of it all, but also a matter of the Perception of the Economics of it. Robert Fisk's recent report of a behind-the-scenes plan by oil-producing and consuming nations OTHER THAN the United States (and GB) to establish an exchange system based on a "basket" rather than the USDollar is just the start of the unravelling. On his story alone, gold jumped way over $1,000.
The real problem here is physical Entropy. This can be translated to the Earth's carrying capacity to support a totally parasitic species known as homo sapiens sapiens, which likes to think of itself as innately intelligent while it is shitting in its own well then drinking the "water." And that is only one metaphor of many. Another would be, we are literally suffocating ourselves with airborne pollution.
Put simply, the IMF is dedicated to preserving the prerogatives of the elite---the world's worst polluters---at the expense of the hordes of the Desperate which increasingly includes the American "middle class." Such as it is.
Maintain appearances, folks, and attend church!
One more minor point. This carbon Cap & Trade thing is a pile of money and no answer to Climate Change. It is paper shifting. It completely avoids a major aspect of "energy production," namely the calorie expenditure of, say, Duke Energy to provide 60 watts for your light bulb. It isn't just carbon.
Pol Pot may have had it right. Get rid of the bifocals and the paperwork.
Capture the Sun. Directly. NOT indirectly via fossil fuels. Idiots...
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And, oh, "carbon sequestration" my ass. The oceans have been trying to absorb our CO2 and it enhances their acidity (carbolic acid) and kills coral reefs. Limestone and cement can absorb CO2 but the effect of doing so has not been studied in building structures.
What dead mines do you want to pump it down? Those created by Appalachian mountaintop removal? The Post WWII pact is dead. Welcome to the second stage of the New World Order.
If you think Climate Change is not going to effect you, check the rates on your insurance policies. And not just for "health care." Half my annual income now goes for insurance and taxes. You are next. If not already.
We had half a Century to build upon the lessons that WWII should have taught us. We have failed.
I spent most of my adult life trying to address those failures. I have failed. Mostly but not always. My apologies to my fellow humans. Now I can die.
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