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Showing Original Post only (View all)Can the IMF and the World Bank really be changed? [View all]

Those with seats at the table of the international financial institutions, Jayati Ghosh writes, cling to their power.
https://www.socialeurope.eu/can-the-imf-and-the-world-bank-really-be-changed

That was then: a commemorative plaque in the Mount Washington Hotel, Bretton Woods
As the Bretton Woods institutions complete 80 years of existencesince they were agreed upon at an allies conference on a postwar financial and monetary order in the New Hampshire townsome stocktaking is inevitable. This is however a rather depressing exercise. The international financial institutions, the International Monetary Fund and what came to be known as the World Bank, were created in a buzz of optimism about the potential for international economic co-operation as the second world war was coming to a close. But their functioning has fallen far short of what the architects of the system then would have hoped. In their first decade, both institutions were heavily focused on lending for reconstruction. Thereafter, when lower-income countries did start receiving funds, the conditionalities associated with the loansheavily oriented towards fiscal discipline, expressed as austerity and privatisation of public goods and servicesbecame highly controversial and very often did not deliver the desired outcomes. Through the debt crises of the developing world in the 1980s and 90s, the IMF effectively became the debt collector, enforcing programmes designed to benefit (or even save) the creditor banks based in the global north.
So well-known was this pattern that by the early part of this century, most lower-income countries had opted for self-insurance, holding excess foreign-exchange reserves to avoid having to approach the IMF. The institution was in decline, with few client countries, and increasingly irrelevant. It was, ironically, saved by the Global Financial Crisis, when G20 countries decided to use the IMF as the conduit for rescue funds. Thereafter, the eurozone crisis became yet another opportunity for the IMF to provide very large (and controversial) loansand since then it has been very much back in business. The underlying politics of the choice of recipients and the varying amounts of loans offered have unfortunately become even more evident. A record loan of (ultimately) $57 billion was offered in 2018 to the then president of Argentina, Mauricio Macri, because of his closeness to the United States president, Donald Trump, and his willingness to engage in blatantly neoliberal policies. That loan was so poorly designed that it was associated with massive outflows of private capital, so that in a few years Argentina was back in a debt crisis, with Macris successor having to clean up the mess.
Fit for purpose?
The deeply geopolitical nature of the operations and the problems with the programmes are not the only reasons why the revival of the IMF as the supposed financial stabiliser of the global economy is problematic. There is a real question about whether the IMF and the World Bank are fit for purpose in a global economy which has changed dramatically. During those eight decades, there has been a transformation in the relative sizes and significance of national economies while, among other trends, private financial flows have risen markedly. The institutions now betray major inadequacies in their organisation and functioning. The sharply increasing economic and ecological inequalities across the world are thereby accentuated, creating social and political tensions and geopolitical conflicts which are ever more intense. Humanity faces common challenges which require global public investment on a large scale. But the IMF and the World Bank are too slow, unwieldy and (lets admit) miserly in their responses, exacerbating rather than assuaging these problems.
Some of this is because of the outdated governance of both institutions. Quotas and voting rights are skewed heavily in favour of a few rich economies with a small minority of the worlds people. This is now even more difficult to justify, given those states diminished shares of global output and world trade, which obviously affects their credibility and legitimacy. The gentlemens conventions on the leadership of these institutionsan American at the head of the World Bank, a European at the head of the IMFcan no longer be justified at all. More open, transparent and democratic processes must be introduced for choosing the leadership. The IMFs executive board should be expanded to ensure more representation from global-majority countries, especially from Africa. For important decisions, a double-majority voting mechanism would ensure that decisions had the support of principal shareholders as well as the majority. There should also be a general increase in quotas and shares to reflect the changed contours of the global economy.
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