The painful reality the IMF ignores

The fund has again failed in its most urgent task - to reform itself

Joseph Stiglitz
Thursday October 2, 2003
The Guardian

It is six years since the IMF's fateful meeting in Hong Kong, just before
the global financial crisis. I was there. What a peculiar meeting it was. To
those paying attention, it was clear that a crisis loomed. Capital market
liberalisation was the culprit, exposing countries to the vagaries of
international capital flows - to both irrational pessimism and optimism, not
to mention the manipulation of speculators.
Yet the IMF was still lobbying to change its charter in order to force
countries to liberalise capital markets, ignoring the evidence that this did
not lead to enhanced growth or investment, but only to more instability. The
crises that erupted later that year undermined confidence in the IMF and led
to discussions about "reforming the global financial architecture".

Six years later, we can say that those discussions did not lead to much real
change. The US Treasury and the IMF knew, or at least hoped, that with the
passing of the crisis, global attention would turn elsewhere. On this point
they were right.

But change has occurred, though sometimes more in rhetoric than reality.
Today the IMF is more aware of the impact its programmes have on poverty -
though it still does not produce a "poverty and unemployment impact"
statement when it presents a programme. The fund has recognised the
importance of participation and ownership. No longer are programmes simply a
matter between the IMF, central bank governors and finance ministers. The
IMF has recognised that there was excessive conditionality, and that these
conditions led to a lack of focus.

· Joseph Stiglitz, professor of economics at Columbia University, is a Nobel
prize winner and author of Globalisation and Its Discontents.

Full article: http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1053904,00.html

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