Th
ese activities have been central to the development of
global trade since a stable system
of international payments
and exchange rates is necessary for trade to take place
between two countries. In carrying out its responsibilities,
the IMF has three main functions that are known as
surveillance, technical assistance and lending. Th
e fi rst two
are in line with its mission of promoting global growth
and economic stability by encouraging
countries to adopt
sound economic policies. Th
e third function is used where
member countries experience diffi
culties in fi nancing their
balance of payments.
The World Bank
Like the IMF, the World Bank was established at the
Bretton Woods Conference.
Its function is to provide
fi nancial support for internal investment payments such
as building new roads, improving infrastructure and
constructing new health facilities.
It is best described as the World Bank Group through
the activities of its fi ve constituent agencies. Th
ese are:
■
International Bank for Reconstruction
and Development
(IBRD)
■
International Finance Corporation (IFC)
■
International Development Association (IDA)
■
Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA)
■
International Centre for Settlement of Investment
Disputes (ICSID).
Th
e IBRD and IDA provide low- or no-interest loans and
grants to countries that do not have favourable access
to international credit markets. Th
erefore, the focus of
activities is very much on developing economies.
Grants
are only provided to the world’s poorest economies. Loans
cover areas such as:
■
health and education – in order to enhance human
development in a country for improving sanitation and
combating AIDS
■
agriculture and rural development – for irrigation
programmes and
water supply projects
■
environmental protection – for reducing pollution and for
ensuring that there is compliance and pollution regulation
■
infrastructure – roads, railways, electricity
■
governance – for anti-corruption reasons.
Loans tend to be linked to conditions that involve wider-
reaching changes being made to the economic
policies of the
recipient economies. But the IMF and World Bank have been
criticised for imposing the so-called ‘Washington Consensus’
on developing economies. Th
e Washington Consensus
was devised by a US economist, who proposed ten economic
policy prescriptions. Th
ese policy prescriptions, which
include
privatisation, deregulation and trade liberalisation,
are based on increasing the role of market forces. Such an
approach may increase effi
ciency, which would increase
productive potential. It may, however, increase income
inequality and may not work if
the problem that is holding
back development is not too much government intervention
but market failure such as a lack of fi nancial markets.
The headquarters of the IMF
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