IMF:History of Limited Choices and Broken Promises
International Monetary Fund and the Inter-American Development Bank: A History of Limited Choices and Broken Promises - Part I
The following article, which is being published in two parts, explores the historically often unfriendly and adversarial relationship that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) have held with Latin America in the past and their attempt to play a reinvigorated role in the region as a result of the current financial crisis. After last month’s G20 Summit during which an agreement was brokered that will increase the IMF’s capitalization from $250 billion to $750 billion, with a special credit line designed for emerging markets, it appears that prospects may exist for the IMF and the IDB to play an increasingly meaningful role in the region.
These lending institutions have had a lackluster record throughout their history in Latin America. The rigid conditions that these lenders of last resort place on credit lines and their chronic adherence to neo-liberal monetary policies often has exacerbated economic crises in the region rather than contain them. COHA Research Associate, Will Petrik, analyzes whether there will be any meaningful modifications to the IMF and the IDB’s traditional lending approaches in the near future. He argues that in spite of the ostensibly consequential revisions to their lending policies, Latin American political leaders should still proceed with caution, as these institutions are still mainly governed by U.S. and European directors and, as a result, the economic and political interests of the region may not be adequately safeguarded or even represented.
Given the
complexity of this subject, COHA has divided the Petrik
article into two parts. The first part of the analysis will
address the deteriorating economic situation throughout much
of Latin America and the reemergence of these international
lenders in the region. More specifically, Petrik outlines
the lending policies of these institutions and their far
from always amicable relationship with borrowing nations.
The second part, to be published tomorrow, will delineate
the recent adjustments to the IMF and the IDB’s lending
policies and then question whether such emendations will
actually lead to a substantial change in their relationship
with Latin America, and whether there will be any
realignment in the balance of forces between financial
lenders and recipient countries.
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The global credit freeze is now trickling down upon the developing nations. Any prospect of a decoupling of industrialized and emerging market economies has largely faded over the past year. The lack of public and private capital in Latin America is exacerbated by several compelling factors: export volumes and commodity prices have precipitously declined, remittances are expected to fall by 11 to 13 percent this year, and the role for tourism, which is normally responsible for a large portion of the revenue earned by smaller Caribbean nations, is markedly retrenching. The Institute of International Finance (IIF) expects net private capital inflows to Latin America to decline by over 50 percent this year and regional trade to fall by 10.8 percent. This, in turn, will result in a sharp drop in Latin America’s trade surplus, falling from $92.2 billion in 2008 to $10.8 billion in 2009.
As a consequence of this protected economic decay, the region’s public and private sectors are strapped for cash, with domestic banks having limited financing capacity. A recent World Bank report entitled, “Swimming Against the Tide: How Developing Countries are Coping with the Global Crisis,” explains how nations in this sector along with small and medium-scale businesses are being squeezed out of international credit markets due to large-scale loans to industrialized nations. These hefty loans have allowed the U.S. and the European Union to finance massive economic stimulus packages and government bailouts aimed at resolving their own economies, but it has left smaller Latin American development projects, businesses and governments (as well as other developing nations) with limited borrowing options. In the current economic climate, investors have all but lost their appetite for risk and thus, whatever liquidity remains in the system has been reserved for only the most creditworthy borrowers. Poor nations, much like low income individuals, are often deemed unworthy of credit for two primary reasons: first, they do not have the necessary collateral; second, their governments often do not employ responsible monetary policies. As a result, the report suggests developing nations can be expected to face a financing gap between $270 billion and $700 billion.
In an attempt to respond to the
region’s demand for financial assistance, the
Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) had its 50th annual
meeting March 27-31 in Medellín, Colombia. The IDB
governors agreed that the bank needed to increase its
lending capacity by recapitalizing its funds. According to
the Wall Street Journal, the governors approved a
resolution ordering the managers of the IDB to
“immediately initiate a review of the need for a general
capital increase of the ordinary capital and replenishment
of the Fund for Special Operations” and formulate funding
proposals by the end of April in order to alleviate the
plight of the region immediately. Prior to the crisis, the
IDB had been annually lending roughly $8 billion. As a
result of growing demand for capital in Latin America and
the Caribbean, the bank increased that figure to $11.2
billion in 2008. The president of the IDB, Colombian
economist Luis Alberto Moreno, proposed a capital increase
from $100 billion to between $250 and $280 billion, which
would allow the bank to increase its lending figure to $18
billion in 2009.
Just days after the IDB meeting in
Medellín, the leaders of the world’s leading economies
reached a similar consensus at the G20 Summit in London, as
they committed to triple the International Monetary Fund’s
(IMF) budget from $250 billion to $750 billion. They also
pledged $250 billion for trade finance and $100 billion for
multilateral development banks, such as the World Bank and
the IDB. The G20 delegates called for more flexible lending
policies and a greater say for emerging economies in how the
IMF does its business.
History of the IFIs and the IDB
in Latin America
Latin American nations historically
have had relatively few financing options. As repeated
victims of boom and bust cycles and, most recently,
irresponsible fiscal policies during the 1980s and 1990s,
they were forced to borrow money from the World Bank, the
IMF, and the IDB. Theoretically, three different lending
institutions should provide the region with a variety of
choices and options for borrowing. However, the power
structure of these financial institutions is quite similar,
and their lending policies have traditionally been informed
by neo-liberal ideology. Inevitably, the social, economic
and political contracts these banks imposed on recipient
nations also have been quite similar from country to country
in the region.
As aforementioned, the organizational architecture of the World Bank, the IMF and the IDB are essentially congruent. They all operate under a system of corporate governance, in which a member nation’s quantity of shares and voting rights is directly proportional to its financial contribution to the institution. This gives the wealthiest nations a proportionately greater say in the decision making process. The IDB is somewhat of an exception, because just over 50 percent of the bank is owned by borrowing nations providing the framework for a more equitable structure of governance. However, the U.S. vote still carries more weight than any other nation in the bank, due to proportional representation. For instance, as a majority shareholder controlling “30 percent of IDB Board vote share and about 17 percent of World Bank and IMF shares,” the US has the authority to exercise vetoes over IMF, World Bank, and IDB decisions, according to the Bank Information Center (BIC). In comparison, Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, Colombia, Venezuela, Bolivia, and Ecuador combined control less than 6 percent of the World Bank, 4 percent of the IMF, and 33 percent of the IDB voting shares. Although emerging markets are becoming more powerful in the global economy, the IMF and the World Bank have not shifted accordingly to provide them with a greater stake in the process. The leadership selection for these organizations is indicative of this inherent discrimination ingrained in their institutional structure. The president of the World Bank, currently Robert Zoellick, is traditionally from the U.S., whereas the managing director of the IMF, currently Dominique Strauss-Kahn, is generally a European national.
IMF’s Structural Adjustments
In order for
Latin American nations to be eligible for loans from the
World Bank, the IDB, or high-income governments, they
traditionally had to meet a number of strict
conditionalities established by the IMF, known as Structural
Adjustment Policies (SAPs). This gave the IMF enormous
influence over domestic economic policies in borrowing
nations, as it was essentially the “gatekeeper” for
access to foreign credit. The SAPs included implementing
fiscal austerity (including public social spending cuts),
higher interest rates, the privatization of state owned
industries, and rapid liberalization of capital and
commercial markets. These imposed “structural
adjustments” were based on the neo-liberal economic theory
known as the Washington Consensus. Such policies often
resulted in disastrous social consequences for the majority
of poor people in South American countries. For instance,
per capita gross domestic product (GDP) had been growing
steadily in the region throughout the 1960s and 1970s, but
it dramatically slowed during the structural adjustments of
the 1980s and 1990s. This also was the time period when
Latin America experienced some of the highest inequality in
its living standards in the world.
The most notorious example of the social and economic devastation caused by the IMF’s structural adjustments was the 2001 Argentine crisis. The policies, which included pegging the peso to the dollar, were supported by the IMF under President Carlos Menem and his finance minister Domingo Cavallo. Their policies were widely thought to have perpetuated Argentina’s recession from 1998 to 2002. Furthermore, after Argentina’s banking system and currency all-but collapsed near the end of 2002 and beginning of 2003, the IMF offered virtually no assistance. Instead of following the IMF’s continually flawed economic advice, the Argentine government decided to default on its foreign and IMF debts, persuading the IMF to roll over its credit lines to Buenos Aires. According to the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), Argentina became the fastest growing economy in the Western hemisphere during the five years following its default in 2003, achieving its growth through policies opposed by the IMF, such as “a central bank policy that targeted a stable and competitive real exchange rate, an export tax, a freeze on utility price increases, and a hard line on negotiations over the defaulted debt.” The IMF’s unconstructive and almost mean-spirited advice during the crisis and its absence from the scene during Argentina’s boom further undermined the lending agency’s legitimacy in the region.
IDB’s Development
Model
The IDB’s legacy in the region, similar to
that of the IMF’s, has also included “development”
based on neo-liberal elements. In this respect, the IDB has
encouraged foreign investment and large infrastructure
projects, which allow foreign exporters to transfer goods
and extract resources. In theory, the wealth, jobs, and
benefits created by foreign companies were expected to
filter down to the urban and rural poor, but such policies
failed to yield such sanguine results as inequality grew in
the region.
Civil society groups held an alternative meeting during the recent IDB annual meeting, known as “The IDB: 50 Years of Financing Inequality,” in order to expose some of the inequity behind the IDB’s development schemes. A press release issued by the coalition mentions several IDB development projects which were harmful to communities and the environment because the projects directed wealth away from the land and communities in favor of the private sector. For example, the Cana Brava hydroelectric project in Brazil effectively removed displaced 800 families from their homes; they have yet to be compensated for their loss of land. According to César Gamboa, a representative of the Peru’s Rights, Environment and Natural Resources (DAR) NGO, the Camisea natural gas project in Peru “has harmed indigenous peoples living in voluntary isolation in the Amazonian rainforest. By driving pipelines deep into their ancestral territories, the project brought contact with workers carrying diseases that are deadly to these populations.” Rather than alleviate poverty, these unproductive projects often “destroy the social fabric and community networks necessary for indigenous survival,” according to the Center for International Policy (CIP). Rather than empowering communities to accumulate wealth and social capital by using their natural resources, the land is bought and the wealth of the land is enjoyed by a privatize (often foreign) company.
Although the IDB has been castigated for financing large infrastructure projects, IPS notes that the IDB’s power in deciding which ventures to finance is somewhat over-exaggerated, because it is primarily accountable to its shareholders—national governments and their own often divergent policies and initiatives. It should also be noted that the IDB recently announced a $20 million Emergency Liquidity Facility designed to help microfinance institutions respond to natural disasters and the economic crises. Although $20 million is a small fraction of the expected $18 billion disbursed this year, microfinance institutions do empower small-scale community projects and enterprises.
IFIs’ Decreasing
Significance
As a reaction to the World Bank, IMF and
IDB and the neo-liberal strategies these institutions have
continually imposed on Latin American nations, the populist
movements and leftist leaders of the region have sought
greater financial autonomy to pursue alternative
macroeconomic and development policies. Regional financial
institutions, such as Banco del Sur and the ALBA Bank, have
been established to decrease the region’s orthodox
dependence on foreign capital and the rigid conditionalities
attached to such funds. Correspondingly, several Latin
American governments had managed to free themselves from the
IMF’s influence by repaying loans early with only Peru and
Paraguay applying for new stand-by agreements in 2007,
according to BIC. A report from CIP supports this claim:
“In 2005, 80percent of IMF’s $81 billion loan portfolio
was to Latin America. By early 2008, Latin America
represented only 1 percent of the IMF portfolio… Prior to
the crisis, the total outstanding debt owed to the IMF in
Latin America had fallen dramatically to about $700
million.” The region’s governments had the discretionary
right to turn away from the IMF because they had budget
surpluses, rising credit ratings, and increasing reserves
due to high commodity prices and trade deals with China and
India. Nations such as Ecuador, Bolivia and Nicaragua also
had the help of oil-rich Venezuela providing financing and
support with little or no conditions, while Venezuela was
buying tens of millions of dollars in Argentine bonds.
During the boom cycle of the new millennium, Latin America
was beginning to break the chains of debt and financial
dependency on U.S. dominated institutions.
ENDS