Beyond the world creditors' cartel
One group of financiers seems to be doing nicely out of the global
recession, the International Monetary Fund and other International
Financial Institutions (IFIs) are enjoying a return to relevance and
lining up for increased funding.
The London G20 Summit in April was the IMF's big comeback gig. In
2007 the fund's loan book was down to just $20 billion, now its capital
is set to triple to $750 billion, plus permission to issue $250 billion
in 'special drawing rights' (the fund's quasi-currency which allows
member countries to borrow from each others' reserves).

Since September 2008 a range of East European and ex-Soviet states
have taken out new loans. So too have Pakistan, El Salvador, and
Iceland, the fund's first Western European client since Britain in 1976.
The World Bank and regional development banks are also getting in on
the party. In Latin America, the World Bank's regional vice president
Pamela Cox says she expects lending to triple in 2009 to $14 billion.
The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), the most active IFI in the
region, expects to lend $18 billion, its typical loan portfolio is under
$8 billion. And the development banks are queuing up behind the IMF with
their caps out for capital increases, the Asian Development Bank wants
to triple its capital to $165 billion; the IDB is asking for an extra
$50 to $80 billion on top of its current $101 billion.
Why now? The IFIs, says Vince McElhinny of the Bank Information
Center, a group that monitors them, are opportunists at heart. Just like
any private bank or corporation they fight for market share, and as the
world economy and global capital markets grow they need to increase
their lending apace or lose relevance. The freezing of world capital
markets, particularly severe in emerging markets, has created a need
which they can seize as opportunity.
The Institute of International Finance predicts private net capital
flows to emerging markets of $141 billion in 2009, down from $392
billion in 2008, after a record $890 billion in 2007. The IFIs see
themselves helping to fill this gap.
But the issues at stake here go beyond the IFIs' own agendas. On the
one hand, their revival implies a reassertion of US and global North
dominance. They aren't called 'Washington-based' just as a matter of
real estate, the United States has a 17 percent voting share on the IMF
and World Bank, enough to give it a veto on some major changes; Europe
and the United States control the top management positions.
On the other hand, the story underscores how parts of the global
South are gaining in economic power. In the crises of the 1990s, or so
the neo-liberal story went, the IMF stepped in to clean up the messes
made when fragile Third World economies exploded. This time around
things are very different: the mess is in the North, and the likelihood
is that the emerging economies of Asia and Latin America will emerge
from it stronger and more independent. (It's important to note, though,
that large areas in the South, notably Africa, are not part of this
story, nor is Eastern Europe.)
The so called BRIC nations in particular (Brazil, Russia, India,
China) are getting the bargaining power to back up their claims on the
global financial system. Will these claims be met within the existing
institutions, or by creating a new financial architecture that bypasses
Washington altogether? The future of the IFIs is a key arena in which
global rebalancing of economic power is playing out.
New Financial Architecture?
In May 2007 finance ministers from Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela,
Bolivia, and Ecuador signed the 'Quito declaration' in the Ecuadorian
capital. The plan includes a regional monetary fund and moves toward a
South American single currency, but the first step is the creation of
the Banco del Sur, a new regional development bank. While the bank's
launch is behind schedule, this March its constitution was agreed to,
with an initial capitalization of $7 billion. Besides the original five,
Paraguay and Uruguay are also members. (Even Colombia had announced its
support before its late, 2007 row with Venezuela over hostages.)
| The aim of
Banco del Sur is to replace the Washington based lenders
altogether with institutions run by and for South America. Maria
Jose Romero, who researches the IFIs at the Third World
Institute in Montevideo, encapsulates this spirit. "In
responding to the crisis Latin American countries have two
options", she says. "We can return to the old institutions and
the failed recipes of the 1990s, or we can move forward with
alternatives". |
The aim of Banco del Sur is to replace the Washington based lenders
altogether with institutions run by and for South America. Maria Jose
Romero, who researches the IFIs at the Third World Institute in
Montevideo, encapsulates this spirit. "In responding to the crisis Latin
American countries have two options", she says. "We can return to the
old institutions and the failed recipes of the 1990s, or we can move
forward with alternatives".
For many Latin American countries a return to the IMF is politically
out of the question. According to Mark Weisbrot, co-director of the
Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, the decline of
the IMF started with the Asian financial crisis over a decade ago.
After the fund's failure to act as emergency lender of last resort to
Asian banking systems in 1997, those states moved to build up sizeable
currency reserves, determined not to be dependent on the fund again;
others followed suit.
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International Monetary Fund |
This turning away has been more dramatic in Latin America, where IMF
policies are blamed for precipitating the 1998 crisis in Argentina which
led to the collapse of its banking system and eventually to its 2002
default. Argentina and Bolivia both paid off the last of their debts to
the fund in 2006; in April 2007 Ecuador announced it had paid off its
IMF loans and requested the fund withdraw its country manager; the same
month Venezuela announced itself debt-free, and a few weeks later said
it would withdraw from fund membership altogether. When Daniel Ortega
won the Nicaraguan presidential election in May 2007 he promised the
country would be "free from the fund" within five years.
How has this freedom-from-Washington line held in the current crisis?
U.S.-friendly Mexico was the first to sign up for the new Flexible
Credit Lines the IMF is granting without conditions to 'pre-approved'
Governments, followed by Colombia, though neither has yet drawn on them.
So far only El Salvador and Costa Rica have taken out new loans.
In sharp contrast to Eastern Europe, most Latin American states had
healthy reserve cushions coming into the crunch. And with commodity
prices now rising again, it may be that the region's anti-IMF resolve is
not going to face the test many had anticipated.
As for Banco del Sur, the arrival of crisis no doubt slowed the
process: domestic firefighting comes before regional cooperation. But,
according to Romero, in the medium term it will help push change:
"The crisis has focused attention to the failings of the existing
financial system", she says. "It is helping build the impetus for Banco
del Sur, as well as for moves to settle bilateral trade in local
currencies [rather than dollars], which is the first step towards
monetary union, and for broader South-South cooperation initiatives".
To be fair, Banco del Sur may not live up to proponents' hopes. With
just $7 billion in capital, the bank won't be in the same league as the
Washington-based IFIs. Nor is there any immediate plan to create an
emergency monetary fund-an Ecuadorian proposal to that effect has been
dropped. And the principle of one country one vote, perhaps the biggest
rallying point of all, has been modified: equal votes will apply only on
loans under $70m, above which approval is required from members with 2/3
of the capital contributions.
Finally, there is still no clarity on the focus of lending.
Campaigners hope for a true emphasis on poverty reduction and projects
to build regional cooperation, and have scored the provision of a
socially focused "audit board." But some fear that more conservative
members could push Banco del Sur toward being just one more development
bank.
Across Asia, there are parallel developments. A proposal by Japan to
set up an Asian Monetary Fund met the same fate as an earlier
Malaysian-backed scheme called the East Asian Economic Caucus, both were
dropped after expressions of disapproval from the IMF and U.S.
officials.
But now the Chiang Mai Initiative, a longstanding plan for a system
of swap arrangements between the central banks of the southeast Asian
countries plus China, Japan, and South Korea is expected to come on line
this year, and the proposed size of the scheme was upped to $120 billion
in February.
Chiang Mai is linked to the IMF (members need IMF agreements in place
to withdraw more than 20 percent of the total), but some see it leading
towards an eventual independent regional fund. For now, though, at least
officially, the talk is usually of "complementing," not supplanting, the
IMF.
Rise of the BRICs
If the Quito project is the idealistic side of the regionalization
movement, the BRIC bloc is global power shift as real politik. The BRICs
together now account for 22 percent of world production (by purchasing
power parity), up from 16% ten years ago and rising.
Even as they move ahead with building regional institutions
independent of the IFIs, the BRICs are pushing for more power within the
Washington-based institutions. Increased say at the IMF is one of the
four governments' main demands.
In March 2008 China's vote share was raised all the way up to 3.7
percent, putting the world's most populous country on a par with Belgium
plus the Netherlands, combined population 27 million. The BRICs jointly
muster a 9.82 percent quota.
Courtesy: Dollars and Sense
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