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David D. Driscoll Revised September 1998 External Relations Department, Publication Services
[ Origins ] [ Quotas
and Voting ] [ Organization ]
[ Operations ] [ Exchange Arrangements
] [ Surveillance ] [ Consultations
] [ Financial Function ] [ Source
of Finance ] [ Financial Assistance
] [ Charges ] [ SDRs
] [ Services ] [ Recent
Activities]
The IMF is the enemy of surprise. Members of the IMF believe that keeping other countries informed of their intentions regarding policies that influence payments by the government and residents of one country to those of another, rather than making a secret of such policies, is to everyone's advantage. They also believe that occasionally modifying those policies (by reducing export taxes, for instance), when fellow members agree that this is in the common interest, will help international trade to grow and will create more and higher-paying jobs in an expanding world economy. The IMF lends money to members having trouble meeting financial obligations to other members, but only on condition that they undertake economic reforms to eliminate these difficulties for their own good and that of the entire membership. Contrary to widespread perception, the IMF has no effective authority over the domestic economic policies of its members. It is in no position, for example, to force a member to spend more on schools or hospitals and less on buying military aircraft or constructing grandiose presidential palaces. It can, and often does, urge members to make the best use of scarce resources by refraining from unproductive military expenditures or by spending more money on health and education. Unfortunately, members can, and often do, ignore this well-intentioned advice. In this case, the IMF can only try, through rational argument, to persuade members of the domestic and international benefits of adopting policies favored by the membership as a whole. There is no question of forcing a member to adopt any policy. What authority the IMF does possess is confined to requiring the member to disclose information on its monetary and fiscal policies and to avoid, as far as possible, putting restrictions on exchanging domestic for foreign currency and on making payments to other members. Its members have given the IMF some authority over their payments policies because these policies are of paramount importance to the flow of money between nations and because experience has confirmed that without a global monitoring agency the modern system of payments in foreign currency simply does not work. Changing money is the central point of financial contact between nations and the indispensable vehicle of world trade. Each currency, be it the dollar, franc, or the Gambian dalasi or Haitian gourde, has a value in terms of other currencies. The relative or exchange values of the world's major currencies now fluctuate continuously, to the delight or misery of currency traders, and are reported daily in the financial columns of the newspapers. Although the operations of the exchange market, where money (much the same as such commodities as wheat or apples) is bought and sold, may seem remote from daily life, these operations profoundly affect us all. Most commonly, we experience the reality of exchange values abruptly when we travel abroad as tourists and find we must first buy local money before we can buy anything else. Purchasing foreign currency is a fact of life not only for tourists, but also for importers, banks, governments, and other institutions that must acquire foreign currency, often on a very large scale, before they can do business abroad. Take, for example, a bicycle importer in Copenhagen who tries to buy from a dealer in Tokyo 100 Japanese bicycles for sale at 30,000 yen each. The Japanese dealer will not accept payment in Danish kroner, for which he has no immediate use: he cannot pay his suppliers or employees in kroner or even buy his lunch at the local noodle shop using Danish money. He wants yen. The Danish importer must therefore have enough kroner converted to make up the 3 million yen for the shipment. It is not difficult to change kroner into yen (any bank in Copenhagen will be happy to do so), because both the Danish and Japanese governments are committed to the convertibility of their respective currencies. Neither country restricts the exchange of its national currency into another national money, and this greatly facilitates international trade. Fortunately, widespread convertibility now permits easy exchange between most of the world's major currencies. Convertibility has allowed virtually unrestricted travel, trade, and investment during the past quarter of a century and has resulted largely from the cooperation of member nations with the IMF in eliminating restrictions on buying and selling national currencies. The current confident expectation that one currency will be converted into another on demand makes it difficult to imagine circumstances in which this was not the case. And yet it was largely in reaction to circumstances of widespread inconvertibility and related exchange problems that the international community decided over 50 years ago to work out these problems in a common forum that was to become the International Monetary Fund. The need for an organization like the IMF became evident during
the Great Depression that ravaged the world economy in the 1930s. Most
of us are familiar with that era through dramatic photographs of farms
eroding away in duststorms and of lines of jobless men waiting to enter
soup kitchens. The Depression was devastating to all forms of economic
life. Banks failed by the thousands, leaving bewildered depositors penniless,
agricultural prices fell below the cost of production, land values plummeted,
abandoned farms reverted to wilderness, factories stood idle, fleets waited
in harbors for cargoes that never materialized, and tens of millions of
workers walked the streets in search of jobs that did not exist.
Several international conferences convened during the 1930s to address world monetary problems ended in failure. Partial and tentative solutions were clearly inadequate. What was required was cooperation on a previously unattempted scale by all nations in establishing an innovative monetary system and an international institution to monitor it. Fortunately, in a happy coincidence, two bold and original thinkers, Harry Dexter White in the United States and John Maynard Keynes in the United Kingdom, put forward almost simultaneously in the early 1940s proposals for just such a system, to be supervised not by occasional international meetings but by a permanent cooperative organization. The system, reacting to the needs of the times, would encourage the unrestricted conversion of one currency into another, establish a clear and unequivocal value for each currency, and eliminate restrictions and practices, such as competitive devaluations, that had brought investment and trade to a virtual standstill during the 1930s. After much negotiation under difficult wartime conditions, the international community accepted the system and an organization to supervise it. Final negotiations for establishing the International Monetary Fund took place among the delegates of 44 nations gathered at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, U.S.A. in July 1944. The IMF began operations in Washington, D.C. in May 1946. It then had 39 members. The IMF's membership now numbers 182 countries. Membership is open to every country that conducts its own foreign policy and is willing to adhere to the IMF charter of rights and obligations. All major countries are now members of the IMF. The formerly centrally planned economies of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union have become members and are at various stages of completing their transition to market economies. Members can leave the IMF whenever they wish. Cuba, Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic and Slovak Republic), Indonesia, and Poland have in fact done so in the past, although all except Cuba eventually rejoined the institution. On joining the IMF, each member country contributes a certain
sum of money called a quota subscription, as a sort of credit union deposit.
The founding nations reasoned in 1944 that the IMF would function most efficiently and decisions would be made most responsibly by relating members' voting power directly to the amount of money they contribute to the institution through their quotas. Those who contribute most to the IMF are therefore given the strongest voice in determining its policies. Thus, the United States now has more than 265,000 votes, or about 18 percent of the total; Palau has 272, or 0.002 percent of total votes. Many people view the IMF as an institution of great authority and independence and assume that it decides the best economic policies for its members to pursue, dictates these decisions to the membership, and then makes sure its members conform. Nothing could be further from the truth. Far from being dictated to by the IMF, the membership itself dictates to the IMF the policies it will follow. The chain of command runs clearly from the governments of member countries to the IMF and not vice versa. In setting out the obligations of individual members to the IMF, or in working out details of lending arrangements with a member, the IMF acts not on its own but as an intermediary between the will of the majority of the membership and the individual member country. The top link of the chain of command is the Board of Governors, one from each member, and an equal number of Alternate Governors. As the Governors and their Alternates are ministers of finance or heads of central banks, they speak authoritatively for their governments. The oddly named Interim Committee (it has existed since the 1970s) gives them advice on the functioning of the international monetary system, and a joint IMF/World Bank Development Committee advises them on the special needs of poorer countries. Since Governors and Alternates are fully occupied in their own capitals, they gather only on the occasion of annual meetings to deal formally and as a group with IMF matters. During the rest of the year, the Governors communicate the wishes of their governments for the IMF's day-to-day work to their representatives who form the IMF's Executive Board at headquarters in Washington. The 24 Executive Directors, meeting at least three times a week in formal session, supervise the implementation of policies set by member governments through the Board of Governors. At present, eight Executive Directors represent individual countries: China, France, Germany, Japan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Sixteen other Executive Directors each represent groupings of the remaining countries. The Executive Board rarely makes its decisions on the basis of formal voting, but relies on the formation of consensus among its members, a practice that minimizes confrontation on sensitive issues and promotes acceptance of the decisions ultimately made. The IMF has a staff of about 2,600, headed by a Managing Director, who is also chairman of the Executive Board, which appoints him. By tradition, the Managing Director is a European, or at least a non-American. (The President of the World Bank is traditionally a U.S. national.) The international staff comes from 122 countries and comprises mainly economists, but also statisticians, research scholars, experts in public finance and taxation and in financial systems and central banking, linguists, writers and editors, and support personnel. Most staff members work at IMF headquarters in Washington, though a few are assigned to small offices in Paris, Geneva, Tokyo, and at the United Nations in New York, or represent the IMF on temporary assignment in member countries. (At present, 70 "resident representatives" are assigned to 64 member countries.) Unlike Executive Directors, who represent specific countries, staff members are international civil servants; they are responsible to the membership as a whole in carrying out IMF policies and do not represent national interests. On joining the IMF, a member country undertakes to keep other members informed about its arrangements for determining the value of its money in relation to the money of other countries, to refrain from restricting the exchange of its money for foreign money, and to pursue economic policies that will increase in an orderly and constructive way its own national wealth and that of the whole membership. Members obligate themselves to follow this code of conduct. As noted above, the IMF has no means of coercing them to live up to these obligations, although it can and does exert moral pressure to encourage them to conform to the rules and regulations they have freely agreed to observe. And the IMF does, of course, have somewhat greater leverage over the policies of members that borrow from it. If a country persistently ignores its obligations to the IMF, the rest of the membership working through the IMF may declare the offending member ineligible to borrow money or, as a last resort, can ask the member to resign from the institution. Normally, however, it is taken for granted that the member wishes to cooperate as far as it can with the general aims of the IMF (otherwise it would not have bothered to join), and that any lapse in fulfilling the self-imposed obligations of membership is a result of factors beyond the member's immediate control. Over the years the membership has assigned to the IMF a variety of duties appropriate to the changing needs of the times, and the IMF has adapted flexibly within its mandate in carrying out these duties. The membership has charged the IMF with the responsibility of supervising a cooperative system for the orderly exchange of national currencies, lending money to members to reorganize their economies so as to cooperate better within the system, and providing other services--notably, technical assistance and training--to assist members in implementing policies beneficial to the whole membership. In its early years, all members joining the IMF undertook to follow
the same method of calculating the exchange value of their money. They
did so according to what was called the par (equal) value system. In those
days, the United States defined the value of its dollar in terms of gold,
so that one ounce of gold was equal to exactly $35. The U.S. government
stood behind this definition and would exchange gold for dollars at that
rate on demand. On joining the IMF, all other members had to define the
exchange value of their money in terms of gold or in terms of the U.S.
dollar (of the weight and fineness in effect on July 1, 1944). Members
kept the value of their money within 1 percent of this par value, and if
they felt a change would help their economy, they discussed the contemplated
change with other members in the forum of the IMF and obtained their consent
before implementing it. The par value system had the advantage of keeping
currencies stable and predictable, a great help to international investors,
traders, and travelers, but over the years it also developed a number of
disadvantages. It was a wrenching experience, attended by great political
risk, for a government to change the par value of its currency, and each
change in the par value of a major currency tended to become a crisis for
the whole system. The par value system served the world well for about
25 years. It came to an end in the early 1970s, however, when U.S. gold
reserves proved inadequate to meet the demand for gold in exchange for
the dollars presented by those who regarded gold at $35 an ounce to be
an irresistible bargain.
The change from the par value to the current open exchange system may seem to imply a loss of influence by the IMF. In fact, that is not the case, as the current approach requires the IMF to be even more deeply involved with members' economic policies that have bearing on money's exchange value. In changing over to the current system, the membership has asked the IMF to penetrate beyond the exchange value, which, after all, is the final result of a range of economic policies, to examine all aspects of the member's economy that cause the exchange value to be what it is and to evaluate the economy's performance candidly for the entire membership. In short, the current system demands greater transparency of members' policies and permits more scope for the IMF to monitor these policies. The IMF calls this activity "surveillance," or supervision, over members' exchange policies. Supervision is based on the conviction that strong and consistent domestic economic policies will lead to stable exchange rates and a growing and prosperous world economy. And IMF surveillance has been bolstered in the wake of both the Mexican financial crisis of 1995 and the still-unfolding Asian financial crisis. Through periodic consultations conducted in the member country,
the IMF determines whether a country is acting responsibly and openly in
setting the conditions under which its currency is bought and sold by governments
and private citizens of other countries; it also obtains information on
the country's overall economic position. These consultations provide an
opportunity for the IMF to encourage the elimination of any restrictions
the country might have imposed on the immediate transfer of its domestic
money into foreign currencies. In the early years of the IMF, these periodic
consultations were mandatory only for members that had placed restrictions
on currency exchange, but since 1978 the IMF undertakes them with all members.
Besides these periodic discussions, the IMF also holds special consultations with those countries whose policies have a major influence on the world's economy. These special consultations review the world economic situation and evaluate anticipated economic developments. The IMF publishes the results of these reviews twice a year in its World Economic Outlook. This publication contains valuable information and projections for the world economy and, by highlighting various policy options, assists member countries in coordinating their own economic policies with anticipated policy developments in other member countries. The IMF is now well known to the general public for lending billions of dollars to the countries at the center of the Asian financial crisis and to Russia. Earlier, its name was probably most associated with large loans connected with the debt crisis of the 1980s and then, in the mid-1990s, with very large credits to Mexico and Russia. During 1983 and 1984, for example, the IMF lent some $28 billion to member countries having difficulty meeting their financial obligations to other members. In 1995, it extended to Mexico a credit of nearly $18 billion and to Russia more than $6.2 billion to help tide these countries over a difficult period of reform. And as of July 23, 1998, the IMF had committed about $35 billion to Indonesia, Korea, and Thailand to help them deal with their financial crises, and some $20.4 billion to Russia to support its economic program for 1998. The swift and well-publicized reactions of the IMF to the latest crises may mislead observers into thinking that the IMF is first and foremost a lending institution. This is not the case, as the IMF remains primarily a supervisory institution for coordinating efforts to achieve greater cooperation in the formulation of economic policies. Nevertheless, its financial function is a significant activity. The quota subscriptions, or membership fees referred to earlier,
constitute the largest source of money at the IMF's disposal. Quotas are
now in theory worth about $193 billion, although in practice this sum is
deceptively large. Because member countries pay 75 percent of their quotas
in domestic money, and because most national currencies are rarely in demand
outside the countries issuing them, approximately half of the money on
the IMF's balance sheets cannot be used. Although there are occasional
exceptions, only 20 or so currencies are borrowed from the IMF in the course
of a typical year, and most potential borrowers from the IMF want only
the major convertible currencies: the U.S. dollar, the Japanese yen, the
deutsche mark, the pound sterling, and the French franc.
The IMF lends money only to member countries with payments problems, that is, to countries that do not take in enough foreign currency to pay for what they buy from other countries. The money a country takes in comes from what it earns from exports, from providing services (such as banking and insurance), and from what tourists spend there. Money also comes from overseas investment and, in the case of poorer countries, in the form of aid from better-off countries. Countries, like people, however, can spend more than they take in, making up the difference for a time by borrowing until their credit is exhausted, as eventually it will be. When this happens, the country must face a number of unpleasant realities, not the least of which are commonly a loss in the buying power of its currency and a forced reduction in its imports from other countries. A country in that situation can turn for assistance to the IMF, which will for a time lend it foreign exchange to help it put right what has gone wrong in its economic life, with a view to stabilizing its currency and strengthening its trade. A member country with a payments problem can immediately withdraw from the IMF the 25 percent of its quota that it paid in gold or a convertible currency. If the 25 percent of quota is insufficient for its needs, a member in greater difficulty may request more money from the IMF and can over a period of years borrow cumulatively three times what it paid in as a quota subscription. This limit, however, does not apply to loans under the IMF's special facilities, including the Supplemental Reserve Facility, created in December 1997 to provide short-term financing to members faced with a sudden and disruptive loss of market confidence (Korea was the first country to use the SRF). In lending to a member more than the initial 25 percent of quota, the IMF is guided by two principles. First, the pool of currencies at the IMF's disposal exists for the benefit of the entire membership. Each member borrowing another's currency from the pool is therefore expected to return it as soon as its payments problem has been solved. In this way, the funds can revolve through the membership and are available whenever the need arises. Second, before the IMF releases any money from the pool, the member must demonstrate how it intends to solve its payments problem so that it can repay the IMF within its normal repayment period of three to five years (which in certain cases can be extended up to ten years). The logic behind these requirements is simple. A country with a payments problem is spending more than it is taking in. Unless economic reform takes place, it will continue to spend more than it takes in. Since the IMF has an obligation to the whole membership to preserve the financial integrity of its transactions, it lends only on condition that the member use the borrowed money effectively. The borrowing country therefore undertakes to initiate a series of reforms that will eradicate the source of the payments difficulty and prepare the ground for "high quality" economic growth. Along with its request for a loan, the potential borrower presents to the IMF a plan of reform, typically undertaking to reduce government expenditure, tighten monetary policy, and deal with certain "structural" weaknesses (such as the need to privatize inefficient public enterprises). More recently, the IMF's experience with its member countries' adjustment efforts has shown that reforms need to be broader and deeper to achieve high-quality growth. This means more attention to ensuring that countries have adequate social safety nets in place to cushion the effects of adjustment on the poor parts of the population, good-equality government spending (including more attention to spending on health and education), and good "governance" (with minimal scope for corruption and with openness of fiscal policy and policymaking). The specifics of each IMF-supported adjustment program are selected by the member, and hence the program of reform is the member's, not the IMF's. The IMF's main concern is that the policy changes are sufficient to overcome the member's payments problem and do not cause avoidable harm to other members. Depending on the seriousness of the payments problem and the amount the member wishes to borrow, the Executive Directors, representing the entire membership, judge whether the reform measures are in fact sufficient and whether the IMF can reasonably expect repayment. If the Executive Directors are satisfied that the reforms will solve the problem, the loan is disbursed in installments (usually over one to three years) tied to the member's progress in putting the reforms into effect. If all goes well, the loan will be repaid on time, and the member, with necessary reforms now in place, will come out of the experience economically stronger. The IMF lends to member countries with payments problems under a variety of mechanisms that differ according to the specific problems they address. Two frequently used mechanisms are Stand-By Arrangements and Extended Arrangements. These provide a line of credit to a member having trouble in staying current in its foreign obligations to support a program of one to two years (in the case of Stand-By Arrangements) or three to four years (in the case of Extended Arrangements) to allow it time to reorganize its finances, restructure its economy, and take measures to restore growth. During the period of the program, the member can borrow from the IMF in installments up to the maximum value of the credit to make its foreign payment, on condition that it stays with its program of policy adjustments. Over the past 25 years, the IMF has also lent to its members through a mechanism designed to address a temporary decline in the member's export earnings for reasons substantially beyond the member's control. Let us say that frost destroys most of the coffee beans that a member exports in order to earn the foreign exchange (U.S. dollars, for example) that goes to pay for the member's day-to-day financial obligations to other members. The member then applies to the IMF for a loan--known as compensatory financing--related to its loss of export revenue, that will supply it with the necessary dollars to stay current in its obligations until the next coffee harvest is exported and the normal flow of revenues resumes. Since 1988, the IMF may also provide "contingency" financing to help members with IMF-supported adjustment programs maintain these programs in the face of a wide range of unforeseen external shocks. Another mechanism makes money available at a very low interest rate to poor nations while they radically restructure their economies to rid themselves of long-standing inefficiencies. A novel feature of this method of lending--for structural adjustment--requires close coordination with the World Bank, the IMF's sister institution that works exclusively for the economic development of the world's poorer nations, in putting in place reforms that will eradicate the source of the payments difficulty and prepare the ground for economic growth. This mechanism is funded by voluntary contributions from member countries that, in a spirit of cooperation, forgo the market rate of interest they could otherwise have obtained on those funds. The IMF's better-off members have made available nearly $20 billion to finance this mechanism. If a member borrows money from the IMF, it pays various charges to cover the IMF's operational expenses and to recompense the member whose currency it is borrowing. At present, the borrower pays in service charges and commitment fees about 1/4 of 1 percent of the amount borrowed and in interest charges about 4 1/2 percent (except for the structural adjustment mechanism described above, for which interest charges are much less). An IMF member earns interest on its quota contributions only if other members borrow its currency from the pool. How much the member earns varies but lately has been about 4 percent of the amount of its currency that other members have borrowed from the IMF. Both the interest charges a borrower pays to the IMF and the recompense a creditor receives from the IMF are slightly below market rates in keeping with the cooperative spirit of the institution. By supplying convertible money to a member country through these
various means, the IMF helps stabilize the exchange value of the member's
currency. The IMF is also able to create a special type of money to add
to the reserve assets that most countries keep on hand as a cushion against
any payments that might have to be settled in foreign exchange. As a rule
of thumb, most countries find it prudent to keep on hand enough reserves
to cover a few months' worth of payments. During the 1960s it appeared
that the world economy might be slowed down because reserves were inadequate
to back the robust economic expansion the world was then experiencing.
The principal reserves during that era were gold and U.S. dollars, and
there was a problem with the supply of each. The supply of gold was limited
by the difficulty of finding and raising it from the ground. New supplies
of gold could not keep pace with the rapid expansion of the world economy.
The supply of dollars to be kept on reserve by other nations depended on
the willingness of the United States to spend and invest abroad more money
than it took in. Since the United States could not be counted on to continue
to do so indefinitely, a long-range shortage of reserves was feared. In
response to this possibility, its member governments empowered the IMF
to issue the asset called the SDR (special drawing right), which members
add to the holdings of foreign currencies and gold they keep in their central
banks. A value based on the average worth of the world's five major currencies
is assigned to the SDR. Today there are 21.4 billion SDRs in existence,
worth nearly $29 billion, accounting for about 2 percent of all reserves.
Besides supervising the international monetary system and providing financial support to member countries, the IMF assists its membership by making technical assistance available to member countries in certain specialized areas of its competence; by running an educational institute in Washington and offering training courses abroad; and by issuing a wide variety of publications relating to all aspects of international monetary matters and IMF operations. Because they sometimes lack expertise in highly technical areas of public finance and central banking, or wish to have a second opinion, many countries turn to the IMF for assistance in solving problems in these areas or in providing an expert to work with government financial agencies until sufficient domestic expertise is developed. Such calls for assistance were especially frequent during the 1960s and 1970s when scores of newly independent nations were suddenly faced with setting up central banks, issuing new currencies, devising tax systems, and organizing the other financial and monetary systems of a modern sovereign state. The IMF responded by sending out experts from its own staff or experienced consultants to impart the required knowledge and training. During the 1990s, the decision of the countries of Eastern Europe, the Baltic countries, Russia, and the other countries of the former Soviet Union to move from central planning to a market-based economy and to enter the international monetary system has placed heavier demands than ever on the IMF's capacity to furnish technical assistance. More recently, technical assistance for these countries has eased somewhat while it has increased for developing countries in Africa and the Middle East. Current requests are for specialized assistance in accounting, budget preparation, public spending management, design of monetary instruments, social benefits and social security systems, development of money markets, bank regulation and supervision, statistics, research, law, tax policy, and management. In financial year 1998 (May 1, 1997, to April 30, 1998), technical assistance accounted for 17 percent of the IMF's budget. Since its founding at headquarters in Washington in 1964, the IMF Institute has offered courses and seminars to over 10,000 officials from virtually all member countries whose work is closely related to the work of the IMF. Most participants are employees of finance ministries, central banks, and other official financial agencies. The Institute has been highly successful over the years in acquainting its participants with how the monetary system works and what part the IMF plays in its operation. Training at the Institute has also helped to standardize throughout the world the methods of gathering and presenting balance of payments, monetary, and financial statistics to the benefit of the entire membership. In addition, IMF courses and seminars are offered at the Joint Vienna Institute operated by the IMF and other international organizations, and at the newly created IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute. The IMF is also collaborating with training institutions in Africa, the Arab world, and in Latin America. Access to each member's fiscal, monetary, and external debt data has made the IMF a unique conduit of such information to the entire membership. The IMF regards sharing statistical data as indispensable to the cooperative character of the institution. Almost since its inception, therefore, it has issued monthly and annual statistical publications, such as International Financial Statistics, that not only keep member countries informed of the financial position of their fellow members but also constitute an unrivaled source of statistical information for banks, research institutes, universities, and the media. In an important initiative to develop standards to guide countries in disseminating more accurate and timely economic and financial statistics to the public, the IMF in 1996 opened an electronic bulletin board on the Internet. This bulletin board is designed to identify countries that have adhered to the standards and inform users where they may obtain the relevant data. The publication of financial data helps to make members' economic policies more transparent. It reinforces a trend of recent years, in which international organizations, commercial banks, academics, nongovernmental organizations, and the general public have increasingly looked to the IMF for information not readily available elsewhere. In addition to its statistical publications--and the semiannual World Economic Outlook report and the annual International Capital Markets report--the IMF puts out an Annual Report with comprehensive information on its work during the year under review; Occasional Papers on issues of finance, monetary policy, and developments of a national or regional nature; collections of Press/Public Information Notices (which summarize consultations with member countries) three times a year; Economic Issues pamphlets that describe important IMF research topics clearly and concisely; books and seminar volumes on a wide range of economic, financial, and legal topics; a quarterly academic journal (Staff Papers) comprising the results of economic research by IMF staff; Staff Country Reports on recent economic developments in member countries; the IMF Survey, a biweekly publication featuring articles on the IMF's work and on national economies and international finance; the quarterly Finance & Development; and large numbers of working papers and other staff studies. In addition to the dissemination of printed material, the IMF's website (http://www.imf.org) makes freely available all press releases and public statements of the IMF and the texts of all of the IMF's complimentary publications (and also the full text of the World Economic Outlook), as well as full texts of all staff working papers. The turbulent decade of the 1990s has presented the IMF with the most demanding challenges of its history. These new challenges have stimulated interest in ensuring that the IMF's mechanisms and operations fit the new world of integrated global markets for goods, services, and capital. In particular, the IMF has been continually reviewing its surveillance operations, including in the areas of banking soundness, data dissemination, and the promotion of good governance. By responding flexibly to the changing needs and global environment, the IMF continues to show itself an effective and relevant presence in international monetary affairs. Starting early in the decade, the IMF mounted a massive campaign to help the countries of Central Europe, the Baltic countries, Russia, and the other countries of the former Soviet Union in the difficult shift from centrally planned to market economies. Much of the effort focused on providing expertise in establishing those financial and economic structures (central banks, tax systems, currency convertibility, tariff regimes) essential for the functioning of a free-enterprise system, but financing was another important component of this support. As part of the IMF's continuing efforts to promote economic growth and sound policies in the developing countries, it is cooperating with the World Bank in an initiative to help the most heavily indebted poor countries. The initiative will help those countries that have a sound record of economic adjustment reduce their debt burdens to sustainable levels of debt service. In mid-decade, a financial crisis erupted in Mexico that showed the vulnerability of members to sudden shifts in market sentiment that lead to large and unpredictable capital outflows. Mexico moved quickly to enact a strong program of policy adjustments and the IMF swiftly approved, on February 1, 1995, a record financing package for a member country of $17.8 billion. This exceptional assistance was designed to give confidence to the international financial community and to stop contagion spreading from Mexico to other members. More recently, the outbreak of the Asian financial crisis resulted in a record loan of $20.9 billion to Korea in December 1997, as part of a major international support financial package. Very large loans were also extended to Indonesia ($11.2 billion in November 1997) and Thailand ($4.0 billion in August 1997). And in July 1998, serious economic and financial problems in Russia led to an $11.2 billion IMF loan to Russia to augment a previous $9.2 billion loan extended in March 1996. In the wake of the Mexican and Asian financial crises, the IMF has been focusing on preventing such crises in the future by strengthening surveillance of members' exchange rate policies and financial markets. It has taken steps to assess more candidly the potential risks attached to members' policies. It has also sought more timely and accurate data from members, more closely scrutinized members' financial sectors, and concentrated attention on countries where economic disturbances are likely to spill over to the international community. The Asian financial crisis has underscored the critical importance of members' publication of timely and accurate data; that surveillance must extend beyond the usual short-term macroeconomic issues, notably to cover financial sector policies; that the IMF must pay more attention to the interdependence of countries' policies and the risks of "contagion;" that "transparency" (or openness) of a country's policies is crucial to regaining the confidence of markets; and that effective IMF surveillance ultimately depends on members' willingness to take its advice. In addition, given the increased importance of private capital flows in the globalized world economy, the Interim Committee has endorsed the concept of an amendment to the IMF's charter (or Articles of Agreement) that would make the promotion of capital account liberalization one of its purposes and give the IMF appropriate jurisdiction over capital movements. The IMF is considering carefully all aspects of this issue, recognizing that moves toward capital account liberalization must be properly paced and sequenced in light of individual country circumstances. The call on the IMF to provide financial support for Russia, the Asian crisis countries, and Mexico, as well as to other developing countries, has led to exceptionally heavy demands on its resources. The IMF and its members are now considering expanding emergency financial resources and increasing quotas to meet the needs of its members in the current world environment. Also awaiting formal approval by members is an amendment to the IMF's charter to allow a special one-time allocation of SDRs to members.
11 SDR = US$1.32523 (as of August 24, 1998).
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