Jacob Martin
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I understand that. Hence it will be even more jarring of a change for the IMF loan repayments. I guess the exact impact would depend on how much the Pakistan debt is from the IMF w.r.t World Bank and other lenders that use GDP figures to base their loan repayment calculations. I've definitely read the impression that the World Bank is more forgiving and open to restructuring loan repayments in general....whereas the IMF is more the harsh taskmaster. A bit of the US vs EU mentality I guess.
It's all airy-fairy, I guess. Sample this gem from the IMF website about the difference in the purpose of the two institutions:
At Bretton Woods the international community assigned to the World Bank the aims implied in its formal name, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), giving it primary responsibility for financing economic development. The Bank's first loans were extended during the late 1940s to finance the reconstruction of the war-ravaged economies of Western Europe. When these nations recovered some measure of economic self-sufficiency, the Bank turned its attention to assisting the world's poorer nations, known as developing countries, to which it has since the 1940s loaned more than $330 billion. The World Bank has one central purpose: to promote economic and social progress in developing countries by helping to raise productivity so that their people may live a better and fuller life.
Contrast that with IMF:
The international community assigned to the IMF a different purpose. In establishing the IMF, the world community was reacting to the unresolved financial problems instrumental in initiating and protracting the Great Depression of the 1930s: sudden, unpredictable variations in the exchange values of national currencies and a widespread disinclination among governments to allow their national currency to be exchanged for foreign currency. Set up as a voluntary and cooperative institution, the IMF attracts to its membership nations that are prepared, in a spirit of enlightened self-interest, to relinquish some measure of national sovereignty by abjuring practices injurious to the economic well-being of their fellow member nations.
Two things:
1. If the IMF's understanding of the remedy to the Great Depression was that the problem was solved by allowing free exchange of currency, I don't know what to say.
2. The World Bank's stated objective seems to be more in line with what is required for poorer countries. The Structural adjustment programme inflicted by IMF on poor countries to ensure fiscal discipline is not what they need. Fiscal profligacy is the last thing on the mind of countries where basic needs of people - education and healthcare, are not met.
So why do countries patronize the IMF is the question the, I guess. IMF is more suitable to middle income or high income countries that are currently suffering from a bout of fiscal mismanagement, like Greece. They did some good work with the Greek government, and were instrumental in exposing the atrocious mismanagement of the Greek economy. Countries like India and Pakistan should avoid the IMF like the plague.