imf world bank past present future

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Mandates: promote stability of the international financial system (IMF); promote economic development (WB).

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IMF promotes stability of the international financial system. WB promotes economic development . International monetary system: the gold standard.

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Page 1: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Mandates: promote stability of the international financial system (IMF); promote economic development (WB).

Page 2: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

International monetary system: the gold standard A system under which the value of a nation’s monetary

unit was backed by gold

Gold standard conditions

Define the monetary unit in terms of a certain quantity of gold

Fixed relationship between stock of gold and the domestic currency

Allow gold to be freely exported and imported

Page 3: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Gold flows

This would result in exchange rates that are fixed

Domestic macro adjustments

The gold standard implies changes in the domestic money supply of nations, which affects prices, real output and employment

Advantages of gold standard

Stable exchange rates resulting from the gold standard reduces uncertainty and risk

The flow of gold between countries caused shifts in the supply and demand curves and automatically corrects balance of payments deficits or surpluses

Page 4: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Disadvantages of gold standard

Nations must accept domestic adjustments in the form of higher unemployment or inflation

Countries must have sufficient reserves of gold

Demise of the gold standard

During the Depression years of the 1930s

Page 5: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Bretton Woods monetary system Bretton Woods conference 1944

Adjustable peg system of exchange rate emerged

A system by which members of the IMF were obligated to define their monetary units in terms of gold (or US dollars), establishing par rates of exchange between the currencies of all other members, and to keep their exchange rates within 1 per cent of these par values

Page 6: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

IMF and pegged exchange rates Stabilisation funds

Suppliers of both foreign and domestic moneys and gold held with the central bank or treasury for the purpose of intervention in the foreign exchange market to maintain the par value of the exchange rate

IMF credit

Provided short-term loans to nations with temporary or short-term balance of payments deficits out of currencies and gold contributed by member nations

Page 7: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Bretton Woods monetary system Fundamental imbalances: adjusting the peg

Countries running persistent balance of payments deficits ran out of reserves and were unable to maintain its fixed exchange rate

Demise of the Bretton Wood

Dilemma: dollars and the deficits

Emergence of floating rates

Page 8: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Managed float An exchange rate system where central banks

buy and sell foreign exchange to smooth out short-run or day-to-day fluctuations in rates

Encourages international trade and finance, while allowing for trend or long-term exchange rate flexibility to correct fundamental payments disequilibria

Liquidity and special drawing rights Special drawing rights are bookkeeping entries

at the IMF, available to IMF members in proportion to their IMF quotas, that may be used to settle payments deficits or satisfy reserve needs in place of foreign exchange or gold

Page 9: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

The Bretton Woods System

and the International Monetary Fund-IMF IMF

In July 1944, 44 representing countries met in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire to set up a system of fixed exchange rates.

All currencies had fixed exchange rates against the U.S. dollar and an unvarying dollar price of gold ($35 an ounce).

It intended to provide lending to countries with current account deficits.

It called for currency convertibility.

Page 10: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Goals and Structure of the IMF

The IMF agreement tried to incorporate sufficient flexibility to allow countries to attain external balance without sacrificing internal objectives or fixed exchange rates.

Two major features of the IMF Articles of Agreement helped promote this flexibility in external adjustment:

IMF lending facilities

IMF conditionality is the name for the surveillance over the policies of member counties who are heavy borrowers of Fund resources.

Adjustable parities

Page 11: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Convertibility

Convertible currency

A currency that may be freely exchanged for foreign currencies.

Example: The U.S. and Canadian dollars became convertible in 1945. A Canadian resident who acquired U.S. dollars could use them to make purchases in the U.S. or could sell them to the Bank of Canada.

The IMF articles called for convertibility on current account transactions only.

Page 12: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

IMF: 3 main functions Surveillance: (economic analysis/advice): appraise each

member’s exchange rate policies within overall analysis of general economic situation. Multilateral: World/Regional Economic Outlooks; Global

Financial Stability Report;

Bilateral: Annual assessment (Article IV consultation); financial sector (FSAP); standards and codes.

Financial assistance: loans to support countries with BoP problems and low income countries (concessional loans, Policy Support Instrument, external shocks facility (ESF)).

Technical assistance: advice/support on technical issues related to macroeconomic policy.

Page 13: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Why the Bretton Woods System Was Created Avoid Past Mistakes -Disastrous economic policies

that contributed to Great Depression of the 1930s and WW II

- Protectionism

- Tariff wars

- Competitive Devaluations

Rebuild confidence in international cooperation and international financial system

Page 14: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Such "beggar-thy-neighbor" policies devastated the international economy; world trade declined sharply, as did employment and living standards in many countries.

Page 15: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Roles of IMF and World Bank IMF Promote global financial stability Exchange rate stability (balanced growth of trade) Forum for international monetary cooperation Temporary financial assistance to members experiencing

balance of payments difficulties

World Bank Reconstruction and economic development after WWII Long-term economic development Project financing, including infrastructure, energy,

education, health

Page 16: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Both IMF and WB share the common objective of raising living standards of their member countries with distinct mandates: WB promotes long-term economic development while IMF promotes international financial stability (stable exchange rates) and facilitates the growth of trade.

Page 17: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Internal and External Balance Under the Bretton Woods System The Changing Meaning of External Balance

The “Dollar shortage” period (first decade of the Bretton Woods system)

The main external problem was to acquire enough dollars to finance necessary purchases from the U.S.

Marshall Plan (1948)

A program of dollar grants from the U.S. to European countries.

It helped limit the severity of dollar shortage.

Page 18: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Speculative Capital Flows and Crises

Current account deficits and surpluses took on added significance under the new conditions of increased private capital mobility.

Countries with a large current account deficit might be suspected of being in “fundamental disequilibrium”under the IMF Articles of Agreement.

Countries with large current account surpluses might be viewed by the market as candidates for revaluation.

Page 19: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

The External Balance Problem of the United States The U.S. was responsible to hold the dollar price of

gold at $35 an ounce and guarantee that foreign central banks could convert their dollar holdings into gold at that price. Foreign central banks were willing to hold on to the

dollars they accumulated, since these paid interest and represented an international money par excellence.

The Confidence problem The foreign holdings of dollars increased until they

exceeded U.S. gold reserves and the U.S. could not redeem them.

Page 20: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Special Drawing Right (SDR)

An artificial reserve asset

SDRs are used in transactions between central banks but had little impact on the functioning of the international monetary system.

Page 21: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Worldwide Inflation and the Transition to Floating Rates

The acceleration of American inflation in the late 1960’s was a worldwide phenomenon.

It had also speeded up in European economies.

When the reserve currency country speeds up its monetary growth, one effect is an automatic increase in monetary growth rates and inflation abroad.

U.S. macroeconomic policies in the late 1960s helped cause the breakdown of the Bretton Woods system by early 1973.

Page 22: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Who Governs the IMF? IMF governed by member countries, through Board of

Governors(1 governor per country). Meets annually.

Subset of governors--International Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC)--advises Board of Governors. Meets 2 x year.

Page 23: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Funding, Quotas, Voting Power IMF capital base consists of membership quotas: the

financial contributions made by member countries. Total quotas nearly $300 billion.

Quotas broadly determined by their economic position relative to other countries, and reviewed regularly.

A country’s quota determines its voting power and access to financing.

Page 24: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

When you become a member you must pay in a certain sum of money; we call it a quota.

The bigger your economy, the bigger your quota. The United States is the biggest economy in the world and

its quota is the largest in the Fund; it represents about 17% of total quotas or about $40 billion.

Think of IMF as a credit union. All members put money in

the bank, and when a member needs money, the other members lend it money under certain conditions. The quotas members pay in are the main source of funding of IMF.

Note that just like when you put money in a bank the money still belongs to you, the money countries put in the Fund is still theirs; they merely transfer some of their monetary assets to the Fund, but it is still part of their reserves.

Page 25: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Reforms to increase share of developing countries Quotas raised for China, Turkey, Korea, Mexico in

2006.

April 2008 approved:

further increase in quota/votes for mainly developing countries (including China)

formula more closely based on GDP

regular 5-yearly reviews

Page 26: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Distribution of quotas US %17

Europe % 41

Americas %10

Asia and Pacific % 20

Africa % 5

Middle East % 7

Page 27: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Global financial crisis Financial turmoil: loose monetary policy and

regulation led to excessive leverage and risk.

“Sub-prime”problem sparked off financial turmoil, leading to world recession.

Page 28: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

World economy slowing sharply Role of Fund

Early warning signs risks in sub-prime

Financial assistance

Policy advice

Multilateral assessments, distillinginternational experience

Page 29: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Actions and issues

Moving quickly to help affected emerging countries. Stand ready to lend over $200 billion. Offering policy advice.

New short-term liquidity facility: help countries with sound fundamentals that face acute liquidity pressures. Fast/flexible, no conditionality.

Questions of resources and new roles in global financial architecture.

Page 30: IMF World Bank Past Present Future

Summary In an open economy, policymakers try to maintain internal

and external balance.

The architects of the IMF hoped to design a fixed exchange rate system that would encourage growth in international trade.

To reach internal and external balance at the same time, expenditure-switching as well as expenditure-changing policies were needed.

The United States faced a unique external balance problem, the confidence problem.

U.S. macroeconomic policies in the late 1960s helped cause the breakdown of the Bretton Woods system by early 1973.