ABSTRACT

The International Monetary Fund has been criticised from both the right and the left of the political spectrum with the right arguing that it is too interventionist and creates more problems than it solves and the left on occasion demanding that it be abolished altogether. What seems almost beyond question is that the IMF needs to be reformed.
Defining a future role for the IMF will always be a controversial issue, but vital to any considerations will be a measured assessment of how it has operated in the past. This excellent new book from an internationally respected expert on the IMF intends to do just that. Starting with an historical background tracing the evolution of the IMF, the book goes on to cover such themes as:
*The circumstances under which countries turn to the IMF
*The various aspects of IMF conditionality
*Institutional issues such as lending facilities and how the fund is resourced.
Bringing together an array of articles, this excellent new book will undoubtedly be required reading for anyone with a serious interest in development studies as well as being an eye-opening read for policy makers involved with the IMF.

chapter 1|30 pages

A suitable case for treatment?

Understanding the ongoing debate about the IMF

chapter 2|13 pages

Borrowing from the IMF

The policy implications of recent empirical research

chapter 3|24 pages

IMF lending

How is it affected by economic, political and institutional factors?

chapter 4|25 pages

IMF programmes — do they work?

Can they be made to work better?

chapter 5|20 pages

The effectiveness of conditionality and the political economy of policy reform

Is it simply a matter of political will?

chapter 6|17 pages

IMF programmes

Is there a conditionality Laffer curve?

chapter 8|22 pages

The IMF's role in mobilizing international capital

Is there a catalytic effect?

chapter 9|16 pages

Restructuring the IMF's lending facilities

chapter 10|15 pages

Resourcing the Fund

Direct borrowing from private capital markets

chapter 11|17 pages

Crisis averter, crisis lender, crisis manager

The IMF in search of a systemic role

chapter 12|32 pages

The IMF and developing countries

A review of the evidence and policy options

chapter 14|23 pages

The political economy of the SDR

The rise and fall of an international reserve asset