Focus On The Corporation
by Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
IMF on the Ropes
There may be no single institution with greater pernicious influence in the
world than the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Now, for the first time,
the Fund faces a real challenge to its existence, at least in its current
form.
For two decades, the IMF has exerted a stranglehold over developing country
economies, denying them the funding they need to make foreign debt payments
and avoid default, unless they enact "structural adjustment" policies.
Structural adjustment can fairly be described as a virulent strain of
Reaganomics or Newt Gingrich's Contract with America. The basic idea of
these policies is to open countries' labor markets and natural resource
riches to multinationals, shrink the size and role of government, rely on
market forces to distribute resources and services, and integrate poor
countries into the global economy.
Key structural adjustment policies include: privatizing government-owned
enterprises and government-provided services, slashing government spending,
orienting economies to promote exports, lifting trade restrictions,
implementing higher interest rates, eliminating subsidies on consumer items
(such as foods, fuel, and medicines), and imposing tax increases.
Structural adjustment has been successful at its intended effort to
diminish the scope of government and integrate developing countries into
the global economy.
But it has increased suffering in developing countries immeasurably. In
most of the world's poorest nations undergoing structural adjustment,
poverty has increased, health care systems have collapsed and income
inequality has skyrocketed.
Developing countries that have done well in recent decades, primarily those
in Asia, including China, have succeeded by violating central tenets of
structural adjustment: they have maintained a strong government role in the
economy, and they have protected certain parts of their economy.
Not surprisingly, people in developing countries have protested strongly
against IMF policies. Countries throughout the world have witnessed "IMF
riots" following IMF-ordered lifting of price subsidies for goods such as
bread and gasoline.
But because the IMF derives it authority from rich countries, not the poor
nations, it has been able to weather these outbursts.
In the last two years, however, momentum against the IMF has grown in the
rich countries, as well as in the developing world.
The IMF's admitted mishandling of the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis made
the economic contraction in Asian nations much worse. The structural
adjustment agenda further slowed the Asian economies that had already
plunged into recession.
This incompetent performance finally sparked widespread criticism of the
Fund in the industrialized countries.
Meanwhile, the worldwide Jubilee movement is increasingly winning support
for the idea of debt cancellation for the poorest countries.
The IMF has deftly tried to turn these weaknesses to strengths. It adroitly
used the Asian financial crisis to win $90 billion in new funding from the
rich countries. The Fund needed more money, proponents claimed, to keep the
crisis economies afloat.
And the IMF has sought new monies so it can offer very modest debt relief
through its Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility--now known as the
Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility, an Orwellian twist--in exchange for
countries agreeing to years of closely supervised structural adjustment.
But these jujitsu tactics may be running out of steam. Political momentum
against the IMF ratcheted up in recent weeks, when the Meltzer Commission,
a bipartisan advisory commission to the U.S. Congress, released its report.
While the members of the commission disagreed on many matters, they agreed
on two. First, the IMF (along with the World Bank) should use its existing
resources to cancel all debts owed to these institutions by the poorest
countries. Second, the IMF should get out of the business of long-term
lending--the kind of development loans to which structural adjustment
conditions are normally attached.
The report has shifted the terms of debate over the IMF in the United
States and the U.S. Congress. Unfortunately, the IMF is only seeking a
relatively small amount of new money from Congress--and if that money goes
through, Congress will lose most of its influence over the monetary agency
for several years (until the next funding request).
But the shift in policy circles is now being accompanied by a new
progressive public protest against the IMF in the United States. On April
16, during the IMF's annual spring meeting, thousands of demonstrators will
take to the streets of Washington, D.C. to protest the deadly toll of IMF
policies.
Infused with the spirit of Seattle that shut down the World Trade
Organization meetings, the demonstrators are planning a direct action to
shut down the IMF, as well as a massive, permitted rally and march (for
more information on the April 16 actions, see http://www.a16.org).
Street demonstrations against the IMF in Washington have the potential to
awaken people in the United States to the needless suffering imposed by the
Fund on people throughout the world, and to mobilize a critical mass of
opponents in the country that exercises a dominant influence at the Fund.
The IMF's reign of terror may finally be winding down.
(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, DC-based
Multinational Monitor. To subscribe to Focus on the Corporation, send an
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