The Paris Peace Conference
Economics was far from being a high priority at the Paris peace conference of 1919. The borders of Europe had to be redrawn one by one, and that task alone took up most of the six months of high-level meetings. A means had to be found to pay the costs of the war and the costs of rebuilding, and solving that problem was about all the economics that any of the leaders had the patience for. They created the League of Nations, but its economic functions were poorly defined and never did gel into an effective role.1 They created the International Labour Organization, but its role was specialized and limited.
The conference’s neglect of economics did not result from a failure to understand the importance of international trade for prosperity and thus for maintaining the peace. As the quotation at the head of this prologue shows, Woodrow Wilson had made this relationship clear in his “fourteen points” speech to the U.S. Congress in January 1918. Instead, the neglect of economics occurred largely because the limitations of the invisible hand were not well understood. For a generation or more, the international gold standard had provided a measure of stability with little need for overt cooperation. The challenge seemed to be simply to avoid imposing barriers to trade or otherwise interfering with markets.
In the economic turmoil that followed the war, that passive approach was not nearly enough. Some countries remained on the gold standard, but others did not. Without clear guidance or any institutional check on behavior, competitive devaluations and punitive tariffs became a common temptation for a quick fix to economic ills. Margaret MacMillan (2001) is surely right in arguing that the Versailles treaty cannot be held solely responsible for these and other ills of the twentieth century, but neither can it be absolved from blame.
What does this experience have to do with the IMF? A quarter century afterward, it was very much on the minds of those who were drawing up the designs for the new institution. In the view of John Maynard Keynes (1883–1946), the head of the British delegation, the “contractionist pressure on world trade” brought on by the “special protective expedients which were developed between the two wars” resulted in large measure from futile efforts “to protect an unbalanced position of a country’s overseas payments.” Creation of an “international clearing union” would obviate the need for such “forced and undesired dodges” (Horsefield, 1969, pp. 3–18). Without the clearing union (which eventually morphed into the IMF), the expected persistent creditor position of the United States would depress world economic growth and drive the world back into protectionist policies, regardless of how quickly or well production and trade could be reconstructed after the war.
Harry Dexter White (1892–1948), the chief drafter of the IMF charter for the U.S. delegation, was equally impressed by the need to avoid the passive errors of Versailles. His initial plan noted that during “the last twenty years” (that is, throughout the interwar period), countries had often imposed protectionist policies because they lacked adequate gold reserves, and it warned that the same problems would arise and would constitute a major barrier to the growth of trade after the war. An international monetary fund would enable countries in that position to economize on their gold reserves and thus avoid recourse to trade barriers, payments barriers, and bilateral clearing schemes (Horsefield, 1969, pp. 37–82).
As early as 1935, when France and Great Britain were contemplating currency devaluations that were aimed at improving their competitive positions but that threatened to spark a vicious cycle of retaliatory actions, White argued that the U.S. Treasury should intervene by encouraging an international agreement to stabilize exchange rates (Boughton, 2002). That led to the Tripartite Agreement of 1936 and set the stage for more comprehensive and institutionalized agreements later on. When the Articles of Agreement for the IMF were adopted at Bretton Woods in 1944, they specified that one purpose of the institution was “to avoid competitive exchange depreciation.”
It is important to note that for both Keynes and White the motivating principle for creating the IMF was to engender postwar economic growth by establishing an institution that would prevent a relapse into autarky and protectionism, not just to avoid a recurrence of the Depression. The impetus was less the Depression than the necessity of rebuilding and engendering economic growth after the war.
The Great Depression
In a major study of the history of the international monetary system in the twentieth century, Michael Bordo and Barry Eichengreen (1998) argued that the Great Depression of the 1930s was the “defining moment” for the system. Without the Depression as a catalyst, they concluded, the necessary political support to create the postwar system could never have emerged. That claim seems exaggerated, because the dangers of financial chaos were already apparent before the Depression, and the effects would have been seriously damaging even if the world had muddled through the 1930s without a full-scale and persistent state of depression. Nonetheless, the Great Depression certainly was a major influence on the initial design of the IMF.
The Depression amplified the negative consequences of Versailles, as an implosion of international trade interacted with domestic policy errors to deflate both output and prices around the world. It severely tested the confidence of analysts and voters in the efficacy of free markets and strengthened belief in an activist role for the public sector in economic life.
It thus became easier and more natural to start discussions on a postwar framework from the assumption that an intergovernmental agency with substantive powers would be beneficial and even essential for the international financial system.
The combined effects of Versailles (the absence of a stabilizing system in international finance) and the Depression were important influences on the mandate of the IMF adopted at Bretton Woods in 1944. Article I of the Articles of Agreement, which sets out the purposes of the Fund, includes the objective of using IMF lending to provide member countries “with opportunity to correct maladjustments in their balance of payments without resorting to measures destructive of national or international prosperity.”
Article IV, as originally drafted at Bretton Woods, set out a system for achieving that purpose by establishing a system of fixed but adjustable exchange rates through agreements to be reached under the auspices of the Fund. U.S. Treasury staff made the case for such a system by evoking the specter of what had occurred throughout the interwar period: “Long before the war, the necessary monetary and financial basis for international prosperity had been weakened by competitive currency depreciation, by exchange restriction, by multiple currency devices,” and the like (Horsefield, 1969, pp. 136-82). The new institution would obviate the need for such unilateral and destructive actions.
The Second World War
The third major historical influence on the IMF was the Second World War, which provided both the impetus and the context for reforming the international system. When the United States entered the war in response to the bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 1941, Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau, Jr. put Harry White in charge of international economic and financial policy and asked him to come up with a plan for remaking the system once the war was over. As it happened, White had already sketched out a rough plan for an international stabilization fund, and he was able to produce a first draft within a couple of months.
On the other side of the Atlantic, John Maynard Keynes was developing a plan for an international clearing union to be run jointly by Britain and the United States as “founder-States.”2 Though less overtly multilateral than White’s scheme, and based on the British overdraft system rather than on White’s rather complicated proposal for currency swaps (Boughton, 2002, 2004), Keynes’s clearing union was similar in its essence to White’s stabilization fund. During the next two years of discussion and negotiation, the two plans would meld into a draft for the IMF charter.
The IMF was created in the midst of the war, at the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference at Bretton Woods in July 1944. Keynes had tried to limit the involvement of countries other than Britain and the United States, fearing that a “great monkey house” would result if all of the wartime allies were invited. White, however, insisted on a multilateral conference, partly because he seems to have sensed that the project would otherwise fail and partly because he doubtless wanted to neutralize the force of Keynes’s intellect and personality.
The importance of Bretton Woods as a wartime event was that it took advantage of a window of opportunity to create a multilateral financial system.
Both before and after the war, too much suspicion and national self-interest were at play for such a sweeping agreement to be possible. Even in 1945, when the U.S. Congress and the U.K. Parliament were to ratify the Articles of Agreement, passage was far from easy (Gardner, 1956). Again, White invoked the specter of Versailles. Asked, in a hearing in the U.S. House of Representatives, what would happen if Congress refused to ratify the agreement, White replied, “I think history will look back and indict those who fail to vote the approval of the Bretton Woods proposals in the same way that we now look back and indict certain groups in 1921 who prevented our adherence to an international organization designed for the purpose of preventing wars.”3 Such arguments carried the day in 1945. Within three years, however, when negotiators tried to complete the system by creating an International Trade Organization, the multilateralists were outmanned, and the proposal failed.4
The other major influence of the war on the IMF was that it left the United States in virtual control of the world economy. With Britain heavily dependent on American largesse, Keynes had few cards to play in his efforts to shape the postwar system to his country’s advantage. Of the other major allies, France was equally powerless and the Soviet Union was politically isolated and intellectually detached.
As a consequence, the financial structure of the IMF would be based on the U.S. dollar, rather than on an international currency of its own making. Its lending power would be limited in size and scope, and the Fund would lack most of the powers of a central bank. Its headquarters would be neither in London nor even in New York, but in Washington where the U.S. Treasury could exert a strong gravitational pull.
For the next three decades, the IMF would be essentially a dollar-centric institution, with the United States providing most of its lendable resources and effectively controlling most of its lending decisions.
The Rise of Multiple Economic Centers
Once the war was over and the world economy—and world trade—began to recover, U.S. economic hegemony was gradually eroded. The first to rise from the ashes was Western Europe. Through a combination of national drive, international support—from the U.S. Marshall Plan, the World Bank, and eventually the IMF—and a home-grown multilateralism in the form of the Common Market and the European Payments Union, much of Europe was growing rapidly and increasingly open to multilateral trade and currency exchange by the late 1950s. The Federal Republic of Germany joined the IMF in 1952 and quickly became one of the world’s leading economies. Next came Asia: Japan joined the Fund in 1952, and by the 1960s it was on its way to joining the United States and Germany on the top rung of the economic ladder. Then the 1970s saw the rise of economic power in Saudi Arabia and other oil-exporting countries of the Middle East. In 30 years, the U.S. share of world exports had fallen from 22 percent to 12, while its share of official international reserves dropped even more dramatically, from 54 percent in 1948 to 12 percent in 1978.
As the balance of economic and financial power became more widely dispersed, more and more currencies became fully convertible for current account and even capital transactions. Trading partners grew at different rates and with different mixes of financial policies. Pressures on fixed exchange rates and on the limited supply of gold and U.S. dollars became increasingly frequent and more severe. The IMF responded in 1969 by amending its Articles and creating special drawing rights (SDRs) as a supplement to existing reserve assets, but that action was too limited to deal with the underlying problem of differential pressures. As a result, even before the first oil shock in 1973, the original Bretton Woods system of fixed but adjustable exchange rates had become unviable. A second amendment, adopted in 1978, acknowledged that exchange rates among key currencies were likely to float or at least be allowed to adjust more frequently than the old system could have handled.
The Cold War
Harry White had worked hard in 1944 to persuade the Soviet Union to join the IMF, in the belief that economic cooperation between the Soviet Union and the United States would be the key to postwar peace and prosperity. The Soviet delegation to Bretton Woods did sign the Articles ad referendum, but Joseph Stalin eventually refused to ratify the agreement, apparently because he feared (not without justification) that Fund policies would be largely controlled by the west (James and James, 1994).
When that tension segued into the Cold War, White’s vision of universal membership was dashed. Poland withdrew from membership in 1950. Four years later, Czechoslovakia was forced to withdraw. Shortly after taking power in 1959, Fidel Castro pulled Cuba out.
For more than three decades after Mao Zedong took control of China, the U.S. government blocked efforts by the People’s Republic to be seated as China’s representative on the IMF Executive Board. Most other countries in the Soviet or Chinese spheres of influence simply did not join. Not until the 1980s would the trend be reversed with the seating of China and renewed membership for Poland (Boughton, 2001b, Chapter 19).
The obvious effect of the Cold War on the IMF was this limitation on membership. In the terminology of the period, it included the first world and much of the third, but the second was missing from the table.
The IMF became largely a capitalist club that helped stabilize market-oriented economies.5 The more subtle and difficult question concerns the effect on the staff and its analytical work. The bulk of IMF analysis has always been mainstream and centrist, viewed from the perspective of the dominant strain of Anglo-Saxon economics.
The leading universities of North America, the United Kingdom, and Australia have been the main training grounds for much of its professional staff. Martha Finnemore, a political scientist who has studied a number of large organizations, has even claimed that the Pentagon displays more intellectual diversity than the IMF.6
Would this centrist dominance have been weaker, with a broader range of views on economic policy represented (perhaps at some cost of efficiency and effectiveness), if the Fund’s membership had been universal from the outset? That seems unlikely. The shift to universal membership in the 1990s and the corresponding geographic broadening of the staff7—in Finnemore’s terminology, an increase in “passport diversity”—had little analytical impact. Moreover, the influence of Latin American economic thought—exemplified by the dependencia theories of Raúl Prebisch (1971) and others at the UN Economic Commission on Latin America8—was never strong in the IMF despite the presence of large numbers of economists from the region on the Fund staff from the outset. Much the same could be said regarding the lack of influence of Austrian and German institutional economics. Analytical diversity and internal dissent have been more prominent in the World Bank (with the same membership) than in the IMF, albeit less so than in the nearly universal United Nations secretariat. The influence of mainstream western thinking at the IMF—an influence that the staff itself would regard, with some justification, as reflecting best practices in the economics profession—is a more deeply seated phenomenon than can be explained by Cold War politics.
African Independence
When the IMF began its work in 1946, Africa played a marginal role. Of the 40 original member countries, only three were in Africa: Egypt, Ethiopia, and South Africa. (Liberia participated in the Bretton Woods conference but chose not to join until 1962.) Most of the continent was under colonial rule and was not invited to participate. That situation began to change in 1957 when Ghana and Sudan, both newly independent countries, applied for membership and were readily accepted.
The presence and role of African countries in the IMF increased greatly from the late 1950s through the end of the 1960s as independence from colonial rule quickly snowballed. The emergence of Africa as a continent of independent nations joining the IMF had a major effect on the size and diversity of the institution, and it required a substantial intensification of the Fund’s involvement with and oversight of its borrowers.
Most of these countries, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, had and continued to have very low per capita incomes and were among the least economically developed countries in the world. Their economic problems tended to be structural even more than macroeconomic; rooted in the need for improvements in education, health, infrastructure, and governance rather than finance; and more deeply ingrained and persistent than in other regions. When the Fund began providing financial assistance to large numbers of low-income countries in the 1970s, it had to find ways to subsidize its lending, coordinate its assistance with other official agencies, and develop more extensive and structural-policy-reform conditions on its lending. In addition, the Fund sharply increased and broadened its provision of technical assistance to member countries, thereby expanding its work further beyond its original boundaries.
Lending to low-income countries also raised the riskiness of the IMF’s portfolio of sovereign claims.
By the mid-1980s, several African countries had fallen into protracted arrears on their borrowings from the Fund, which forced the institution to further reexamine its conditionality as well as its finances. Several countries with protracted arrears—mostly in Africa—were subject to “remedial” measures leading up to suspension of voting rights.
The IMF shifted its lending to low-income countries primarily through separately funded and subsidized trusts, and it coordinated that assistance closely with the World Bank. To qualify for those loans, countries had to develop their own strategies for generating economic growth and reducing poverty. The IMF still emphasized the need for countries to maintain sound macroeconomic policies, but that traditional focus was only the starting point for most of its work in Africa.
The Vietnam War
The intensification of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War in the 1960s and early 1970s would not by itself have had substantial effects on the IMF, other than the direct effect on Vietnam’s membership. When the government of South Vietnam was about to fall in April 1975, its officials tried desperately to borrow as much as they could from the IMF. The Fund refused to go along, and within a few months it recognized the Socialist Republic of Vietnam as the successor government (Boughton, 2001b, pp. 766–67).
The larger effect, however, was on the U.S. economy and its external payments position. In combination with a sizable increase in domestic spending on President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society programs, the rise in external military spending gradually worsened the overvaluation of the U.S. dollar under the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates.
In a series of spasms, the system dissolved between 1968 and 1973. With the dollar no longer convertible into gold, the precious metal could no longer serve a central or even a useful function in the international monetary system. The Vietnam War was by no means the sole culprit in this decline, but its catalytic role was certainly substantial (James, 1996, Ch. 8).
Globalization of Financial Markets
Private sector financial flows were of limited scope and importance when the IMF was founded. Trade flows were financed largely by trade credits, and cross-border portfolio flows were considered by most economists to be as much a potential destabilizing nuisance as a potential source of investment capital. Keynes and White therefore agreed that the IMF should be given the power to restrict capital flows in situations in which they seemed to be destabilizing. Article VI of the IMF charter prohibited member countries from borrowing from the Fund “to meet a large or sustained outflow of capital,” and it empowered the IMF to “request a member to exercise controls to prevent such use” and to declare the member ineligible to use the Fund’s resources if it failed to comply. More generally, it recognized countries’ right to impose capital controls as long as the controls did not restrict payments for transactions on the current account.
The range and importance of capital flows began to increase in the 1950s as European countries gradually reestablished convertibility. The first big increase, however, came in the 1970s, with the emergence of the Eurodollar and other offshore financial markets. It was driven further by the accumulation of “petrodollars” by oil-exporting countries in the 1970s and the recycling of those assets to oil-importing sovereign borrowers through large international banks.
By the 1990s, cross-border flows had become an essential source of finance for both industrial and emerging market economies around the world, and the structure of international financial markets had become so complex that their effective size could no longer be measured, much less controlled.
Largely in an implicit recognition of these developments, the IMF has never invoked the provisions of Article VI enabling it to encourage the imposition of capital controls. Nor has the prohibition on lending to finance a large or sustained capital outflow ever prevented the Fund from acting, simply because it can always be argued that an unchecked capital outflow will eventually cause problems for the current account. That justification was first made in 1956, when the United Kingdom borrowed to stop a speculative attack on the pound sterling in the wake of the Suez crisis (Boughton, 2001a), and it has been taken for granted ever since.
The globalization of capital flows eventually forced the IMF to reconsider its views on the desirability of open capital markets. For a time, the Fund took a quite liberal view and became skeptical of the wisdom of trying to control capital flows at all, but that position proved problematic once it became evident that capital markets were inherently volatile (Abdelal, 2007, Ch. 6; Chwieroth, 2010, Ch. 8; Boughton, 2012, Ch. 4).
By the 1980s, the essence of an emerging market economy was to supplement domestic saving with capital inflows to finance real investment. The availability of international bank loans and the ability to sell bonds internationally came to be seen as essential fuel for economic growth. Whenever a developing country lost access to capital inflows, it was likely to turn to the IMF to help fill the gap. By the late 1990s, helping countries strengthen their banking and other financial sectors so as to be less vulnerable to the vagaries of international financial markets was an important part of the IMF’s work with emerging market economies.
For a brief period (1995–97), serious consideration was given to amending the Articles of Agreement to make the oversight of capital market liberalization an explicit part of the IMF’s mandate. The financial crisis that afflicted East Asia in 1997 revealed the extreme dangers of openness to capital flows without first establishing a strong and well-regulated domestic financial system. That led the IMF to be more cautious in promoting openness, and it halted the effort to amend the Articles. After the global economic crisis that hit a decade later, the Fund shifted further. In 2010, it adopted a new policy that explicitly acknowledged the value of capital controls, at least in limited circumstances.
A second effect of financial globalization was that IMF financing became quantitatively marginalized, in the aggregate and for many potential borrowers. In the early days of the IMF, countries facing a financing gap in their balance of payments could often close it solely by borrowing from the Fund. By the 1980s, the object was more often to “catalyze” other capital inflows by borrowing relatively small amounts from the Fund in support of an agreed package of policy reforms, thereby hoping to convince other creditors that the country was a good prospect. What mattered was not so much the quantity of money as the quality of the reforms.
Globalization thus fundamentally altered the relationship between the IMF and its borrowing members and between the IMF and other official and private creditors.
A third effect was to weaken the “credit union” character of the IMF as a membership institution. The original idea was that most countries would probably undergo some periods as creditors and other periods as debtors. In the 1950s and 1960s, most of the large industrial countries fit that description. Of the seven largest economies, only Germany and the United States consistently maintained creditor positions in the Fund.
By the 1980s, however, the more advanced economies all were able to finance their external payments with private flows, and for many years (until the global crisis hit in 2007) the IMF’s members became divided into persistent creditor and debtor groups. The presumed commonality of interests among members was correspondingly diminished.
Two Decades of Debt and Capital Crises
In August 1982, a two-year gradual worsening of conditions in international debt markets suddenly accelerated and precipitated a major economic and financial crisis. A scattering of countries including Hungary, Morocco, Poland, and Yugoslavia had already seen their bank creditors turn their backs in 1981 and the first half of 1982. When the banks suddenly pulled out of Mexico, the crisis took on systemic proportions.
Within a few months, Argentina, Brazil, and Chile were also in trouble, and the crisis continued to spread. Not until 1990, when world interest rates were settling down and the bank debts of the most heavily indebted developing countries were being replaced by Brady Bonds, would it be possible to declare the crisis over (Boughton, 2001b, Part II).
The debt crisis had a transforming impact on the IMF, catapulting it into the role of international crisis manager. Previous international crises—Suez in 1956, the breakdown of the official gold market in 1968, the oil shocks of the 1970s—had intensified the demand for IMF lending without fundamentally changing the way the IMF worked (Boughton, 2000).
The 1982 crisis was different because the range and diversity of creditors involved made it unlikely that it could be resolved without the active involvement of an outside agent. The Fund’s Managing Director, Jacques de Larosière, intervened personally by refusing to approve stand-by arrangements for the crisis-hit countries until he received written assurances from bank creditors that they would share the burden by increasing their lending exposure. This “concerted lending” tactic was the first instance of what later became known as “private sector involvement” in debt workout procedures.
Over time, the specific tactics changed in response to evolving circumstances, but the role of the IMF as the central agency for coordinating the resolution of financial crises remained. For better or worse, the Mexican peso crisis of 1994–95, the Asian crises of 1997–98, and those that hit Russia, Brazil, Argentina, and Turkey in the next few years brought the IMF to the forefront of efforts to coordinate temporary official financing, reform macroeconomic and structural policies in the affected countries, and attempt to restore confidence and commitment on the part of creditors and investors. The frequency and the increasing scope and intensity of these crises eventually induced the IMF to reconsider aspects of its strategic analysis, especially regarding the institutional preconditions for a country to enjoy the benefits of a liberal policy toward private capital flows.
The East Asian crises of 1997–98 had an especially profound effect on the IMF. In part this effect was because the economic models that the staff used at the time proved inadequate for predicting or analyzing the shocks that hit Thailand, Indonesia, and the Republic of Korea within a few months in the second half of 1997. In each case, currency and maturity mismatches in the balance sheets of poorly regulated banks and other financial institutions played an important part in transmitting financial shocks to the real economy. Because the IMF typically focused on macroeconomic imbalances and problems with exchange rate policies, it missed some key signals in the run-up to the crises and faced delays in resolving problems after they erupted. Subsequently, the staff developed broader analytical models that incorporated more explicit information about financial soundness and shortcomings in balance sheets.9
A second reason that the Asian crises had such a major effect was that the IMF came under withering criticism from many quarters for the way it tried to manage the workout. Some of the criticism was misplaced. For example, the Korean crisis became known popularly as “the IMF crisis,” and an oft-repeated joke in Seoul was that IMF stood for “I’m fired.” In fact, after a brief rocky start, the IMF-supported program in Korea was quickly revised and succeeded in turning the economy back onto a strong growth path within a few months (Boughton, 2012, Ch. 11; Neiss, Tseng, and Gordon, 2009).
Much of the criticism, however, was warranted. For the first time, the IMF published a self-critical post mortem by the staff (Lane and others, 1999) that acknowledged that the Fund could and should have done more to restore confidence that the afflicted economies could recover and regain a sustainable path of economic growth. Throughout the next decade, the IMF devoted considerable energy to reviewing these and other criticisms and trying to improve its policies and practices.
Collapse of Communism
The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 enabled the IMF at last to become a (nearly) universal institution (Boughton, 2012, Ch. 2). In three years, membership increased from 152 countries to 172, the most rapid increase since the influx of African members in the 1960s. Many of the new members needed to borrow from the Fund, and all of them needed technical assistance and regular consultations. Consequently, the size of the IMF staff increased by nearly 30 percent in six years, with 15 new countries represented. The Executive Board expanded from 22 seats to 24 to accommodate Directors from Russia and Switzerland,10 and some existing Directors saw their constituencies expand by several countries.
As discussed above, this development had little impact on the philosophical underpinnings of the Fund’s work. It did, however, broaden the range of issues with which the staff had to struggle. How could formerly centrally planned economies best be transformed and integrated into the world market economy? Should those countries try to reform as fast as possible, or more gradually? What structural reforms were needed, and in what sequence? How could price levels be stabilized when individual prices were still so far out of equilibrium and large excess money balances were still outstanding? How important for stabilization was the independence of the central bank from government control? For the Fund to stay reasonably within its mandate of stabilizing economies and strengthening macroeconomic policies while meeting the genuine needs of its expanding membership, it required a balancing act that became harder and harder to sustain.
The Great Recession
For several years after the financial crisis in Argentina (2001–02), the world economy entered a period of relative calm. By mid-decade, many analysts were questioning the continuing relevance of the IMF. If and when the next crisis erupted, would countries call on the IMF as in the past, or would they find other ways to cope? Especially in East Asia but elsewhere as well, potentially vulnerable countries were accumulating unprecedented levels of foreign exchange reserves as insurance against a loss of access to capital inflows. In addition, regional institutions such as the Chiang Mai Initiative were springing up with the aim of helping avert or manage crises and thus avoid the stigma of asking the IMF for help.
In 2007, the collapse of the market for subprime mortgages in the United States triggered a widespread freeze of lending activity in advanced economies around the world. Large hedge funds and investment banks began to fail. The bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in September 2008 further accelerated the global loss of liquidity and generated a panic that brought on deep recessions in Europe as well as the United States. Despite the adoption of monetary and fiscal stimulus programs in a number of countries, the markets for sovereign debt in vulnerable countries essentially dried up. The scope of the downturn and the associated financial panic soon proved to be beyond the ability of national or regional institutions to manage. As a lender and crisis manager, the IMF was back in business.
One major effect on the IMF was that the Great Recession produced a demand for IMF support from European countries, whereas in the previous quarter century almost all Fund lending had been to less developed economies. By the end of 2011, the IMF had large outstanding lending arrangements with Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Romania, and Ukraine; a precautionary Flexible Credit Line with Poland; and smaller arrangements with several countries in eastern and central Europe. The program with Greece was particularly complex, with serious systemic implications including the risk of contagion to other European debt markets or even a possible breakup of the euro common currency area. Consequently, the program was designed and overseen by a novel arrangement known as the Troika, comprising the IMF, the European Commission, and the European Central Bank. The IMF was thus drawn into closer relationships with other official creditors than it had been in previous crises.
The Great Recession and the euro area crisis persuaded world leaders and the IMF management team that the IMF had to have more resources and that it had to update its ability to provide policy advice and financial assistance. The stock of outstanding SDRs had been essentially unchanged since the last allocation in 1981, so that it had become a negligible portion of total official reserves. In 2009, the Board of Governors agreed to allocate SDR 182.7 billion (about US$290 billion), which was 8 and a half times the previous stock. In addition, the Fund was authorized to triple its borrowing capacity to SDR 370 billion (about US$575 billion). To strengthen surveillance, the IMF introduced new analytical tools such as spillover and cluster reports. To enable more flexible responses to requests from member countries, it established new lending facilities, including notably the Flexible Credit Line and the Precautionary and Liquidity Line.
Conclusion
The IMF was created at a particular time in world history—during the Second World War—and was given a structure and mandate that reflected that time and those circumstances. The institution has changed greatly throughout the seven decades since Bretton Woods. Much of the volume of its lending became crisis-driven, and the Fund’s involvement in crisis prevention and resolution correspondingly intensified. To a large extent the IMF became divided into groups of creditor and debtor countries whose membership changed slowly over long periods of time. Its membership became much larger, more diverse, and nearly universal, and its responsibilities in global governance increased commensurately. The breadth of its involvement in policymaking in member countries, especially borrowing countries, vastly increased, though a concerted effort was eventually made to circumscribe that role.
If the events chronicled here had not affected the IMF along these lines, the institution would have become marginalized and even irrelevant. The motivation for the evolution of the IMF has been the need to meet shifts in demand—shifts in world economic and political conditions—not to satisfy forces from within seeking to reinvent the institution to hang on to a role once the original purpose had faded away.
The challenge for the IMF has always been to hold on to its vital center (the original narrow mandate to promote orderly payments adjustment and global financial stability) while adapting its activities to new circumstances and new ideas. Meeting that challenge became increasingly difficult in the 1970s and 1980s, when the advent of generalized currency floating, financial globalization, the need for multilateral crisis management, and financial demands from low-income countries all pressed new functions and responsibilities onto the Fund.
By the 1990s, when the Fund had to deal with all of those issues plus the need for rapid structural reforms in formerly centrally planned economies—including Russia, with its great geopolitical importance—“mission creep” may have been inevitable.
Even accepting that most of the changes in the Fund occurred for good reasons and probably could not have been avoided in any case, the argument for adhering to a consistent mandate and mission is not diminished. Institutions have limited resources and employ staff with specific skills and experience, and diffusing those resources imposes substantial costs. The commitments by the Fund at the beginning of the twenty-first century (IMF, 2001, 2002) to streamline and refocus its policy conditions, strengthen its cooperation with the World Bank, and initiate a comprehensive review of its structure and practices, were taken in recognition of that imperative. As much as the world had changed, the raison d’être for the IMF—compensating for the limited global reach of the invisible hand, the goal that first led Keynes and White to create institutions to promote multilateral cooperation—remained as vital as ever.