What is the IMF?
The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank were created in
1944 at a conference in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, and are now based
in Washington, DC. The IMF was originally designed to promote
international economic cooperation and provide its member countries with
short term loans so they could trade with other countries (achieve
balance of payments). Since the debt crisis of the 1980's, the IMF has
assumed the role of bailing out countries during financial crises
(caused in large part by currency speculation in the global
casino
economy) with emergency loan packages tied to certain conditions, often
referred to as structural adjustment policies (SAPs). The IMF now acts
like a global loan shark, exerting enormous leverage over the economies
of more than 60 countries. These countries have to follow the IMF's
policies to get loans, international assistance, and even debt relief.
Thus, the IMF decides how much debtor countries can spend on education,
health care, and environmental protection. The IMF is one of the most
powerful institutions on Earth -- yet few know how it works.
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The IMF has created an immoral system of modern day colonialism that SAPs the poor
The IMF -- along with the WTO and the World Bank -- has put the
global economy on a path of greater inequality and environmental
destruction. The IMF's and World Bank's structural adjustment policies
(SAPs) ensure debt repayment by requiring countries to cut spending on
education and health; eliminate basic food and transportation subsidies;
devalue national currencies
to make exports cheaper; privatize national assets; and freeze wages.
Such belt-tightening measures increase poverty, reduce countries'
ability to develop strong domestic economies and allow multinational
corporations to exploit workers and the environment A recent IMF loan
package for Argentina, for example, is tied to cuts in doctors' and
teachers' salaries and decreases in social security payments.. The IMF
has made elites from the Global South more accountable to First World
elites than their own people, thus undermining the democratic process.
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The IMF serves wealthy countries and Wall Street
Unlike a democratic system in which each member country would have an equal vote, rich countries dominate
decision-making in the IMF because voting power is determined by the
amount of money that each country pays into the IMF's quota system. It's
a system of one dollar, one vote. The U.S. is the largest shareholder
with a quota of 18 percent. Germany, Japan, France, Great Britain, and
the US combined control about 38 percent. The disproportionate amount of
power held by wealthy countries means that the interests of bankers,
investors and corporations from industrialized countries are put above
the needs of the world's poor majority.
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The IMF is imposing a fundamentally flawed development model
Unlike the path historically followed by the industrialized
countries, the IMF forces countries from the Global South to prioritize
export production over the development of diversified domestic
economies. Nearly 80 percent of all malnourished children in the
developing world live in countries where farmers have been forced to
shift from food production for local consumption to the production of
export crops destined for wealthy countries. The IMF also requires
countries to eliminate assistance to domestic industries while providing
benefits for multinational corporations -- such as forcibly lowering
labor costs. Small businesses and farmers can't compete. Sweatshop
workers in free trade zones set up by the IMF and World Bank earn
starvation wages, live in deplorable conditions, and are unable to
provide for their families. The cycle of poverty is perpetuated, not
eliminated, as governments' debt to the IMF grows.
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The IMF is a secretive institution with no accountability
The IMF is funded with taxpayer money, yet it operates behind a veil
of secrecy. Members of affected communities do not participate in
designing loan
packages. The IMF works with a select group of central bankers and
finance ministers to make polices without input from other government
agencies such as health, education and environment departments. The
institution has resisted calls for public scrutiny and independent
evaluation.
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IMF policies promote corporate welfare
To increase exports, countries are encouraged to give tax breaks and
subsidies to export industries. Public assets such as forestland and
government utilities
(phone, water and electricity companies) are sold off to foreign
investors at rock bottom prices. In Guyana, an Asian owned timber
company called Barama received a logging concession that was 1.5 times
the total amount of land all the indigenous communities were granted.
Barama also received a five-year tax holiday. The IMF forced Haiti to
open its market to imported, highly subsidized US rice at the same time
it prohibited Haiti from subsidizing its own farmers. A US corporation
called Early Rice now sells nearly 50 percent of the rice consumed in
Haiti.
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The IMF hurts workers
The IMF and World Bank frequently advise countries to attract foreign
investors by weakening their labor laws -- eliminating collective
bargaining laws and suppressing wages, for example. The IMF's mantra of
"labor flexibility" permits corporations to fire at whim and move where
wages are cheapest. According to the 1995 UN Trade and Development
Report, employers are using this extra "flexibility" in labor laws to shed
workers rather than create jobs. In Haiti, the government was told to
eliminate a statute in their labor code that mandated increases in the
minimum wage when inflation exceeded 10 percent. By the end of 1997,
Haiti's minimum wage was only $2.40 a day. Workers in the U.S. are also
hurt by IMF policies because they have to compete with cheap, exploited
labor. The IMF's mismanagement of the Asian financial crisis plunged
South Korea, Indonesia, Thailand and other countries into deep
depression that created 200 million "newly poor." The IMF advised
countries to "export their way out of the crisis." Consequently, more
than US 12,000 steelworkers were laid off when Asian steel was dumped in
the US.
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The IMF's policies hurt women the most
SAPs make it much more difficult for women to meet their families'
basic needs. When education costs rise due to IMF-imposed fees for the
use of public services (so-called "user fees") girls are the first to be
withdrawn from schools. User fees at public clinics and hospitals make healthcare
unaffordable to those who need it most. The shift to export agriculture
also makes it harder for women to feed their families. Women have
become more exploited as government workplace regulations are rolled
back and sweatshops abuses increase.
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IMF Policies hurt the environment
IMF loans
and bailout packages are paving the way for natural resource
exploitation on a staggering scale. The IMF does not consider the
environmental impacts of lending policies, and environmental ministries
and groups are not included in policy making. The focus on export growth
to earn hard currency to pay back loans has led to an unsustainable
liquidation of natural resources. For example, the Ivory Coast's
increased reliance on cocoa exports has led to a loss of two-thirds of
the country's forests.
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The IMF bails out rich bankers, creating a moral hazard and greater instability in the global economy
The IMF routinely pushes countries to deregulate financial systems.
The removal of regulations that might limit speculation has greatly
increased capital investment
in developing country financial markets. More than $1.5 trillion
crosses borders every day. Most of this capital is invested short-term,
putting countries at the whim of financial speculators. The Mexican 1995
peso crisis was partly a result of these IMF policies. When the bubble
popped, the IMF and US government stepped in to prop up interest and
exchange rates, using taxpayer money to bail out Wall Street bankers.
Such bailouts encourage investors to continue making risky, speculative
bets, thereby increasing the instability of national economies. During
the bailout of Asian countries, the IMF required governments to assume
the bad debts of private banks, thus making the public pay the costs and
draining yet more resources away from social programs.
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IMF bailouts deepen, rather then solve, economic crisis
During financial crises -- such as with Mexico in 1995 and South
Korea, Indonesia, Thailand, Brazil, and Russia in 1997 -- the IMF
stepped in as the lender of last resort. Yet the IMF bailouts in the
Asian financial crisis did not stop the financial panic -- rather, the
crisis deepened and spread to more countries. The policies imposed as
conditions of these loans
were bad medicine, causing layoffs in the short run and undermining
development in the long run. In South Korea, the IMF sparked a recession
by raising interest rates, which led to more bankruptcies and
unemployment. Under the IMF imposed economic reforms after the peso
bailout in 1995, the number of Mexicans living in extreme poverty
increased more than 50 percent and the national average minimum wage
fell 20 percent.
Source: http://www.globalexchange.org/resources/wbimf/oppose
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