OUR DEMANDS of the IMF & WORLD BANK
September
2000
On the occasion of the annual general meetings
of the governing bodies of the International Monetary Fund
and the World Bank, we call for the immediate suspension of
the policies and practices that have caused widespread poverty,
inequality, and suffering among the worldâs peoples and damage
to the worldâs environment. We assert the responsibility of
these anti-democratic institutions, together with the World
Trade Organization, for an unjust world economic system. We
note that these institutions are controlled by wealthy governments,
and that their policies have benefited international private
sector financiers, transnational corporations, and corrupt
officials.
We issue this call in the name of global
justice, in solidarity with the peoples of the Global South
and the former "Soviet bloc" countries who struggle
for survival and dignity in the face of unjust, imperialistic
economic policies. We stand in solidarity too with the millions
in the wealthy countries of the Global North who have borne
the burden of "globalization" policies and been
subjected to policies that mirror those imposed on the South.
Only when the coercive powers of the international
financial institutions are rescinded shall governments be
accountable first and foremost to the will of their peoples.
Only when a system that allocates power chiefly to the wealthiest
nations for the purpose of dictating the policies of the poorer
ones is reversed shall nations and their peoples be able to
forge bonds - economic and otherwise - based on mutual respect
and the common needs of the planet and its inhabitants. Only
when integrity is restored to economic development, and both
the corrupter and the corrupted held accountable, shall the
people begin to have confidence in the decisions that affect
their communities. Only when the well-being of all, including
the most vulnerable people and ecosystems, is given priority
over corporate profits shall we achieve genuine sustainable
development and create a world of justice, equality, and peace
where fundamental human rights, including social and economic
rights, can be respected.
With these ends in mind, we make the following
demands of those meeting in Washington April 16-19, 2000 for
the semi-annual meetings of the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund:
1. That the IMF and World Bank cancel all
debts owed them. Any funds required for this purpose should
come from positive net capital and assets held by those institutions.
2. That the IMF and World Bank immediately
cease imposing the economic austerity measures known as structural
adjustment and/or other macroeconomic "reform,"
which have exacerbated poverty and inequality, as conditions
of loans, credits, or debt relief. This requires both the
suspension of those conditions in existing programs and an
abandonment of any version of the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries
(HIPC) Initiative which is founded on the concept of debt
relief for policy reform.
3. That the IMF and World Bank accept responsibility
for the disastrous impact of structural adjustment policies
by paying reparations to the peoples and communities who have
borne that impact. These funds should come from the institutionsâ
positive net capital and assets, and should be distributed
through democratically-determined mechanisms.
4. That the World Bank Group pay reparations
to peoples relocated and otherwise harmed by its large projects
(such as dams) and compensate governments for repayments made
on projects which World Bank evaluations rank as economic
failures. A further evaluation should determine which World
Bank projects have failed on social, cultural, and environmental
grounds, and appropriate compensation paid. The funds for
these payments should come from the institutionsâ positive
net capital and assets, and should be distributed through
democratically-determined mechanisms.
5. That the World Bank Group immediately
cease providing advice and resources through its division*
devoted to private-sector investments to advance the goals
associated with corporate globalization, such as privatization
and liberalization, and that private-sector investments currently
held be liquidated to provide funds for the reparations demanded
above.
6. That the agencies and individuals within
the World Bank Group and IMF complicit in abetting corruption,
as well as their accomplices in borrowing countries, be prosecuted,
and that those responsible, including the institutions involved,
provide compensation for resources stolen and damage done.
*The International Finance Corporation (IFC)
is a division of the World Bank Group. Also included is the
Multilateral Investment Guaranty Agency (MIGA), which insures
private investments in Southern countries.
7. That the future existence, structure,
and policies of international institutions such as the World
Bank Group and the IMF be determined through a democratic,
participatory and transparent process. The process must accord
full consideration of the interests of the peoples most affected
by the policies and practices of the institutions, and include
a significant role for all parts of civil society.
The accession to these demands would require
the institutionsâ directors to accept and act on the need
for fundamental transformation. It is possible that the elimination
of these institutions will be required for the realization
of global economic and political justice.
We commit to work towards the defunding of
the IMF and World Bank by opposing further government allocations
to them (in the form of either direct contributions or the
designation of collateral) and supporting campaigns such as
a boycott of World Bank bonds until these demands have been
met.
Last updated 04-Oct-2000 03:50:38 PM
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