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The Crisis of Multilateralism
Foreign Policy in Focus
Sep 13, 2006
by Walden Bello
The two institutions have formally protested the government's action.
But they are simply reaping the consequences of their decision to
hold the fall meeting in the authoritarian island-state in order to
avoid street protests like those that have attended WTO ministerial
meetings. Angry at the banning of their colleagues, many civil
society representatives are now asking the Bank and Fund to cancel
the annual meeting, demanding that the two agencies be consistent
with their declared support for practices of “good governance.”

Controversial Reforms
Prior to the controversy over the banning of the NGO's, the IMF's
Executive Board was trying to steer through two reforms intended
to “safeguard and enhance the Fund's credibility.” The first involved
reallocating the voting power of IMF member countries according to
the current size of their gross domestic product. This proposal was
ostensibly intended to increase the voting power of a selected number
of big developing countries—Korea, Turkey, China, and Mexico—while
laying the ground for eventually expanding the decision-making power
of other developing countries. The other initiative the IMF
leadership was trying to get off the ground would give the Fund the
new role of solving “global macroeconomic imbalances”—a euphemism for
disciplining countries with large trade surpluses like China.

Both reforms are mired in controversy.

A bloc of about 50 developing countries objects to the proposed GDP-
based formula. These countries see the move as dividing developing
countries while producing only one real winner: the United States,
which would increase its voting power under the new system. The
second initiative has generated opposition for attempting to get the
Fund to do Washington's dirty work of pressuring China to revalue its
currency to reduce the massive U.S. trade deficit with Beijing.

These troubles are the latest in a string of crises to plague the two
agencies, also known as the “Bretton Woods institutions” after the
site of the July 1944 conference where they were founded. The Fund,
in particular, is in a state of demoralization. “Ten years ago, the
IMF was flying high, arrogant in its belief that it knew what was the
best for developing countries,” notes one civil society policy
paper. “Today, it is an institution under siege, hiding behind its
four walls in Washington, DC, unable to mount an effective response
to its growing numbers of critics.”

The IMF's Stalingrad
The IMF's equivalent of Stalingrad—where the defeat of the German
Sixth Army marked the turning point of World War II—was the Asian
financial crisis, where it “lost its legitimacy and never recovered
it,” according to Dennis de Tray, a former IMF and World Bank
official who is now vice president of the Washington-based Center for
Global Development.

The Fund was blamed for pushing policies of capital account
liberalization that made the Asian economies vulnerable to the
volatile movements of speculative capital; assembling multibillion
dollar rescue programs that rescued creditors at the expense of the
debtors; imposing expenditure-cutting programs that merely worsened
the downspin of the economy; and opposing the formation of an Asian
Monetary Fund that could have provided the crisis countries with
financial reserves to save their currencies from speculative attacks.

The Fund went from one financial disaster to another. The Russian
financial collapse in 1998 was attributed to its policies, as was
Argentina's economic unraveling in 2002.

Resistance was not long in coming. In the midst of the Asian
financial crisis, Prime Minister Mohamad Mahathir of Malaysia broke
with the IMF approach and imposed capital controls, saving the
country from the worst effects of the crisis. Mahathir's defiance of
the IMF was not lost on Thaksin Shinawatra, who ran for prime
minister of Thailand on an anti-IMF platform and won. He went on to
push for large government expenditures, which stimulated the consumer
demand that brought Thailand out of recession. Nestor Kirchner
completed the humbling of the IMF when, upon being elected president
of Argentina in 2003, he declared that his government would pay its
private creditors only 25 cents for every dollar owed. Enraged
creditors told the IMF to discipline Kirchner. But with its
reputation in tatters and its leverage eroded, the Fund backed off
from confronting the Argentine president, who got away with the
radical debt write-down.

By 2006, underscoring the crisis of legitimacy of the institution,
the governor of the Bank of England described the IMF as having “lost
its way.”

From Crisis of Legitimacy to Budget Crisis
The crisis of legitimacy has had financial consequences. In 2003, the
Thai government declared it had paid off most of its debt to the IMF
and would soon be financially independent of the organization.
Indonesia ended its loan agreement with the Fund in 2003 and recently
announced its intention to repay its multibillion-dollar debt in two
years. A number of other big borrowers in Asia, mindful of the
devastating consequences of IMF-imposed policies, have refrained from
new borrowings from the Fund. These include the Philippines, India,
and China. Now, this trend has been reinforced by the move of Brazil
and Argentina earlier this year to pay off all their debts to the
Fund and declare financial sovereignty.

What is, in effect, a boycott by its biggest borrowers is translating
into a budget crisis for the IMF. Over the last two decades the IMF's
operations have been increasingly funded from the loan repayments of
its developing country clients rather than from the contributions of
wealthy Northern governments. The burden of sustaining the
institution has shifted to the borrowers. The upshot of these
developments is that payments of charges and interests, according to
Fund projections, will be cut by more than half, from $3.19 billion
in 2005 to $1.39 billion in 2006 and again by half, to $635 million
in 2009. These reductions have created what Ngaire Woods, an Oxford
University specialist on the Fund, describes as “a huge squeeze on
the budget of the organization.”

Role Crisis
The erosion of the Fund's role as a disciplinarian of debt-ridden
countries and an enforcer of structural adjustment has been
accompanied by a futile search to find a new role.

The Group of Seven tried to make the Fund a central piece of a
new “global financial architecture” by putting it in charge of
a “contingency credit line” to which countries about to enter a
financial crisis would have access if they fulfilled IMF-approved
macroeconomic conditions. But the prospect of a government seeking
access to a credit line that could trigger the very financial panic
that it sought to avert doomed the project.

Another proposal envisioned an IMF-managed “Sovereign Debt
Restructuring Mechanism”—an international version of a Chapter 11
bankruptcy mechanism that would provide countries protection from
creditors while they came out with a restructuring plan. But when
South countries objected that the mechanism was too weak and the
United States opposed the proposal for fear it would curtail the
freedom of operations of U.S. banks, this new prospect also
collapsed.

The role of righting “global macroeconomic imbalances” assigned to
the Fund during the spring meetings of the IMF leadership earlier
this year is part of this increasingly desperate effort by the G 7
governments to find a task for an international economic bureaucracy
that had become obsolete and irrelevant.

Hiding the World Bank's Crisis
While it does not have the aura of controversy and failure that
surrounds the IMF, the World Bank is also in crisis, say informed
observers. A budget crisis is also overtaking the Bank, according to
Ngaire Woods. Income from borrowers' fees and charges dropped from
US$8.1 billion in 2001 to US$4.4 billion in 2004, while income from
the Bank's investments fell from US$1.5 billion in 2001 to US$304
million in 2004. China, Indonesia, Mexico, Brazil, and many of the
more advanced developing countries are going elsewhere for their
loans.

The budgetary crisis is, however, only one aspect of overall crisis
of the institution. The policy prescriptions offered by Bank
economists are increasingly seen as irrelevant to the problems faced
by developing countries, says de Tray, who served as the IMF's
resident officer in Hanoi and the World Bank's representative in
Jakarta. The problem, he says, lies in the emphasis at the Bank's
research department on producing “cutting edge” technical economic
work geared to the western academic world rather than coming out with
knowledge to support practical policy prescriptions. The Bank is
currently staffed by some 10,000 professionals, most of them
economists, and de Tray claims that “there is nothing wrong at the
World Bank that a 40% staff reduction would not fix.”

American University Professor Robin Broad, an expert on the Bank,
claims that the Bank is, in fact, in more of a crisis than the IMF
but that this is less visible to the public. “The IMF's response has
been to withdraw behind its four walls, thus reinforcing the public
perception of its being besieged,” she notes. “The Bank's response,
however, has been to engage the world to hide its mounting crisis.”

Broad identifies three elements in the Bank's offensive. “First, it
goes out and tells donors that it is the institution best positioned
to do lending to end poverty, for the environment, for addressing HIV-
AIDS, you name it…when in fact its record proves that it's not.
Second, it has the world's largest ‘development' research department—
funded to the tune of about $50 million—whose raison d'etre is to
produce research to back up predetermined conclusions. Third, it has
this huge external affairs department, with a budget of some $30
million—a PR unit that feeds these so-called objective research
findings to the press and fosters the image of an all-knowing Bank.”
But, she concludes, “This can't last. Inside the Bank, they know
they're in crisis and are scrambling. And sooner or later, if we do
our work, the truth will come out.”

Multilateralism in Disarray
The crisis of the Bretton Woods institutions must be seen as part of
the same phenomenon that has overtaken the World Trade Organization,
whose latest round of trade liberalization negotiations fell apart in
July. Noting that “trade liberalization has stalled, aid is less
coherent than it should be, and the next financial conflagration will
be managed by an injured fireman,” the Washington Post's Sebastian
Mallaby contends that “the great powers of today are simply not
interested in creating a resilient multilateral system.”

What is troubling for people like Mallaby, however, offers an
opportunity for those who have long regarded the current multilateral
system of global economic governance as mainly concerned with
ensuring the hegemony of the developed countries, particularly the
United States. Proposals for alternative institutions for global
finance have been circulating for some time. The current crisis may
be the break in the system that will make governments, especially
those in the South, willing to seriously consider the alternatives.


FPIF columnist Walden Bello is executive director of Focus on the
Global South and professor of sociology at the University of the
Philippines. This column is based partly on the campaign document he
drafted, "The IMF: Sink it or Shrink it."


FPIF columnist Walden Bello is executive director of Focus on the
Global South and professor of sociology at the University of the
Philippines. This column is based partly on the campaign document he
drafted, "The IMF: Sink it or Shrink it."

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