[stop-imf] IMF Policies Thwart Poverty Goals

robert weissman rob@essential.org
Tue, 20 Sep 2005 15:57:21 -0400


FINANCE:
IMF Policies Thwart Poverty Goals - Report
Jim Lobe

WASHINGTON, Sep 19 (IPS) - If U.S. President George W. Bush is serious
about his enthusiastic embrace last week at the United Nations of
democracy and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to slash global
poverty, he will press his treasury secretary and other members of the
governing board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) meeting here
this week to stop imposing strict spending limits on poor-country
governments.

That is the message of two new reports by ActionAid International (AAI),
which charges that IMF anti-inflation policies and the World Bank, which
is bound by them, are making it impossible for Third World governments
to make much progress either in achieving MDG targets or in promoting
democratic institutions.

The MDGs include achieving universal primary education, cutting hunger
and poverty in half, and sharply reducing maternal and infant mortality
by 2015.

"What the IMF and World Bank are doing is effectively tearing the heart
out of democracy," said Rick Rowden, (AAI's) senior policy analyst.
"Holding periodic elections doesn't mean much when a nation's economic
direction is hammered out between the IMF, the central banks, and the
finance ministries behind doors that are closed to voters."

The two reports, based on case studies in 13 developing countries,
conclude that the indirect control exercised by the IMF over recipient
governments' macroeconomic policies is straitjacketing their ability to
deal with urgent social, health, and economic issues, such as the
HIV/AIDS pandemic, and likewise the ability of their electorates to
influence those policies.

Voters in most transitional and democratic governments, according to
AAI, strongly favour greater efforts to improve the health and welfare
of their poor population, if only because the poor make up the vast
majority of their constituents, particularly in Africa, South Asia, and
much of Latin America.

But even as democratically elected governments struggle to respond to
these demands, they are effectively unable to do so given the IMF's
policies and power.

This, indeed, has been noted by democratically elected developing
country leaders themselves at various times. "We are caught between a
rock and a hard place in terms of managing IMF requirements and then
dealing with the demands of our electorate," Tanzanian President
Benjamin Mkapa asserted last year.

AAI also cited a Kenyan education official as complaining that, "The
general feeling among the citizenry is that government decisions are
subordinate to the IMF rules and directions, and that the country is
held captive by these decisions without much recourse."

The first report, "Square Pegs, Round Holes", notes a "fundamental
contradiction between the need to greatly scale-up social spending to
fight HIV/AIDS and what can actually be spent under the IMF's current
low-inflation monetary policy", which traditionally aims to keep annual
inflation rates to under five percent.

"How can significantly more money be spent in these economies without
producing higher levels of inflation than the IMF's low-inflation policy
permits?"

Because donor governments and other financial agencies, including the
World Bank, treat compliance with IMF targets as the Seal of Good
Housekeeping, failure by borrowing governments to meet those targets
risks a cut-off of external credit.

"The IMF can effectively 'switch off' foreign aid flows to any country
that it feels is not satisfactorily adhering to the agreed macroeconomic
framework," according to AAI, citing recent examples of such actions in
Zambia and Honduras.

The second report, "Contradicting Commitments: How the Achievement of
Education for All is Being Undermined by the International Monetary
Fund", argues that the MDG target of providing universal primary
education by the year 2015 is also threatened by the IMF's imposition of
budget targets.

To meet the MDG target, according to the report, poor countries must
sharply increase their investment in building schools, training and
employing teachers, and in making education more accessible to poor and
other disadvantaged children by, for example, eliminating school fees.

But in most cases, they cannot do so without exceeding spending limits
imposed by the IMF, thus making it effectively impossible for them to
meet their MDG commitments and the demands of their electorates.

The problem described in the two reports is not new. Indeed, last year
AAI and a number of other development and health non-governmental
organisations (NGOs) published a major report, entitled "Blocking
Progress". It asserted that the IMF's policies in southern Africa, which
has the world's highest HIV infection rates, were having a disastrous
impact on the ability of governments there to both curb the spread of
the disease and treat its victims.

But the constraints faced by governments dependent on the IMF's Seal of
Approval have become ever more obvious since the MDGs were first adopted
at the Millennium Summit by global leaders in 2000 and now that they
have been re-affirmed at last week's World Summit.

Indeed, with multilateral agencies, including the IMF's sister
organisation, the World Bank, warning that progress in achieving most of
the eight MDGs is lagging badly, the IMF's insistence on maintaining
stringent budget limits appears increasingly anomalous, particularly in
light of the endorsement by leaders of the Group of Eight (G8),
including U.S. Pres. George W. Bush, which exercise a preponderant
influence on IMF policies.

AAI and other groups have also argued that the five percent inflation
ceiling is based on shaky economics and that there is little agreement
among economists on the rate that begins to undermine economic growth.

"Current IMF monetary policies may have seemed appropriate for combating
the crisis of hyperinflation in many developing countries during the
late 1970s and early 1980s," according to the first report, "but its
tactic of tightly constraining public spending in order to get inflation
down and keep it down is at odds with what is needed today: new monetary
policies that allow for a major increase in public spending."

The historical record indicates that Latin American in the 1950s and
1960s and East Asia in the 1960s and 1970s experienced very high
economic growth rates despite inflation levels that averaged 20 percent
per year, the report asserted.

As noted by the UNAIDS 2004 Report on the Global Epidemic: "The
short-term inflationary effects of increased and additional resources
applied towards tackling the HIV epidemic pale in comparison with what
will be the long-term effects of half-hearted responses on the economies
of hard hit countries. AIDS is an exceptional disease; it requires an
exceptional response."

Meanwhile, the fact that the elected governments were effectively boxed
in by the IMF is doing nothing to promote confidence in democratic
institutions throughout the developing world, according to the AAI.

"What this all comes down to is that the IMF acts like a school bully,
taking power away from publicly elected officials, particularly in the
poorest and weakest countries," said David Archer, the group's director
for education. "This is not a recipe for working democracy; instead, it
could spell democracy's death knell." (END/2005)