Series: 1944-2020, 76 years of interference from the World Bank and the IMF (Part 25)
9 November 2020 by Eric Toussaint , Emilie Paumard , Milan Rivié
Banksy (CC - Wikimedia)
Considering the economic and social tragedy resulting from the structural adjustment policies (SAP) imposed on people in the South from the 1990s onward, several voices have exposed the promoters of such policies, namely the IMF and the World Bank. Criticism reached beyond NGOs and global justice movements, to unexpected quarters, as testified by Joseph Stiglitz, former chief economist at the World Bank, who published an accusation of the IMF in 2002 [1].
In the wake of such condemnations, the rising prices of raw materials from 2003-2004 made it possible for a number of countries to get the necessary hard currencies to anticipate repayment of IMF loans, thus partly escaping the disastrous conditionalities backing IMF loans. At the time, faced with a legitimacy crisis and while the scarcity of clients was taking its financial toll, the Bretton Woods institutions multiplied attempts to build a new image.
When it announced the interruption of the much decried SAPs and its reorienting its action towards fighting poverty from 1999, the World Bank claimed to have embraced a new ethical approach.
While the debt crisis in the North was a good opportunity to recover financially from 2008 onward, IMF executives loudly proclaimed the institution’s allegedly new direction. « On ne reconnaît plus le FMI ? De fait, il a changé ! » (People don’t recognize the IMF anymore? Indeed, it has changed!) [2], as Dominique Strauss-Kahn stated on French television in 2011.
The World Bank also claimed it was fighting climate change.
But is there really anything new about the Bretton Woods institutions?
Definitely not. To start with a telling example: the World Bank still heavily subsidizes fossil fuel production.
In October 2014, in an IEO paper entitled IMF
IMF
International Monetary Fund
Along with the World Bank, the IMF was founded on the day the Bretton Woods Agreements were signed. Its first mission was to support the new system of standard exchange rates.
When the Bretton Wood fixed rates system came to an end in 1971, the main function of the IMF became that of being both policeman and fireman for global capital: it acts as policeman when it enforces its Structural Adjustment Policies and as fireman when it steps in to help out governments in risk of defaulting on debt repayments.
As for the World Bank, a weighted voting system operates: depending on the amount paid as contribution by each member state. 85% of the votes is required to modify the IMF Charter (which means that the USA with 17,68% % of the votes has a de facto veto on any change).
The institution is dominated by five countries: the United States (16,74%), Japan (6,23%), Germany (5,81%), France (4,29%) and the UK (4,29%).
The other 183 member countries are divided into groups led by one country. The most important one (6,57% of the votes) is led by Belgium. The least important group of countries (1,55% of the votes) is led by Gabon and brings together African countries.
http://imf.org
Response to the financial and economic crisis, the IMF claimed to have learned from its mistakes and that since the financial crisis in 2008 none of the loans it had granted were backed on the drastic conditions it had imposed in the past. From 2009, an economic research centre decided to test this claim [3]. The findings were indisputable: out of 41 countries granted IMF loans, 31 led policies of fiscal austerity in a context of recession or slow growth.
The situation deteriorated from 2010 onward. According to Isabel Ortiz and Matthew Cummins “premature expenditure contraction became widespread in 2010, which marked the beginning of a second phase of the crisis, despite vulnerable populations’ urgent and significant need of public assistance.” The authors show that in 2013 the contraction of public expenditure significantly intensified and affected the GDP
GDP
Gross Domestic Product
Gross Domestic Product is an aggregate measure of total production within a given territory equal to the sum of the gross values added. The measure is notoriously incomplete; for example it does not take into account any activity that does not enter into a commercial exchange. The GDP takes into account both the production of goods and the production of services. Economic growth is defined as the variation of the GDP from one period to another.
of 119 countries. They anticipated that there would be 132 countries affected by 2015.
When Mohammed Mossallem, a former World Bank analyst, examined the conditionalities on which loans granted to Tunisia, Morocco, Jordan and Egypt were backed after 2011, he found all the ingredients of the SAPs of the 1980s.
According to Isabel Ortiz and Matthew Cummins, “Regarding austerity measures, a desk review of IMF country reports published since 2010 indicates that governments are weighing various adjustment strategies. These include: (i) elimination or reduction of subsidies, including on fuel, agriculture and food products (in 100 countries); (ii) wage bill cuts/caps, including the salaries of education, health and other public sector workers (in 98 countries); (iii) rationalizing and further targeting of safety nets (in 80 countries); (iv) pension reform (in 86 countries); (v) healthcare reform (in 37 countries); and (vi) labor flexibilization (in 32 countries). Many governments are also considering revenue-side measures that can adversely impact vulnerable populations, mainly through introducing or broadening consumption taxes, such as value added taxes (VATs), on basic products that are disproportionately consumed by poor households (in 94 countries).” https://www.cadtm.org/The-Age-of-Austerity
The experience of some Arab countries is illustrative.
As it was concerned, as from 2011, that those countries, under the impulsion of popular uprisings aimed at overthrowing dictators, were shedding the neoliberal hold , the IMF multiplied reassuring statements. In the reports that followed the “Arab Spring,” the institution insisted on the social dimension of the policies it promoted: inclusive growth, social policies for the more vulnerable, etc.
However, when Mohammed Mossallem, a former World Bank
World Bank
WB
The World Bank was founded as part of the new international monetary system set up at Bretton Woods in 1944. Its capital is provided by member states’ contributions and loans on the international money markets. It financed public and private projects in Third World and East European countries.
It consists of several closely associated institutions, among which :
1. The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD, 189 members in 2017), which provides loans in productive sectors such as farming or energy ;
2. The International Development Association (IDA, 159 members in 1997), which provides less advanced countries with long-term loans (35-40 years) at very low interest (1%) ;
3. The International Finance Corporation (IFC), which provides both loan and equity finance for business ventures in developing countries.
As Third World Debt gets worse, the World Bank (along with the IMF) tends to adopt a macro-economic perspective. For instance, it enforces adjustment policies that are intended to balance heavily indebted countries’ payments. The World Bank advises those countries that have to undergo the IMF’s therapy on such matters as how to reduce budget deficits, round up savings, enduce foreign investors to settle within their borders, or free prices and exchange rates.
analyst, examined the conditionalities on which loans granted to Tunisia, Morocco, Jordan and Egypt [4]
were backed after 2011, he found all the ingredients of the SAPs of the 1980s: lower taxes for the private sector, higher taxes on consumption (the most unfair kind of tax), liberalized investment, fewer State subsidies along with higher energy prices, deregulation of the labour market. As to the content of austerity plans imposed on countries in the Euro zone since 2010, it strictly continues t to inflict the same treatment as upon North African countries.
Over the last years, however, there have been a number of internal reports acutely questioning IMF policies:
Do those several critical voices point to a change of direction for the institution?
First, while newspapers’ headlines may suggest that those who draft such reports are thoroughly heterodox in their views, a close reading of their texts shows that they are actually quite moderate. As an illustration, while the paper “Neoliberalism: oversold?” includes figures that clearly show the limitations of the model, it also claims that the neoliberal has many beneficial aspects [7]. We should also emphasize that the critical and heterodox documents published on the IMF website are the sole responsibility of their authors and not the institution’s position.
The IMF’s intervention in Greece from 2010 is illustrative of this continuity in the implementation of neoliberal policies that favour big capital, aggravate social inequalities and destroy essential social conquests
Besides, playing with contradictions is not really new with Bretton Wood institutions. But the point is to know whether this self-criticism, however limited, results in actual changes in the orientations taken by the institution.
Now the IMF’s intervention in Greece from 2010 is illustrative of this continuity in the implementation of neoliberal policies that favour big capital, aggravate social inequalities and destroy essential social conquests. As early as 2013, an IMF independent evaluation report [8] acknowledged that the first 2010 bail-out programme had resulted in “notable failure.” Yet the same austerity measures have continued to be implemented.
In June 2016, the same independent team produced a report that made the same assessment of the failure of the IMF’s action in Greece. This time round, however, the IMF experts claimed that in spite of the limitations of the IMF’s action, it was impossible to build an alternative scenario. The notorious TINA (There Is No Alternative) is still very much present in the corridors of the institution!
In early October 2020, facing the most serious international crisis of capitalism since the 1930s, IMF researchers announced that public investment had to increase [9]. This is what all governments have done in order to save big capital and avoid the abyss. This increase in expenditure is financed by a staggering increase of public debt and nowhere are governments taking measures to tax big fortunes and large corporations.
Since it was created, the structure of decision-making within the IMF benefits the US and their victorious allies at the end of World War II. The distribution of power flouts any notion of equality since it is based on the rule 1 dollar = 1 vote, a rule questioned by emerging countries that want their share Share A unit of ownership interest in a corporation or financial asset, representing one part of the total capital stock. Its owner (a shareholder) is entitled to receive an equal distribution of any profits distributed (a dividend) and to attend shareholder meetings. of the cake. To try and establish some pretence of democracy, and to meet the demand of those expanding countries, a reform on the increase of quotas [10] and the transfer of voting rights finally came into force at the beginning of 2016.
Adopting a system that would allow all member countries to have a say was never considered; the aim was rather to accommodate “emerging countries” whose economic weight had become too important to be ignored
In fact, adopting a system that would allow all member countries to have a say was never considered; the aim was rather to accommodate “emerging countries” whose economic weight had become too important to be ignored. While the 6% of voting rights that were newly distributed went to the BRICS (South Africa excluded), those who lost out in the operation were predictably the poorest countries, whose voting rights the IMF cynically committed to preserve. [11] Surely Bangladesh felt it had more leverage Leverage This is the ratio between funds borrowed for investment and the personal funds or equity that backs them up. A company may have borrowed much more than its capitalized value, in which case it is said to be ’highly leveraged’. The more highly a company is leveraged, the higher the risk associated with lending to the company; but higher also are the possible profits that it may realise as compared with its own value. given this commitment, with its 0.24% voting rights to defend the interests of its 155 million inhabitants!
The USA on the other hand scored a twofold victory. Not only did they keep their hold on the voting structure, since, as they had only relinquished 0.3% of their voting rights, they retain their veto power [12]; but they are still at the helm of one of the biggest international vessels since the reform also doubled the Funds’ resources that are now close to $660 billion.
The IMF reforms reinforce the central leadership role of the United States in the global economic system. Jacob Lew, US Treasury Secretary, 2015.
As regards the World Bank, the last major reform of this kind occurred in April 2010, when the controversial figure of Robert Zoellick was president. As well as an increase of $86.2 billion in the capital of the IBRD, countries of the South were granted an increase of 3.13% of their voting rights, reaching 47.19% of total votes. Compared with the US’s 15.44%, this is outrageously little for those 135 countries having 85% of the global population. [13]
From the end of the 1990s, a hail of criticism rained down on the World Bank, to the point where it became increasingly difficult for it to promote the Structural Adjustment
Structural Adjustment
Economic policies imposed by the IMF in exchange of new loans or the rescheduling of old loans.
Structural Adjustments policies were enforced in the early 1980 to qualify countries for new loans or for debt rescheduling by the IMF and the World Bank. The requested kind of adjustment aims at ensuring that the country can again service its external debt. Structural adjustment usually combines the following elements : devaluation of the national currency (in order to bring down the prices of exported goods and attract strong currencies), rise in interest rates (in order to attract international capital), reduction of public expenditure (’streamlining’ of public services staff, reduction of budgets devoted to education and the health sector, etc.), massive privatisations, reduction of public subsidies to some companies or products, freezing of salaries (to avoid inflation as a consequence of deflation). These SAPs have not only substantially contributed to higher and higher levels of indebtedness in the affected countries ; they have simultaneously led to higher prices (because of a high VAT rate and of the free market prices) and to a dramatic fall in the income of local populations (as a consequence of rising unemployment and of the dismantling of public services, among other factors).
IMF : http://www.worldbank.org/
Policies (SAP) at the heart of the polemic. Faced with this crisis of legitimacy, the World Bank gave itself up to a flurry of semantic pirouettes without ever touching on the neoliberal logic inscribed in its DNA.
Among these crafty manœuvres, we find for example the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC
Heavily Indebted Poor Countries
HIPC
In 1996 the IMF and the World Bank launched an initiative aimed at reducing the debt burden for some 41 heavily indebted poor countries (HIPC), whose total debts amount to about 10% of the Third World Debt. The list includes 33 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa.
The idea at the back of the initiative is as follows: a country on the HIPC list can start an SAP programme of twice three years. At the end of the first stage (first three years) IMF experts assess the ’sustainability’ of the country’s debt (from medium term projections of the country’s balance of payments and of the net present value (NPV) of debt to exports ratio.
If the country’s debt is considered “unsustainable”, it is eligible for a second stage of reforms at the end of which its debt is made ’sustainable’ (that it it is given the financial means necessary to pay back the amounts due). Three years after the beginning of the initiative, only four countries had been deemed eligible for a very slight debt relief (Uganda, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, and Mozambique). Confronted with such poor results and with the Jubilee 2000 campaign (which brought in a petition with over 17 million signatures to the G7 meeting in Cologne in June 1999), the G7 (group of 7 most industrialised countries) and international financial institutions launched an enhanced initiative: “sustainability” criteria have been revised (for instance the value of the debt must only amount to 150% of export revenues instead of 200-250% as was the case before), the second stage in the reforms is not fixed any more: an assiduous pupil can anticipate and be granted debt relief earlier, and thirdly some interim relief can be granted after the first three years of reform.
Simultaneously the IMF and the World Bank change their vocabulary : their loans, which so far had been called, “enhanced structural adjustment facilities” (ESAF), are now called “Growth and Poverty Reduction Facilities” (GPRF) while “Structural Adjustment Policies” are now called “Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper”. This paper is drafted by the country requesting assistance with the help of the IMF and the World Bank and the participation of representatives from the civil society.
This enhanced initiative has been largely publicised: the international media announced a 90%, even a 100% cancellation after the Euro-African summit in Cairo (April 2000). Yet on closer examination the HIPC initiative turns out to be yet another delusive manoeuvre which suggests but in no way implements a cancellation of the debt.
List of the 42 Heavily Indebted Poor Countries: Angola, Benin, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoro Islands, Congo, Ivory Coast, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Guyana, Honduras, Kenya, Laos, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Myanmar, Nicaragua, Niger, Rwanda, Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Vietnam, Zambia.
) initiative which, through limited debt reduction controlled by the IFI, enabled them… and still does… to impose on the poorest countries policies similar to the SAP and keep them in a spiral of indebtedness. Moreover in 2002, shortly after the World Bank had announced the official end of SAP, as though by chance, it pulled a new instrument called “Doing Business” out of its hat!
The governments of the countries of the South are competing ferociously to offer the private sector the most attractive conditions, aware that the World Bank and bilateral creditors also use the results of that ranking to decide where to place their loans
The annual report sets out to classify the 189 member countries of the World Bank according to their ability to create a good “business climate” for investors based on various criteria: maximum deregulation, taxation favourable to the private sector, legislation that gives workers’ rights as little protection as possible and places them in competition against one another.
The governments of the countries of the South are competing ferociously to offer the private sector the most attractive conditions, aware that the World Bank and bilateral creditors also use the results of that ranking to decide where to place their loans. And the World Bank is overjoyed! In 2014, it was congratulating itself that “Doing Business” had inspired over a quarter of the 2100 reforms recorded since it was started [14].
And why stop when doing so well? At the request of the G8
G8
Group composed of the most powerful countries of the planet: Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK and the USA, with Russia a full member since June 2002. Their heads of state meet annually, usually in June or July.
that in 2012 wanted it to elaborate an index to benchmark countries on the business climate of their agricultural sector [15], it developed an instrument called “Enabling the Business of Agriculture” (EBA
EBA
European Banking Authority
The body charged with supervising the European banking system and, along with two other authorities, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) and the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA), form part of the European System of Financial Supervision.
EBA : https://www.esma.europa.eu/
) [16]. Financed by the US, British, Danish and Dutch governments and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the methodology of EBA has been modelled on that of “Doing Business”.
By promoting access to non-organic inputs and by pushing for contract-driven agriculture, EBA enables the big multinational agro-business corporations to spread their influence even further [17]. The World Bank’s logic conflicts with the realities and interests of the family-based agriculture that concerns about 80% of agricultural holdings in the countries of the South.
Limited at first to a pilot project involving 10 volunteer countries, the 2016 report had already spread to include 40 countries with the aim of covering the maximum number of countries as quickly as possible.
In view of all these new mechanisms, it is hard to see how the World Bank can be, as it claims, an organization fighting against poverty.
Here again, reality soon caught up with the institution. To the numerous accusations from social movements, trade unions and acedemics have been added those of Paul Romer, then Chief Economist at the World Bank. By emphasizing for example the loss of 23 places by Chile, then under the “socialist” president Michelle Bachelet, Romer also denounces the ideological bias (openly neoliberal) in the report’s methodology and the way it is written. After being reprimanded by President Jim Yong Kim, he immediately handed in his resignation in January 2018. In August 2020, the World Bank itself announced, albeit reluctantly, that publication of the 2020 report had been interrupted due to “[a] certain number of irregularities [having] been reported regarding changes to the data in the Doing Business 2018 and Doing Business 2020 reports, published in October 2017 and 2019. The changes in the data were inconsistent with the Doing Business methodology.” [18]
One might reasonably expect of an organization claiming to fight poverty that human rights would be an integral part of its action. Yet even though the World Bank is officially obliged to respect international law [19], for over 76 years those principles have never passed the threshold of its lush Washington offices.
“The World Bank is a human rights-free zone... it treats human rights more like an infectious disease than universal values and obligations.” [20] Philip Alston, Special UN Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, 2015. |
To “justify” this refusal, the World Bank hides behind its mission which, being limited to economic considerations, allegedly prevents it from broaching notions considered too political. It is hard to comprehend why this supposedly technical mission would place it outside or above international law. Moreover the World Bank has never had any problem in finding justifications when it was a matter of integrating issues such as corruption, money-laundering, financing terrorism or governance, none of which were part of its initial prerogatives.
Considering itself above the law, the World Bank makes no bones about flouting the fundamental rights of the peoples of the South. Among far too many examples, we could cite the field investigation carried out in fourteen countries by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) [21], which revealed that projects financed by the World Bank had forced nearly 3.4 million people out of their homes since 2004, sometimes using armed police. Far from being an isolated case, United Nations agencies, national bodies and committees of independent experts constantly confirm that several projects funded by the International Finance Corporation (IFC), part of the World Bank, have given rise to serious breaches of human rights: land-grabbing, repression, arbitrary arrests or murders, in order to silence protest movements that refuse those WB projects.
The outrageous fiasco of “pandemic bonds” issued by the World Bank
In July 2020, the World Bank abandoned the project of re-issuing pandemic bonds after the first issue had been criticized for its tardiness in delivering the aid to poor countries affected by epidemics [22].
Investment funds and private banks that had bought those securities in 2017 had accumulated interest payments of up to almost $100 million by the end of February 2020!
In 2017 the World Bank launched its programme of “pandemic bonds” in the wake of the 2014 Ebola epidemic in Africa. For a country to access this programme aimed at helping it confront an epidemic, it first had to have registered 2500 deaths. In 2018, the Democratic Republic of Congo was obliged to wait until the epidemic had wreaked havoc before being granted any aid. This drew fierce criticism.
In 2017 the World Bank issued 320 million dollars’ worth of bonds, officially destined to help developing countries deal with a serious epidemic of infectious disease [23].
Investment funds
Investment fund
Investment funds
Private equity investment funds (sometimes called ’mutual funds’ seek to invest in companies according to certain criteria; of which they most often are specialized: capital-risk, capital development funds, leveraged buy-out (LBO), which reflect the different levels of the company’s maturity.
and private banks that had bought those securities in 2017 made ample profits since the World Bank had guaranteed a two-figure return, i.e. over 10 %. The owners of those securities, among whom the Scottish hedge fund Baillie Gifford, Amundi (owned by the French bank Crédit agricole) and a New York financial firm Stone Ridge Asset
Asset
Something belonging to an individual or a business that has value or the power to earn money (FT). The opposite of assets are liabilities, that is the part of the balance sheet reflecting a company’s resources (the capital contributed by the partners, provisions for contingencies and charges, as well as the outstanding debts).
Management, were paid interest
Interest
An amount paid in remuneration of an investment or received by a lender. Interest is calculated on the amount of the capital invested or borrowed, the duration of the operation and the rate that has been set.
of up to almost $100 million by the end of February 2020!
Towards the middle of April 2020, over two months after the virus had started spreading across the world, the conditions allowing the release of almost $200 million were finally met. The 64 countries that were to share the meagre sum of 195 million dollars were entitled, according to size, to between 1 million and 15 million dollars, in other words, peanuts. The highest amount available, of 15 million dollars, was allocated to Nigeria and Pakistan.
A second version of the “Pandemic Emergency Financing Facility” (PEF), the name given by the Bank to the “pandemic bonds”, was to have been launched this year, after the World Bank had declared in early 2019 that it was making adjustments to the structure before it would be ready to commercialize the new product in May 2020 or thereabouts. Finally, in the face of growing criticism, the World Bank renounced before making the new emission.
Governments and major multilateral institutions like the World Bank, the IMF and regional development banks have used repayment of public debt to generalize policies that have damaged public health systems. This has meant job cuts in the health sector, job instability, reduced numbers of hospital beds, closing down neighbourhood health services, increased medical costs both for care Care Le concept de « care work » (travail de soin) fait référence à un ensemble de pratiques matérielles et psychologiques destinées à apporter une réponse concrète aux besoins des autres et d’une communauté (dont des écosystèmes). On préfère le concept de care à celui de travail « domestique » ou de « reproduction » car il intègre les dimensions émotionnelles et psychologiques (charge mentale, affection, soutien), et il ne se limite pas aux aspects « privés » et gratuit en englobant également les activités rémunérées nécessaires à la reproduction de la vie humaine. and for medicines, under-investment in infrastructure and equipment, privatization of various health sectors, public under-investment in research and development for treatments to the advantage of big private pharmaceutical groups and so on.
Even before the Covid-19 pandemic broke out, these policies had already led to enormous loss of human lives and all round the world health personnel were organizing protests.
If we really want to fight the coronavirus and, beyond that, improve the health and living conditions of populations, emergency measures must be taken.
Immediate suspension of debt payments and better still, cancellation of debt, must take priority.
Neither the World Bank nor the IMF have cancelled any debts since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic. Although they have made endless declarations calculated to give the impression that they are taking very strong measures. This is completely false
Neither the World Bank nor the IMF have cancelled any debts since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic. Although they have made endless declarations calculated to give the impression that they are taking very strong measures. This is completely false. The mechanism put in place by the IMF, the World Bank and the G20 G20 The Group of Twenty (G20 or G-20) is a group made up of nineteen countries and the European Union whose ministers, central-bank directors and heads of state meet regularly. It was created in 1999 after the series of financial crises in the 1990s. Its aim is to encourage international consultation on the principle of broadening dialogue in keeping with the growing economic importance of a certain number of countries. Its members are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Italy, India, Indonesia, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, USA, UK and the European Union (represented by the presidents of the Council and of the European Central Bank). is identical to the measures taken after the Tsunami that hit India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Indonesia in December 2004 [24]. Instead of cancellation, public creditors simply postponed the due dates. As for the IMF, not only does it not end repayments, but it does not even suspend them. It has set up a special fund financed by rich countries into which the IMF can dip to repay itself.
Worse still, since March 2020, the IMF has extended the loan agreements that entail continuing with the structural measures enumerated above.
As for the World Bank, since March 2020 it has received more in debt repayments from developing countries than it has paid out to finance either donations or loans.
The text is an updated and augmented version of Émilie Paumard’s article, « Le FMI et la Banque mondiale ont-ils appris de leurs erreurs ? » published 13 October 2017 (in French only). Milan Rivié contributed to the updating and Éric Toussaint did additional research and finalized the draft. Thanks to Claude Quémar for his rereading.
Translated by Vicki Briault, Mike Krolikowski and Christine Pagnoulle.
[1] Joseph E. Stiglitz, Globalization and Its Discontents, Norton, 2002.
[2] On France 2 on 20 February 2011, quoted in Christian Chavagneux’s article, « Le FMI a-t-il vraiment changé ? », Alternatives économiques n°301, April 2011. See also the report “Recent changes in IMF Lending,” https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2011/dec/8.html
[3] Mark Weisbrot and al., “IMF‐Supported Macroeconomic Policies and the World Recession: A Look at Forty‐One Borrowing Countries,” CEPR, October 2009.
[4] At the time of Mohammed Mossallem’s survey, the loan agreement with Egypt was not yet signed. The IMF eventually sanctioned a $12 billion loan agreement in November 2016.
[5] See https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2013/wp1301.pdf, January 2013.
[6] https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00036846.2015.1021463; see also https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2014/wp1434.pdf
[7] Jonathan D. Ostry, Prakash Loungani, and Davide Furceri, “Neoliberalism: Oversold?”, IMF, June 2006.
[8] IMF, Greece: Ex Post Evaluation of Exceptional Access under the 2010 Stand-By Arrangement, IMF Country Report No. 13/156, June 2013.
[9] Vitor Gaspar, Paolo Mauro, Catherine Pattillo and Raphael Espinoza, “Public Investment for the Recovery”, https://blogs.imf.org/2020/10/05/public-investment-for-the-recovery/, 5 October 2020.
[10] The quota of a member country determines its maximum financial commitment towards the IMF and its voting power.
[11] Press Release: IMF Executive Board Approves Major Overhaul of Quotas and Governance, 5 November 2010 https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2015/09/14/01/49/pr10418
[12] IMF, “Acceptances of the Proposed Amendment of the Articles of Agreement on Reform of the Executive Board and Consents to 2010 Quota Increase”, April 2017.
[13] “World Bank Reforms Voting Power, Gets $86 Billion Boost”, 25 April 2010, https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2010/04/25/world-bank-reforms-voting-power-gets-86-billion-boost
[14] World Bank Group, “Doing Business 2014 - Understanding Regulations for Small and Medium-Size Enterprises”, 2013.
[15] “Fact sheet : G-8 action on Food Security and Nutrition,” Press release, The White House, 18 May 2012, quoted in The Oakland Institute, “Unfolding Truth: Dismantling the World Bank’s Myths on Agriculture and Development,” 2014, p.5.
[17] Rémi Vilain, « La nouvelle révolution verte en Afrique subsaharienne », CADTM, December 2015 (in French).
[18] “Doing Business – Data Irregularities Statement,” 27 August 2020, https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/statement/2020/08/27/doing-business---data-irregularities-statement
[19] The UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights recalled in an official statement on 24 June 2016 that the World Bank, like any other international body, must defend and implement the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the general principles of international law and the 1966 Covenants on Human Rights. E/C.12/2016/1 “Public debt, austerity measures and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights”. Statement by the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.
[20] Philip Alston, “Report of the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights”, A/70/274, 4 August 2015.
[21] Sasha Chavkin and Michael Hudson, “New investigation reveals 3.4m displaced by World Bank,” International Consortium of Investigative Journalism, 13 April 2015.
[22] Financial Times, “World Bank ditches second round of pandemic bonds”, 5 July 2020, https://www.ft.com/content/949adc20-5303-494b-9cf1-4eb4c8b6aa6b
[23] Here is what can be found on the World Bank’s website: “The insurance was obtained in July 2017 in two classes and in both bond and swap form. Class A was composed of US$225 million in bonds and US$50 million in swaps, and Class B was composed of US$95 million in bonds and US$55 million in swaps. The bonds were issued under the IBRD’s Global Debt Issuance Facility, under the Capital at Risk Notes supplement which was created in 2014 in part to transfer catastrophe risks to the capital markets.”
Source: https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/pandemics/brief/fact-sheet-pandemic-emergency-financing-facility
[24] [See Éric Toussaint and Damien Millet, Tsunami Aid and Debt Cancellation, Mumbai, Vikas Adhyayan Kendra, 2005
is a historian and political scientist who completed his Ph.D. at the universities of Paris VIII and Liège, is the spokesperson of the CADTM International, and sits on the Scientific Council of ATTAC France.
He is the author of Greece 2015: there was an alternative. London: Resistance Books / IIRE / CADTM, 2020 , Debt System (Haymarket books, Chicago, 2019), Bankocracy (2015); The Life and Crimes of an Exemplary Man (2014); Glance in the Rear View Mirror. Neoliberal Ideology From its Origins to the Present, Haymarket books, Chicago, 2012, etc.
See his bibliography: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89ric_Toussaint
He co-authored World debt figures 2015 with Pierre Gottiniaux, Daniel Munevar and Antonio Sanabria (2015); and with Damien Millet Debt, the IMF, and the World Bank: Sixty Questions, Sixty Answers, Monthly Review Books, New York, 2010. He was the scientific coordinator of the Greek Truth Commission on Public Debt from April 2015 to November 2015.
When President Joe Biden says that the US never denounced any debt obligation it’s a lie to convince people that there is no alternative to a bad bi-partisan agreement
Debt ceiling: Radio Silence Concerning United States President Franklin Roosevelt’s Repudiation of Debts28 May, by Eric Toussaint
23 May, by Eric Toussaint , Sushovan Dhar
20 May, by Eric Toussaint
12 May, by Eric Toussaint , Sushovan Dhar , Ashley Smith , Yuliya Yurchenko
6 April, by Eric Toussaint , Anaïs Carton
20 March, by Eric Toussaint
6 March, by Eric Toussaint
26 February, by Eric Toussaint
26 February, by Eric Toussaint , Anis Germany
11 January, by Eric Toussaint
13 October 2015, by Emilie Paumard , Brigitte Marti
5 July 2015, by Emilie Paumard
22 June 2015, by Emilie Paumard
8 September 2021, by CADTM , Eric Toussaint , Milan Rivié
The North’s New Debt Trap for the South
North Africa and the Middle-East: A new wave of debt26 May 2021, by Eric Toussaint , Omar Aziki , Milan Rivié
The North’s New Debt Trap for the South
An unsustainable burden of debt afflicts the peoples of Sub-Saharan Africa10 May 2021, by Eric Toussaint , Milan Rivié
The North’s New Debt Trap for the South
Latin America and the Caribbean are facing a serious debt crisis3 May 2021, by Eric Toussaint , Milan Rivié
The North’s New Debt Trap for the South
Developing countries in the stranglehold of debt26 April 2021, by Eric Toussaint , Milan Rivié
Version 2.0: A new debt trap from the South to the North
The external debt of Developing Countries: a Timebomb22 February 2021, by Eric Toussaint , Milan Rivié
Version 2.0: The North’s New Debt Trap for the South
Evolution of the external debt of developing countries between 2000 and 201919 January 2021, by Eric Toussaint , Milan Rivié
A new trap of indebtedness of the South to the North - Part 3
Developing Countries caught in the vice-like grip of indebtedness1 December 2020, by Eric Toussaint , Milan Rivié
A new trap of indebtedness of the South to the North - Part 2
Threats over the external debt of Developing Countries27 November 2020, by Eric Toussaint , Milan Rivié
5 November 2020, by Milan Rivié
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