comparative institutional analysis: the politics of

34
• What are the goals of IMF programs? – Economic stability? – Economic growth? • Note that while originally intended to promote international economic stability, the IMF has become increasingly concerned with promoting growth and addressing poverty…

Upload: vutuong

Post on 01-Jan-2017

215 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

• What are the goals of IMF programs?– Economic stability?

– Economic growth?

• Note that while originally intended to promote international economic stability, the IMF has become increasingly concerned with promoting growth and addressing poverty…

Page 2: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Our primary objective is growth… It is toward growth that our programs and their conditionality are aimed. It is with a view toward growth that we carry out our special responsibility of helping to correct balance of payments disequilibria and, more generally, to eliminate obstructive macroeconomic imbalances. When I refer to growth, I mean high-quality growth, not… growth for the privileged few, leaving the poor with nothing but empty promises.

– Michel Camdessus, former IMF Managing Director

Page 3: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

What are the effects?HERE COMES THE BAD NEWS

• Lower economic growth.

• Growing consensus across the political spectrum.

Page 4: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

The problem may be one of POLITICAL ECONOMY

• What role do politics play in international organizations?

• International politics– Friends of the United States get loans with weak

conditionality.– (E.g., UN Security Council members bribed???)

• Domestic politics– Governments use the IMF as a scapegoat to push

through policies that protect elites at the expense of labor and the poor

Page 5: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

• We often hear that governments do not want conditions to be imposed.

• BUT “International negotiations sometimes enable government leaders to do what they privately wish to do, but are powerless to do domestically… this pattern characterizes many stabilization programs that are (misleadingly) said to be ‘imposed’ by the IMF.” (Putnam 1988)

Page 6: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

• Note that IMF arrangements are a rare and strange breed of international arrangement.

• They are not ratified a priori.• A country’s finance minister “issues” a letter

of intent for the IMF’s approval.• Subsequently, the country is “under” an IMF

arrangement.• Although policy change may require

subsequent approval of other actors, the playing field has been changed.

Page 7: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

• Suppose an executive proposes to reduce the deficit and faces a veto player who is opposed.

• If the government proceeds without the IMF, the proposal is vetoed.

• If the government enters an IMF arrangement requiring deficit reduction, vetoing becomes more costly (“rejection costs”).

• Veto player may accept a deficit reduction to avoid “rejection costs.”

Page 8: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Executive

Figure 1: The logic of bringing in the IMF

How does bringing in the IMF help push through economic reform?

Page 9: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Executive

Without the IMF

Veto player

Accept

Reject

Payoff to veto player-1 (change policy)

0 (maintain the status quo)

Figure 1: The logic of bringing in the IMF

How does bringing in the IMF help push through economic reform?

Page 10: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Executive

Without the IMF

With the IMF

Veto player

Accept

Reject

Payoff to veto player-1 (change policy)

0 (maintain the status quo)

-r (reject the IMF)

Figure 1: The logic of bringing in the IMF

Veto player

Accept

Reject

-1 (change policy) + loan

How does bringing in the IMF help push through economic reform?

Page 11: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

• Note: the story requires a veto player opposed to the deficit reduction.

• What is a “veto player”? (Discuss.)

• The probability of such a veto player existing increases with the number of veto players.

• Hypothesis: As the # of veto players increases, the probability that the government wants an arrangement increases.

Page 12: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Compliance• Note that the IMF can be used as leverage

only if conditionality is enforced.

• Sometimes countries are given a free-ride. Conditionality is window dressing.

• Why?– International politics– Bureaucratic politics

Page 13: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

International Politics• Is the IMF a tool of foreign policy for the US (as

well as Japan, Germany, France and UK)?

• Hundreds of anecdotes… Systematic evidence?

• Countries that vote with the G7 at the UN are more likely to receive an IMF program.

• Countries receiving US foreign aid receive lighter punishments for non-compliance.

• More US bank exposure, more IMF loans.

Page 14: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Putting the domestic and international stories together…

Page 15: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Favorable US interest in the country

Effe

ct o

f dom

estic

inst

itutio

ns

Entering into IMF Programs:The effect of domestic politics depends on international politics

Page 16: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Bureaucratic politics• The “principal-agent” problem: A long chain of

command with little accountability.

• Perhaps the IMF is a power unto itself, seeking to maximize its budget.

• Seeks to loan as much as possible.

• Seeks to expand the contributions of member countries.

• The main condition it enforces on loan recipients: repayment.

Page 17: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

So, the effects of the IMF• May be due to loans – propping up bad

governments/policies– International politics

– Bureaucratic story

• May be due to wrong policies– Bad IMF advice– And/Or partial reform

• Consensus that IMF programs historically did not help economic development

Page 18: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Korea presents a challenge• Sometimes politically important countries accept

IMF loans but follow sound economic policies.

• East Asian Tiger South Korea participated in IMF programs consecutively from 1965 to 1977

• The country’s strategic importance to the West during the Cold War may have improved the chances for the country to borrow from the IMF, but did not lead them to follow policies detrimental to long-run economic growth.

• Political importance and economic vulnerability may be the toxic mix

Page 19: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

The debate

Page 20: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

The left

• Bad policy advice

Page 21: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

The right

• Policy advice is ignored– IMF lending goes to “strategically important”

countries – Or just any countries and the IMF doesn’t

enforce – bureaucratic story

• Loans subsidize bad policies and bad governments

Page 22: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Moderate view

• Governments use the IMF to push through policies that protect elite constituencies.

• This partial reform is not good for economic growth and exacerbates income inequality.

Page 23: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Why is there a debate?

• The “compliance question” has not been answered!

• Why not?

• The IMF (still) lacks transparency!

Page 24: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Reform of the IMF:• Transparency – we need to know what are the conditions

and the standards for compliance.– Letters of Intent available at www.imf.org – Executive Board?

• Ownership – governments must be committed to reform.

• Back to the mandate?

• Governance – More recipient-country representation on the Executive Board.– Reformed in March 2008, but a far cry from what’s needed…

Page 25: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

• Top 5 members:– United States (16.8%)

– Japan (6.0%)

– Germany (5.9%)

– France (4.9%)

– UK (4.9%)

• Other important members:– China (3.7%)– Saudi Arabia (3.2%)– Russia (2.7%)– Italy? (3.2%)– Belgium? (2.1%)– Brazil? (1.4%)– India? (1.9%)– Korea (1.3%)– South Africa? (0.9%)

Page 26: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Korea and IMF governance• http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/memdir/eds.htm

• http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/memdir/members.htm

• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)

• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(PPP)

Page 27: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

IMF web page…http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/memdir/eds.htm

Page 28: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of
Page 29: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Governance

• How will this address the political manipulation of the IMF?

• It won’t.“It is the correct thing to do, but probably

won’t make much difference.”[personal conversation with Pres. Henrique Cardoso,

Brazil & Pres. Ernesto Zedillo, Mexico]

Page 30: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

In the meantime:• Many emerging market countries are “done” with the IMF

(e.g., South Africa)

• Lending is down… so revenue for the IMF is also down!

• The IMF is tightening its belt.

• So what is their reply?• Surveillance is usually considered by the IMF to be its

“most central and important activity” (Hacche 2007, p. 98).• The IMF is like a moving target (the MTS)

Page 31: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Is IMF forecasting unbiased?

• No.

• Before elections, they forecast inflation that is upwards biased.

• But if you are a friend of the United States, before elections, they forecast inflation that is downwards biased!

Page 32: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Recent history

• Back to the old playbook?– Iceland, Hungary?

• The stigma of conditionality– Flexible Credit Line

Page 33: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

IMF Arrangementshttp://www.imf.org/external/np/exr/map/lending/index.htm

• Iceland• Turkey• Seychelles• Pakistan• Georgia• Mongolia

Page 34: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of

Conclusion (from 2007 )• The IMF is like a credit union.• To deal with moral hazard, it attaches policy conditions to its loans.• The policies have not been working out so well, but there is no

consensus as to why.• International politics and domestic politics are likely culprits.• These days, emerging market countries are not taking loans from the

IMF as much as before.• So the IMF is shifting focus (AGAIN) – now pushing surveillance as its

new raison d’etre.• The same political problems that plague its lending practices may

plague its forecasting.• Reform to insulate the IMF from politics is necessary, but probably not

going to happen.• Will the IMF become obsolete?• Another financial crisis could give it a new job, but if the job is too big,

the IMF may become irrelevant.