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International Monetary Fund
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is an organization of 186 countries, working to foster global monetary cooperation, secure financial stability, facilitate international trade, promote high employment and sustainable economic growth, and reduce poverty around the world.
Key IMF Activities
Original Aims
An adapting IMF
What the IMF do?What the IMF do?
policy advice to governments and central
banks based on analysis of economic
trends and cross-country experiences
KEY ACTIVITIESKEY ACTIVITIESThe IMF supports its membership by providing…..
•concessional loans to help fight poverty in developing countries; and•technical assistance and training to help countries improve the management of their economies.
More specifically, the IMF continues to provide a forum for cooperation on international
monetary problems facilitate the growth of international trade, thus
promoting job creation, economic growth, and poverty reduction;
promote exchange rate stability and an open system of international payments; and
lend countries foreign exchange when needed, on a temporary basis and under adequate safeguards, to help them address balance of payments problems.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) was created in July 1944, under the Bretton Woods system which consisted of three international organizations:
1) The International Monetary Fund (IMF): With the purpose of creating international monetary co-operation.
2) The International Bank of Reconstruction and Development (IBRD): With the purpose of international development assistance and Investment
3) The International Trade Organization (ITO): With the Purpose of promoting international trade .
These three elements of the Bretton Woods system were conceived in a context of war, with the memories of high unemployment, hyperinflation, depression and fluctuating exchange rates which characterized the 1930’s.
However, The International Trade Organization was rejected by US Congress, and in place the General Agreement of Tariffs and Trade was developed, and enacted in 1948 in replace of the ITO.
• Membership: 186 countries• Headquarters: Washington, DC• Executive Board: 24 Directors representing countries or
groups of countries• Staff: approximately 2,478 from 143 countries • Total quotas: $325 billion (as of 3/31/09)• Additional pledged or committed resources: $500
billion• Loans committed (as of 9/1/09): $175.5 billion, of which
$124.5 billion have not been drawn
• Biggest borrowers: Hungary, Mexico, Ukraine• Technical assistance: Field delivery in FY2009—173
persons during FY2009• Surveillance consultations: Concluded in 2008—177
countries in 2008, of which 155 voluntarily published information on their consultation (as of 03/31/09)
• Original aims: Article I of the Article of Agreement sets out the IMF’s main goals:
– promoting international monetary cooperation; – facilitating the expansion and balanced growth of international
trade;– promoting exchange stability; – assisting in the establishment of a multilateral system of
payments; and– making resources available (with adequate safeguards) to
members experiencing balance of payments difficulties.
International Monetary
and Financial
Committee
Board of Governors
Joint IMF-World Bank Development Committee
ExecutiveBoard
Independent Evaluation
Office
Managing Director
1) Surveillance2) Conditional Financial Support3) Technical Assistance
The appraisal of a country’s economic and structural policies and performance from an international standpoint. It is a regulatory or jurisdictional function, which historically has been focused on the assessment of the exchange arrangements, the exchange rates and balance of payments.
Exchange Rates, Monetary and Fiscal Policies: Remain at the centre of IMFsurveillance.
Structural Policies: Added to IMF surveillance agenda after the 1980’s oil priceshock. Concerned with the macroeconomic performance of a country, and payspecial attention to such issues as international trade and labour market issues.
Financial Sector: Added during the early 1990’s following a series of international banking crisis's.
Institutional Issues: Concerned with such issues as independence of the centralbank, financial sector regulation.
Assesment of Risks and Vulnerability: Crises prevention
Provide short term loans (1 to 5 years) to countries experiencing balance of payments problems so that they can restore conditions for sustainable economic growth conditional upon policies and procedures developed by the fund to govern the access to and the use of its resource by member countries.
• In the event that member countries experience difficulties financing their balance of payments, the IMF is also a fund that can be tapped to facilitate recover. A policy program supported by financing is designed by the national authorities in close cooperation with the IMF.
• The IMF also provides low-income countries with loans at a concessional interest rate through the Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF) and the Exogeneous Shocks Facility(ESF).
• The IMF’s goal for its technical support is to contribute to the development of the productive resources of member countries by enhancing the effectiveness of economic policy and financial policy.
The IMF provides technical assistance and training mainly in four areas:
• Monetary and financial policies (monetary policy instruments, banking system supervision and restructuring, foreign management and operations, clearing settlement systems for payments, and structural development of central banks)
• Fiscal policy and management (tax and customs policies and administration, budget formulation, expenditure management, design of social safety nets, and management of domestic and foreign debt)
• • Compilation, management, dissemination, and
improvement of statistical data
• Economic and financial legislation.
The Special Drawing Right (SDR) is an interest-bearing international reserve asset created by the IMF in 1969 to supplement other reserve assets of member countries.
Its value is based on a basket of four key international currencies, and SDRs can be exchanged for freely usable currencies.
The basket composition is reviewed every five years to ensure that it reflects the relative importance of currencies in the world's trading and financial systems.
Countries that have larger holdings of SDRs than their allocations receive interest based on the SDR interest
rate.
The SDR was created to support the Bretton Woods fixed exchange rate system.
A country participating in this system needed official reserves—government or central bank holdings of gold and widely accepted foreign currencies.
But the international supply of two key reserve assets that were gold and the U.S. dollar—proved inadequate.
Therefore, the international community decided to create a new international reserve asset.
SDR are like coupons,holders can exchange them for curriences required for making international payments in two ways:-first, through the arrangement of voluntary exchanges and second, by the IMF designating members.
SDR Fact Sheet
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
US
Dol
lar
Ger
man
Japa
nese
fren
chB
ritis
h
US
Dol
lar
Ger
man
Japa
nese
fren
chB
ritis
h
US
Dol
lar
Ger
man
Japa
nese
fren
chB
ritis
h
US
Dol
lar
Ger
man
Japa
nese
fren
chB
ritis
h
US
Dol
lar
Eur
opea
nJa
pane
seB
ritis
h
US
Dol
lar
Eur
opea
nJa
pane
seB
ritis
h
US
Dol
lar
Eur
opea
nJa
pane
seB
ritis
h
jan 1981-dec 1985
jan 1986-dec1990
jan 1991-dec 1995
jan 1996-dec 1998
jan1999-dec2000
jan2001-dec2005
jan2006-dec2010
currencies with year
wei
gh
t
weight
General Allocations. The first allocation was for a total
amount of SDR 9.3 billion in 1970-72. The second allocation, for SDR 12.1
bn in 1979–81. The third general allocation was
approved on August 7, 2009 for an amount of SDR 161.2 billion
Special Allocations.
SDR Allocations to IMF Members