The International Monetary Fund (IMF)
The International Monetary Fund (IMF)
The International Monetary Fund (IMF)
Both organizations are based in Washington, D.C., and were established as part of the Bretton Woods
Agreement in 1945. The Bretton Woods Agreement was a monetary and exchange rate management
system that attempted to encourage international financial cooperation through the introduction of a
system of convertible currencies at fixed exchange rates, with the dollar trading for gold at $35 per ounce
The IMF maintains its mission in three ways. First, it keeps track of the global economy and those of its
member countries. The group employs a number of economists who monitor member countries' economic
health. Each year, the IMF provides each country with an economic assessment.
Secondly, it gives practical assistance to members by providing policymakers to help plan fiscal policies,
coming up with tax and fiscal legislation, along with overseeing the economy through analysis. Finally,
the IMF lends money to countries with balance of payments difficulties. It provides this financial
assistance as long as the borrowing country implements initiatives suggested by the IMF.
The group's loan program doesn't come without criticism, however. Some countries cannot obtain
traditional financing sufficient to meet their international obligations. By providing loans, the IMF helps
countries develop policy programs that solve the balance of payments problem.
But these loans are loaded with conditions. A loan provided by the IMF as a form of rescue for countries
in serious debt ultimately only stabilizes international trade and eventually results in the country repaying
the loan at rather hefty interest rates.
The World Bank:
The World Bank's purpose is to aid long-term economic development and reduce poverty in economically
developing nations. It accomplishes this by making technical and financial support available. The bank
initially focused on rebuilding infrastructure in Western Europe following World War II and then turned
its operational focus to underdeveloped countries. 4
World Bank support helps countries reform inefficient economic sectors and implement specific projects,
such as building health centers and schools or making clean water and electricity more widely available.
The World Bank consists of five different organizations that all aim to meet the group's mission.
World Bank assistance is typically long-term, funded by countries—mainly the world's richest that are
members of the bank—through the issuing of bonds. The bank’s loans are not used as a type of bailout, as
is the case with the IMF, but as a fund for projects that help develop an underdeveloped or emerging
market nation and make it more productive economically.