Unit - 5 India's Foreign Trade
Unit - 5 India's Foreign Trade
Unit - 5 India's Foreign Trade
Business with foreign nations is not a new phenomenon in India. India is used to
trade with foreign nations even in BC. The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea is a
document (written by an anonymous sailor from Alexandria about AD 100)
describing trade between countries, including India. Since 1498, Europeans did
trade with the rulers of India using the sea route. The main export items then were
spices like pepper, ginger, cinnamon, cardamom, nutmeg, mace, and cloves. From
1947-1991, the Indian economy remained largely as a closed economy. High taxes
were levied on import of items. Foreign investments like FDI were restricted.
However, after the liberalisation in 1991, foreign trade improved significantly.
Now, India exports around 7500 commodities to about 190 countries, and imports
around 6000 commodities from 140 countries. Exports and Imports are not only
restricted to commodities (merchandise). Service is also a major export/import
item.
The summary of foreign trade of India can be as below:
Exports of India
Imports of India
Top Import Items: Crude petroleum, gold, petroleum products, coal, coke &
briquettes constitute top import items.
India’s service exports are more than its service imports. This means that
India has a net service surplus.
However, India’s net services surplus has been steadily declining in relation
to GDP.
Now, India’s service surplus finance about 50 per cent of the merchandise
deficit (the trade balance).
India’s top five trading partners continue to be USA, China, UAE, Saudi Arabia
and Hong Kong.
1. Petroleum Products
2. Pearl, Precious, Semiprecious Stones
3. Drug Formulations, Biologicals
4. Gold and Other Precious Metal Jewelry
5. Iron and Steel
6. Electric Machinery and equipment
7. Organic Chemicals
8. RMG Cotton including Accessories
9. Motor Vehicles/ Cars
10.Marine Products
1. U S A
2. UAE
3. China PRP
4. Hong Kong
5. Singapore
6. United Kingdom
7. Netherland
8. Germany
9. Bangladesh PR
10.Nepal
Service Exports:
The composition of service exports has remained largely unchanged over the years.
Software services constitute the bulk of it at around 40-45 per cent, followed by
business services at about 18-20 per cent, travel at 11-14 per cent and
transportation at 9-11 per cent.
1. Petroleum: Crude
2. Gold
3. Petroleum Products
4. Coal, Coke and Briquettes, etc.
5. Pearl, Precious, Semiprecious Stones
6. Electronic Components
7. Telecom Instruments
8. Organic Chemicals
9. Industrial Machinery for Dairy etc.
10.Iron and Steel
Top 10 Countries from which India imports the most
1. China PRP
2. USA
3. UAE
4. Saudi Arabia
5. Iraq
6. Switzerland
7. Hong Kong
8. Korea RP
9. Singapore
10.Indonesia
Service Imports
Over the years, service imports in relation to GDP have been steadily rising putting
pressure on BoP to worsen. However, the increase in service imports to GDP ratio
is inevitable given a rising level of FDI and a gradual upscaling of the Make in
India program. Business Services, Travel, and Transportation are the three top
service imports.
Global Trade
Global Trade was growing at 5.7 per cent in 2017. However, in 2019-20, it is
estimated to grow only at 1.0 per cent.
India now ranks 68 out of the 190 countries under the indicator “Trading across
Borders” in the Ease of Doing Business Report published by World Bank. (2019).
The logistics industry of India is currently estimated to be around US$ 160 billion
and is expected to touch US$ 215 billion by 2020.
Net Remittances are part of the Current Account in the Balance of Payments
statement published by RBI.
Net remittances from Indians employed overseas has been constantly increasing
year after year.
External Debt
After witnessing significant decline since 2014-15, India’s external liabilities (debt
and equity) to GDP has increased at the end of June 2019 primarily driven by an
increase in FDI, portfolio flows and external commercial borrowings (ECBs).
External debt as at end of September 2019 remains low at 20.1 per cent of GDP.
In FY22, these main import items accounted for 70.6 percent of overall imports.
The composition of India’s imports is segregated into three categories:
raw materials,
capital goods, and
consumer products.
Raw materials
Petroleum oil, lubricants, edible oil, iron and steel, fertilizers, non-ferrous metals,
precious stones, pearls, and other commodities fall into this category. The
percentage of total imports made up of all of these commodities skyrocketed
significantly from 47% in 1960-61 to nearly 80% in 1980-81.
Presently, concerns about supply disruptions have risen due to Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine, bringing oil prices to multi-year highs. Given that India imports roughly
80% of its oil, the current circumstance puts its trade deficit in jeopardy. Petroleum
imports increased from USD 13.1 billion in January to USD 15.3 billion on
February 22. Due to rising international oil prices, higher mobility, and a
corresponding increase in domestic and foreign oil consumption, petroleum
imports climbed significantly from USD 72.4 billion in FY21 to USD 141.7 billion
in FY22.
Capital goods
It involves importing electrical items, food grains, medications, and paper, among
other things. Until the end of the Third Five-Year Plan, India had a severe food
grain shortfall. As a result, India would import enormous amounts of food grains.
Presently, India has become self-sufficient in food production.
The top eight export items during the April-February period of FY22 were:
India’s export composition can be classified into two categories: traditional exports
and non-traditional exports.
Traditional products
Traditional items include the export of coffee, tea, jute goods, iron ore, animal
skin, cotton, minerals, fish and fish products, etc. These products accounted for
nearly 80% of our overall exports at the start of the planning era. However, these
items’ contribution is gradually decreasing, while non-traditional items’
contribution is increasing.
Non-traditional products
Engineering goods, sugar, chemicals, electrical goods, iron and steel, leather
goods, gems and jewelry are among the non-traditional items exported.
Engineering goods and petroleum products are the two major components of
India’s total exports. Exports of engineering goods have climbed to USD 101
billion in FY22, a 49.8% increase. Also, petroleum exports have skyrocketed from
USD 22.2 billion in FY21 to USD 55.5 billion in FY22.
Summary of Composition
To summaries, major changes in the scale, composition and course of the Indian
foreign trade have been noted over the last five decades. India’s transformation
from a largely primary commodities exporting country to a non-primary
commodities exporting country is remarkable. The nation’s reliance on importing
capital goods and food grains has also decreased. The majority of these
modifications have been in line with the economy’s development needs. The trend
implies that the Indian economy is undergoing structural changes. The features of
Volume, Composition and Direction of India’s Foreign Trade are as follows:
India’s foreign trade plays an important role in the Gross National Income.
In 1990-91, share of India’s foreign trade (import export) in net national income
was 17 per cent which in 2006-07 rose to 25 per cent. In 2006-07 exports and
imports as percentage of GDP were 14.0 per cent and 21 per cent respectively.
Share of India’s foreign trade in world trade has been declining. In 1950-51,
India’s share in total import trade of the world was 1.8 per cent and in export trade
it was 2 per cent. According to World Trade Statistics, India’s share in world trade
has gone-up from 1.4 per cent in 2004 to 1.5 per cent in 2006 and estimated to be 2
per cent in 2009.
3) Oceanic Trade:
Most of India’s trade is by sea, India has very little trade relations with its neighing
countries like Nepal, Afghanistan, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, etc. Thus, 68 per cent of
India’s trade is oceanic trade: Share of these neighing countries in our export trade
was 21.8 per cent and in import trade 19.1 per cent.
4) Dependence on a Few Ports:
For its foreign trade, India depends mostly on Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai
ports. These ports are therefore, over-crowded. Recently, India has developed
Kandla, Cochin, and Visakhapatnam ports to lessen the burden on former ports.
Since 1990-91, volume and value of India’s foreign trade has gone up. India now
exports and imports goods which are several times more in value and volume. In
1990-91, total value of India’s foreign trade was Rs 75,751 and in 2008-09, it rose
to Rs 22, 15,191 crore. Of it, value of exports was Rs 8, 40,755 crore and that of
imports was Rs 13, 74,436 crore.
Since Independence, composition of India’s import trade has also witnessed a sea
change. Prior to Independence, India used to import mostly consumption goods
like medicines, cloth, motor vehicles, electrical goods, iron, steel, etc. Now it has
been importing mostly petrol and petroleum products, machines, chemicals-,
fertilizers, oil seeds, raw materials, steel, edible oils, etc.
It refers to the countries with whom a country trade. Main changes in the direction
of foreign trade are as under:
In the year 1990, in exports the maximum share, i.e., 17.9 per cent was that of
Eastern Europe, i.e., Romania, East Germany, and U.S.S.R., etc. In import trade,
maximum share, i.e., 16.5 per cent was that of OPEC, i.e., Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, etc. In 2008-09, the largest share in India’s foreign trade (both imports and
exports) was that of European Union (EU), i.e., Germany, Belgium, France, U.K.,
etc., and developing countries. Now, U.A.E., China and U.S.A. have occupied
important place in India’s foreign trade. The importance of England, Russia, etc.,
has declined.
Since 1950-51, India’s balance of trade has been continuously adverse except for
two years, viz., 1972-73 and 1976-77, besides it has been mounting year after year.
In 1950-51 balance of trade was adverse to the tune of Rs 2 crore and by 1990-
1991 it rose to Rs 16,933 crore. After the policy of liberalization, the country has
witnessed a rapid increase in it. In 1999- 2000 it rose to Rs 77,359crorc and in
2008-09 it amounted to 5, 33,680 crore. Fast rise in the value of imports and slow
rise in the value of exports accounted for this tremendous rise in balance of trade
deficit.
Globalization and diversification mark the latest trend of India’s foreign trade.
India’s foreign trade is no longer confined or a few goods or a few countries.
Presently, India exports 7,500 items to about 190 countries and in its import- kitty
there are 6,000 items from 140 countries. It unveiled the changing pattern of
India’s foreign trade.
Since 1991 the role of public sector in India’s foreign trade has undergone a
change. Prior to it, State Trading Corporation (STC), Minerals and Metals Trading
Corporation (MMTC), Handicraft and Handloom Corporation, Steel Authority of
India Ltd. (SAIL), Hindustan Machine Tools (HMT), Bharat Heavy Electrical
Limited (BHEL), etc., used to play significant role in India’s foreign trade. As a
result of implementation of the policy of liberalization, the importance of all these
public sector enterprises has diminished.
Export Import Policy or better known as Exim Policy is a set of guidelines and
instructions related to the import and export of goods. The Government of India
notifies the Exim Policy for a period of five years (1997 2002) under Section 5 of
the Foreign Trade (Development and Regulation Act), 1992. The current policy
covers the period 2002 2007. The Export Import Policy is updated every year on
the 31st of March and the modifications, improvements and new schemes becames
effective from 1st April of every year. All types of changes or modifications
related to the Exim Policy is normally announced by the Union Minister of
Commerce and Industry who coordinates with the Ministry of Finance, the
Directorate General of Foreign Trade and its network of regional offices.
Highlight of Various Exim Policies of India 2002 - 07
1. Service Exports
Duty free import facility for service sector having a minimum foreign exchange
earning of Rs. 10 lakhs. The duty-free entitlement shall be 10% of the average
foreign exchange earned in the preceding three licensing years. However, for
hotels the same shall be 5 % of the average foreign exchange earned in the
preceding three licensing years. Imports of agriculture and dairy products shall not
be allowed for imports against the entitlement. The entitlement and the goods
imported against such entitlement shall be nontransferable.
2. Status Holders
a. Duty free import entitlement for status holder having incremental growth of
more than 25% in FOB value of exports (in free foreign exchange). This
facility shall however be available to status holder having a minimum export
turnover of Rs. 25 crores (in free foreign exchange).
a) Diamonds & Jewelry Dollar Account for exporters dealing in purchase /sale
of diamonds and diamond studded jewelry.
c) Gem & Jewelry units in SEZ and EOUs can receive precious metal
Gold/silver/platinum prior to export or post export equivalent to value of
jewelry exported. This means that they can bring export proceeds in kind
against the present provision of bringing in cash only.
b) Export of 5 items namely paddy except basmati, cotton linters, rare, earth,
silk, cocoons, family planning device except condoms, removed from
restricted list.
a) Sales from Domestic Tariff Area (DTA) to SEZ to be treated as export. This
would now entitle domestic suppliers to Duty Drawback / DEPB benefits,
CST exemption and Service Tax exemption.
b) Agriculture/Horticulture processing SEZ units will now be allowed to
provide inputs and equipment to contract farmers in DTA to promote
production of goods as per the requirement of importing countries.
c) Foreign bound passengers will now be allowed to take goods from SEZs to
promote trade, tourism and exports.
g) SEZ units permitted to take job work abroad and exports goods from there
only.
j) Export/Import of all products through post parcel /courier by SEZ units will
now be allowed.
k) The value of capital goods imported by SEZ units will now be amortized
uniformly over 10 years.
l) SEZ units will now be allowed to sell all products including gems and
jewelry through exhibition and duty free shops or shops set up abroad.
m) Goods required for operation and maintenance of SEZ units will now be
allowed duty free.
7. EOU Scheme
Provision b,c,i,j,k and l of SEZ (Special Economic Zone) scheme , as mentioned
above, apply to Export Oriented Units (EOUs) also. Besides these, the other
important provisions are:
a) EOUs are now required to be only net positive foreign exchange earner and
there will now be no export performance requirement.
c) Gems and jewelry EOUs are now being permitted sub-contracting in DTA.
d) Gems and jewelry EOUs will now be entitled to advance domestic sales.
8. EPCG Scheme
a) The Export Promotion Capital Goods (EPCG) Scheme shall allow import
of capital goods for preproduction and post production facilities also.
b) The Export Obligation under the scheme shall be linked to the duty saved
and shall be 8 times the duty saved.
f) Capital goods up to 10 years old shall also be allowed under the Scheme.
h) Royalty payments received from abroad and testing charges received in free
foreign exchange to be counted for discharge of export obligation under
EPCG Scheme.
9. DEPB Scheme
a) Facility for pro visional Duty Entitlement Pass Book (DEPB) rates
introduced to encourage diversification and promote export of new products.
11. Miscellaneous
a) Actual user condition for import of second hand capital goods up to 10 years
old dispensed with.
b) Reduction in penal interest rate from 24% to 15% for all old cases of default
under Exim policy
Covid-19 was catastrophic for international trade. Indian exports fell by a record
60% and imports by 59% in April 2020. Though the situation has improved, the
road to recovery is long and hard. That is why the new trade policy must deliver
the goods. Based on inputs from traders, trade associations, members of Parliament
and a government-appointed high-level advisory group, some key expectations are:
This is a tough task, considering Indian exports have hovered around the $300-
billion mark since 2011-2012. Battered by the pandemic, exports for the April-
November 2020 period stood at $304.25 billion. The country’s GDP reached $
2.88 trillion in 2019–2020.
In its 2019 report on what India must do for exports to reach $1 trillion by 2025,
the high-level advisory group suggested:
District Export Hubs: The government will identify potential products and
services in each district, identify agricultural and toy clusters, map GI
products, set up district export promotion panels and district export action
plans as part of this initiative targeted at small businesses and farmers.
Correcting imbalances: A persistent demand of exporters/importers is
correcting the imbalances in India’s international trade processes. At the
meeting, the ministry committed to reducing “domestic and overseas
constraints related to the policy, regulatory and operational framework for
lowering transaction costs and enhancing ease of doing business”. It also
spoke of creating “efficient, cost-effective and adequate logistical and
utilities infrastructure”.
5) Improved mobility of capital: In the past few decades there has been a general
reduction in capital barriers, making it easier for capital to flow between different
economies. This has increased the ability for firms to receive finance. It has also
increased the global interconnectedness of global financial markets.
These factors have helped in economic liberalization and globalization and have
facilitated the world in becoming a “global village”. Increasing interaction between
people of different countries has led to internationalization of food habits, dress
habits, lifestyle and views.
Indian government did the same and liberalized the trade and investment due to the
pressure from World Trade Organization. Import duties were cut down phase-wise
to allow MNC’s operate in India on equality basis. As a result globalization has
brought to India new technologies, new products and also the economic
opportunities.
Despite bureaucracy, lack of infrastructure, and an ambiguous policy framework
that adversely impact MNCs operating in India, MNCs are looking at India in a big
way, and are making huge investments to set up R&D centers in the country. India
has made a lead over other growing economies for IT, business processing, and
R&D investments. There have been both positive and negative impacts of
globalization on social and cultural values in India.
Economic Impact:
With an improvement in standard of living and rising income level, the food habits
of people change. People tend toward taking more protein intensive foods. This
shift in dietary pattern, along with rising population results in an overwhelming
demand for protein rich food, which the supply side could not meet. Thus resulting
in a demand supply mismatch thereby, causing inflation.
Nuclear families are emerging. Divorce rates are rising day by day. Men and
women are gaining equal right to education, to earn, and to speak. ‘Hi’, ‘Hello’ is
used to greet people in spite of Namaskar and Namaste. American festivals like
Valentines’ day, Friendship day etc. are spreading across India.
A good example of bicultural identity is among the educated youth in India who
despite being integrated into the global fast paced technological world, may
continue to have deep rooted traditional Indian values with respect to their personal
lives and choices such as preference for an arranged marriage, caring for parents in
their old age.
1. Growth of Self-Selected Culture: means people choose to form groups with like-
minded persons who wish to have an identity that is untainted by the global culture
and its values. The values of the global culture, which are based on individualism,
free market economics, and democracy and include freedom, of choice, individual
rights, openness to change, and tolerance of differences are part of west
2.
3. ern values. For most people worldwide, what the global culture has to offer is
appealing. One of the most vehement criticisms of globalization is that it threatens
to create one homogeneous worldwide culture in which all children grow up
wanting to be like the latest pop music star, eat Big Macs, vacation at Disney
World, and wear blue jeans, and Nikes.
Globalisation is an age old phenomenon which has been taking place for centuries
now. We can experience it so profoundly these days because of its increased pace.
The penetration of technology and new economic structures are leading to an
increased interaction between people. As with other things there have been both
positive and negative impacts on India due to it.
The impact of globalization has been totally positive or totally negative. It has been
both. Each impact mentioned above can be seen as both positive as well as
negative. However, it becomes a point of concern when, an overwhelming impact
of globalization can be observed on the Indian culture.
Every educated Indian seems to believe that nothing in India, past or present, is to
be approved unless recognized and recommended by an appropriate authority in
the West. There is an all-pervading presence of a positive, if not worshipful,
attitude towards everything in western society and culture, past as well as present
in the name of progress, reason and science. Nothing from the West is to be
rejected unless it has first been weighed and found wanting by a Western
evaluation. This should be checked, to preserve the rich culture and diversity of
India.
Convertibility in India
The International movement of capital is not always free; countries restrict flows
of capital as and when needed to safeguard their markets from erratic flows of
capital. In India, for example, there are restrictions on the movement of foreign
capital and the rupee is not fully convertible on capital account.
CAC means the freedom to convert rupee into any foreign currency (Euro, Dollar,
Yen, Renminbi etc.) and foreign currency back into rupee for capital account
transactions. In very simple terms it means, Indian’s having the freedom to convert
their local financial assets into foreign ones at market determined exchange rate.
CAC will lead to a free exchange of currency at a lower rate and an unrestricted
movement of capital.
Capital Account Convertibility and Current Account Convertibility
To attract foreign investment, many developing countries went in for CAC in the
1980s, not realizing that free mobility of capital leaves countries open to both
sudden and huge inflows and outflows, both of which can be potentially
destabilizing. More important, unless you have the institutions, particularly
financial institutions capable of dealing with such huge flows, countries may not be
able to cope as was demonstrated by the East Asian crisis of the late 90s.
Following steps have been taken in the direction of capital account convertibility.
Advantages Disadvantages
Market determined exchange rates being
Availability of large funds by
higher than officially fixed exchange rates can
improved access to international
raise import prices and cause Cost-push
financial markets.
inflation.
Improper management of CAC can lead to
Reduction in cost of capital. currency depreciation and affect trade and
capital flows.
The advantages have been found to be short
The incentive for Indians to acquire
lived as per studies, and also International
and hold international securities and
financial institutions are skeptical about CAC
assets.
post-2008 crisis.
Speculative activity can lead to capital flight
Greater financial competitiveness. from the country as in case of some South
East Asian economies during 1997-98.
Will help Indian corporate to use
Imposing control would become difficult in a
External commercial borrowing
globalized environment once CAC is
route without RBI or Govt
introduced.
approval.
Indian residents can hold and
transact foreign currency
denominated deposits with Indian
banks.
A Certain class of financial
institutions and later NBFCs can
access global financial market.
Banks and financial institutions can
trade in Gold globally and issue
loans.
Objectives
SAARC aims to promote economic growth, social progress and cultural
development within the South Asia region. The objectives of SAARC, as defined
in its charter, are as follows:
Promote the welfare of the peoples of South Asia and improve their
quality of life
Accelerate economic growth, social progress and cultural development in
the region by providing all individuals the opportunity to live in dignity
and realise their full potential
Promote and strengthen collective self-reliance among the countries of
South Asia
Contribute to mutual trust, understanding and appreciation of one
another’s problems
Promote active collaboration and mutual assistance in the economic,
social, cultural, technical and scientific fields
Strengthen co-operation with other developing countries
Strengthen co-operation among themselves in international forms on
matters of common interest; and
Cooperate with international and regional organisation with similar aims
and purposes.
Areas of Cooperation
The Member States agreed on the following areas of cooperation:
Latest Developments
The 18th SAARC Summit held in Kathmandu in 2014 concluded with the adoption
of the SAARC Declaration. The Declaration recognizes labour migration as an
issue in need of collective action. Article 21 states that SAARC countries agree to
collaborate to ensure the protection of migrant workers from South Asia. During
the Summit, SAARC leaders also called for authorities to tackle and prevent the
trafficking in women and children.
In regards to the Post-2015 Development Agenda, participating countries aim to
initiate an inter-governmental process to appropriately contextualize the
Sustainable Development Goals at the regional level.
G 20
The Group of Twenty (G20) is the premier forum for international economic
cooperation. The members of the G20 are: Argentina,
Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan,
Republic of Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South
Africa, Türkiye, the United Kingdom, the United States, and the European Union.
Each year, the presidency invites guest countries to participate. Spain is invited as
a permanent guest.
The G20 brings together the world's major economies. Its members account for
more than 80 per cent of world GDP, 75 per cent of global trade and 60 percent of
the population of the planet.
The forum has met every year since 1999, with leaders meeting for an annual G20
Leaders' Summit since 2008
BRICS
BRICS is an acronym for Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa. Goldman
Sachs economist Jim O'Neill coined the term BRIC (without South Africa) in
2001, claiming that by 2050 the four BRIC economies would come to dominate
the global economy. South Africa was added to the list in 2010.1
This thesis became conventional market wisdom in the aughts. But there were
always skeptics, including some who claimed the phrase was Goldman marketing
hype. Indeed, few talk about BRICS much anymore—at least not in terms of their
global domination. Goldman closed its BRICS-focused investment fund in 2015,
merging it with a broader emerging markets fund.
The leaders of BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) countries met for the first
time in St. Petersburg, Russia, on the margins of G8 Outreach Summit in July
2006. Shortly afterwards, in September 2006, the group was formalised as BRIC
during the 1st BRIC Foreign Ministers’ Meeting, which met on the sidelines of the
General Debate of the UN Assembly in New York City.
After a series of high level meetings, the 1st BRIC summit was held in
Yekaterinburg, Russia on 16 June 2009.
BRIC group was renamed as BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa)
after South Africa was accepted as a full member at the BRIC Foreign Ministers’
meeting in New York in September 2010. Accordingly, South Africa attended the
3rd BRICS Summit in Sanya, China on 14 April 2011.
IMF
Background
2. Main Functions
The IMF employs three main functions – surveillance, financial assistance, and
technical assistance – to promote the stability of the international monetary and
financial system.
Surveillance : The IMF closely monitors each member country's economic and
financial developments and holds a policy dialogue with a member country on a
regular basis (also known as Article IV Consultation), usually once each year, to
assess its economic conditions with a view to providing policy recommendations.
The IMF also reviews global and regional developments and outlook based on
information from individual consultations. The IMF publishes such assessment on
the multilateral surveillance through the World Economic Outlook and the Global
Financial Stability Report on a semi-annual basis.
Financial Assistance : The IMF lends to its member countries facing balance of
payments problems in order to facilitate the adjustment process and restore
member countries' economic growth and stability through various loan instruments
or "facilities". An IMF loan is usually provided under an "arrangement," requiring
a borrowing country to undertake the specific policies and measures to resolve its
balance of payments problem as specified in a "Letter of Intent." Most IMF loans
are primarily financed by its member countries through payments of quotas. Thus,
the IMF's lending capacity is mainly determined by the total amount of quotas.
Nevertheless, if necessary, the IMF may borrow from a number of its financially
strongest member countries through the New Arrangements to Borrow (NAB) or
the General Arrangements to Borrow (GAB) to supplement the resources from its
quotas.
Technical Assistance : The IMF provides technical assistance to help member
countries strengthen their capacity to design and implement effective policies in
four areas, namely, 1) monetary and financial policies, 2) fiscal policy and
management, 3) statistics and
4) economic and financial legislation. In addition to technical assistance, the IMF
also offers training courses and seminars to member countries at the IMF Institute
in Washington D.C., and other regional training institutes (Austria, Brazil, China,
India, Singapore, Tunisia and United Arab Emirates).
3. Organizational Structure
The Board of Governors, comprising one governor from each member country, is
the highest decision-making body of the IMF. The Board of Governors usually
meets once each year at the IMF/World Bank Annual Meetings. The International
Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC), consisting of 24 members, which
reflects the composition of the IMF's Executive Board, acts as the advisor to the
Board of Governors. It meets twice each year to review issues relating to the
Board of Governors' functions in supervising the management of the international
monetary and financial system as well as make recommendations to the Board of
Governors. The day-to-day work of the IMF, as guided by the IMFC, is carried
out by the Executive Board and IMF staff. The Managing Director is Chairman of
the Executive Board and Head of IMF staff.
Membership : IMF's members have grown from 29 at its inception in 1945 to 185
at present. The latest member country is Montenegro who joined the IMF in
January 2007. Countries must first join the United Nations to be eligible for IMF
membership.
Quotas : Upon joining the IMF, each member country is assigned an initial quota
comparable to its relative economic size to the global economy and those of
existing member countries Quotas are denominated in Special Drawing Rights
(SDRs) 1/ General quota reviews are conducted at regular intervals – usually every
five years, allowing the IMF to assess the adequacy of quotas in terms of members'
needs for liquidity and its ability to finance those needs.
A member's quota determines its voting power and access to IMF financing. The
quota largely determines a member's voting power in IMF decisions. Each IMF
member has 250 basic votes plus one additional vote for each SDR 100,000 of
quota. In general, a member can borrow up to 100 percent of its quota annually
and 300 percent cumulatively.
Currency Weighting
Euro 34 percent
The SDR is not a currency, but some refer to it as a form of IMF currency. It does
not constitute a claim on the IMF, which only serves to provide a mechanism for
buying, selling, and exchanging SDRs. Countries are allocated SDRs, which are
included in the member country’s reserves. SDRs can be exchanged between
countries along with currencies. The SDR serves as the unit of account of the IMF
and some other international organizations, and countries borrow from the IMF in
SDRs in times of economic need.
The IMF supports many developing nations by helping them overcome monetary
challenges and to maintain a stable international financial system. Despite this
clearly defined purpose, the execution of its work can be very complicated and can
have wide repercussions for the recipient nations. As a result, the IMF has both its
critics and its supporters. The challenges for organizations like the the IMF and the
World Bank center not only on some of their operating deficiencies but also on the
global political environment in which they operate. The IMF has been subject to a
range of criticisms that are generally focused on the conditions of its loans, its lack
of accountability, and its willingness to lend to countries with bad human rights
records.
1. Conditions for loans. The IMF makes the loan given to countries conditional
on the implementation of certain economic policies, which typically include
the following:
Reducing government borrowing (higher taxes and lower spending)
The austere policies have worked at times but always extract a political toll as
the impact on average citizens is usually quite harsh. The opening case in
Chapter 2 “International Trade and Foreign Direct Investment” presents the
current impact of IMF policies on Greece. Some suggest that the loan
conditions are “based on what is termed the ‘Washington Consensus,’
focusing on liberalisation—of trade, investment and the financial sector—,
deregulation and privatisation of nationalised industries. Often the
conditionalities are attached without due regard for the borrower countries’
individual circumstances and the prescriptive recommendations by the World
Bank and IMF fail to resolve the economic problems within the countries.
IMF conditionalities may additionally result in the loss of a state’s authority
to govern its own economy as national economic policies are predetermined
under IMF packages.”
For most of the first decade of the twenty-first century, global trade and finance
fueled a global expansion that enabled many countries to repay any money they
had borrowed from the IMF and other official creditors. These countries also used
surpluses in trade to accumulate foreign exchange reserves. The global economic
crisis that began with the 2007 collapse of mortgage lending in the United States
and spread around the world in 2008 was preceded by large imbalances in global
capital flows. Global capital flows fluctuated between 2 and 6 percent of world
GDP between 1980 and 1995, but since then they have risen to 15 percent of GDP.
The most rapid increase has been experienced by advanced economies, but
emerging markets and developing countries have also become more financially
integrated.
The founders of the Bretton Woods system had taken for granted that private
capital flows would never again resume the prominent role they had in the
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and the IMF had traditionally lent to
members facing current account difficulties. The 2008 global crisis uncovered
fragility in the advanced financial markets that soon led to the worst global
downturn since the Great Depression. Suddenly, the IMF was inundated with
requests for standby arrangements and other forms of financial and policy support.
The international community recognized that the IMF’s financial resources were as
important as ever and were likely to be stretched thin before the crisis was over.
With broad support from creditor countries, the IMF’s lending capacity tripled to
around $750 billion. To use those funds effectively, the IMF overhauled its lending
policies. It created a flexible credit line for countries with strong economic
fundamentals and a track record of successful policy implementation. Other
reforms targeted low-income countries. These factors enabled the IMF to disburse
very large sums quickly; the disbursements were based on the needs of borrowing
countries and were not as tightly constrained by quotas as in the past.
Many observers credit the IMF’s quick responses and leadership role in helping
avoid a potentially worse global financial crisis. As noted in the Chapter 5 “Global
and Regional Economic Cooperation and Integration” opening case on Greece, the
IMF has played a role in helping countries avert widespread financial disasters.
The IMF’s requirements are not always popular but are usually effective, which
has led to its expanding influence. The IMF has sought to correct some of the
criticisms; according to a Foreign Policy in Focus essay designed to stimulate
dialogue on the IMF, the fund’s strengths and opportunities include the following
Flexibility and speed. “In March 2009, the IMF created the Flexible Credit Line
(FCL), which is a fast-disbursing loan facility with low conditionality aimed at
reassuring investors by injecting liquidity…Traditionally, IMF loan programs
require the imposition of austerity measures such as raising interest rates that can
reduce foreign investment…In the case of the FCL, countries qualify for it not on
the basis of their promises, but on the basis of their history. Just as individual
borrowers with good credit histories are eligible for loans at lower interest rates
than their risky counterparts, similarly, countries with sound macroeconomic
fundamentals are eligible for drawings under the FCL. A similar program has been
proposed for low-income countries. Known as the Rapid Credit Facility, it is front-
loaded (allowing for a single, up-front payout as with the FCL) and is also intended
to have low conditionality.”
To underscore the global expectations for the IMF’s role, China, Russia, and other
global economies have renewed calls for the G20 to replace the U.S. dollar as the
international reserve currency with a new global system controlled by the IMF.
The World Bank came into existence in 1944 at the Bretton Woods conference. Its
formal name is the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(IBRD), which clearly states its primary purpose of financing economic
development. The World Bank’s first loans were extended during the late 1940s to
finance the reconstruction of the war-ravaged economies of Western Europe. When
these nations recovered some measure of economic self-sufficiency, the World
Bank turned its attention to assisting the world’s poorer nations. The World Bank
has one central purpose: to promote economic and social progress in developing
countries by helping raise productivity so that their people may live a better and
fuller life:
[In 2009,] the World Bank provided $46.9 billion for 303 projects in developing
countries worldwide, with our financial and/or technical expertise aimed at helping
those countries reduce poverty.
The Bank is currently involved in more than 1,800 projects in virtually every
sector and developing country. The projects are as diverse as providing microcredit
in Bosnia and Herzegovina, raising AIDS-prevention awareness in Guinea,
supporting education of girls in Bangladesh, improving health care delivery in
Mexico, and helping East Timor rebuild upon independence and India rebuild
Gujarat after a devastating earthquake.
Today, the World Bank consists of two main bodies, the International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) and the International Development
Association (IDA), established in 1960. The World Bank is part of the broader
World Bank Group, which consists of five interrelated institutions: the IBRD; the
IDA; the International Finance Corporation (IFC), which was established in 1956;
the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA), which was established in
1988; and the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID),
which was established in 1966. These additional members of the World Bank
Group have specific purposes as well. The IDA typically provides interest-free
loans to countries with sovereign guarantees. The IFC provides loans, equity, risk-
management tools, and structured finance. Its goal is to facilitate sustainable
development by improving investments in the private sector. The MIGA focuses
on improving the foreign direct investment of developing countries. The ICSID
provides a means for dispute resolution between governments and private investors
with the end goal of enhancing the flow of capital.
The current primary focus of the World Bank centers on six strategic themes:
The World Bank provides low-interest loans, interest-free credits, and grants to
developing countries. There’s always a government (or “sovereign”) guarantee of
repayment subject to general conditions. The World Bank is directed to make loans
for projects but never to fund a trade deficit. These loans must have a reasonable
likelihood of being repaid. The IDA was created to offer an alternative loan option.
IDA loans are free of interest and offered for several decades, with a ten-year grace
period before the country receiving the loan needs to begin repayment. These loans
are often called soft loans.
Since it issued its first bonds in 1947, the IBRD generates funds for its
development work through the international capital markets. The World Bank
issues bonds, typically about $25 billion a year. These bonds are rated AAA (the
highest possible rating) because they are backed by member states’ shared capital
and by borrowers’ sovereign guarantees. Because of the AAA credit rating, the
World Bank is able to borrow at relatively low interest rates. This provides a
cheaper funding source for developing countries, as most developing countries
have considerably low credit ratings. The World Bank charges a fee of about 1
percent to cover its administrative overheads.
Like the IMF, the World Bank has both its critics and its supporters. The criticisms
of the World Bank extend from the challenges that it faces in the global operating
environment. Some of these challenges have complicated causes; some result from
the conflict between nations and the global financial crisis. The following are four
examples of the world’s difficult needs that the World Bank tries to address:
1. Even in 2010, over 3 billion people lived on less than $2.50 a day.
2. At the start of the twenty-first century, almost a billion people couldn’t read a
book or sign their names.
3. Less than 1 percent of what the world spends each year on weapons would
have put every child into school by the year 2000, but it didn’t happen.
4. Fragile states such as Afghanistan, Rwanda, and Sri Lanka face severe
development challenges: weak institutional capacity, poor governance,
political instability, and often ongoing violence or the legacy of past conflict.
The World Bank continues to play an integral role in helping countries reduce
poverty and improve the well-being of their citizens. World Bank funding provides
a resource to countries to utilize the services of global companies to accomplish
their objectives.
IBRD
Created in 1944 to help Europe rebuild after World War II, IBRD joins with IDA,
our fund for the poorest countries, to form the World Bank. They work closely
with all institutions of the World Bank Group and the public and private sectors in
developing countries to reduce poverty and build shared prosperity.
The World Bank Group engages with middle-income countries (MICs) both as
clients and shareholders. These countries are major drivers of global growth, home
to major infrastructure investments, and recipients of a large share of exports from
advanced economies and poorer countries. Many are making rapid economic and
social progress, and they play an ever larger role in finding solutions to global
challenges.
But MICs also have more than 70% of the world’s poor people, often in remote
areas. And limited access to private finance makes these countries vulnerable to
economic shocks and the crises that cross borders, including climate change,
forced migration, and pandemics. The World Bank is an essential partner to MICs,
which represent more than 60% of IBRD’s portfolio.
Above all, we help ensure that progress in reducing poverty and broadening
prosperity can be sustained. We place special emphasis on supporting lower-
middle-income countries as they move up the economic chain, graduating from
IDA to become clients of IBRD. We are also expanding capacity to help countries
dealing with fragility and conflict situations. And as a long-term partner, we step
up our support to all MICs in times of crisis.
IBRD’s Services
Through our partnership with MICs and creditworthy poorer countries, IBRD
offers innovative financial solutions, including financial products (loans,
guarantees, and risk management products) and knowledge and advisory services
(including on a reimbursable basis) to governments at the national and subnational
levels.
IBRD finances investments across all sectors and provides technical support and
expertise at each stage of a project. IBRD’s resources not only supply borrowing
countries with needed financing, but also serve as a vehicle for global knowledge
transfer and technical assistance.
IBRD on Finance
IBRD raises most of its funds in the world's financial markets. This has allowed it
to provide more than $500 billion in loans to alleviate poverty around the world
since 1946, with its shareholder governments paying in about $14 billion in capital.
IBRD has maintained a triple-A rating since 1959. This high credit rating allows it
to borrow at low cost and offer middle-income developing countries access to
capital on favorable terms — helping ensure that development projects go forward
in a more sustainable manner, while often complementing or catalyzing private
financing.
IBRD earns income every year from the return on its equity and from the small
margin it makes on lending. This pays for World Bank operating expenses, goes
into reserves to strengthen the balance sheet, and provides an annual transfer of
funds to IDA, the fund for the poorest countries.
As of 2021, the WTO has 164 member countries, with Liberia and Afghanistan
the most recent members, having joined in July 2016, and 25 “observer” countries
and governments.
The WTO has lowered trade barriers and increased trade among member countries.
It also has also maintained trade barriers when it makes sense to do so in the global
context. The WTO attempts to mediate between nations in order to benefit the
global economy.
Once negotiations are complete and an agreement is in place, the WTO offers to
interpret the agreement in case of a future dispute. All WTO agreements include a
settlement process that allows it to conduct neutral conflict resolution.
WTO Leadership
On Feb. 15, 2021, the WTO’s General Council selected two-time Nigerian finance
minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala as its director-general. She is the first woman and
the first African to be selected for the position. She took office on March 1, 2021,
for a four-year term.
In recent years, the U.S. relationship with the WTO has been cool. The feeling is
that the WTO is not doing enough to counteract China's unfair trade practices.6
Advantages and Disadvantages of the WTO
The history of international trade has been a battle between protectionism and free
trade, and the WTO has fueled globalization, with both positive and adverse
effects. The organization’s efforts have increased global trade expansion. There
are side effects to globalization, including a negative impact on local communities
and human rights.
Proponents of the WTO, particularly multinational corporations, believe that the
organization is beneficial to business, seeing the stimulation of free trade and a
decline in trade disputes as beneficial to the global economy.
As part of his broader attempts to renegotiate U.S. international trade deals, when
he was in office, then-President Donald Trump threatened to withdraw from the
WTO, calling it a “disaster.” A U.S. withdrawal from the WTO could have
disrupted trillions of dollars in global trade. However, he didn’t withdraw the U.S.
from the WTO during his time in office.
The World Trade Organization (WTO) is the body that keeps global trade running
smoothly. It oversees the rules and mediates disputes among its member nations.
It now has 164 member nations and 25 observer nations (out of a total 195 nations
in the world).