Helping the Global Economy Stay in Shape
Carlo Cottarelli and Isabelle Mateos y Lago 

IMF Finance & Development
September 2007, Vol. 44, No. 3

The IMF adopts a new framework for monitoring countries' economic
performance

>From an economic perspective, no country is an island. The policy decisions
of one country often have consequences for neighboring ones. And when it
comes to the policies of large countries, an entire region or even the whole
world may be affected. This is more true today than ever. Trade links have
increased, and capital markets are now able to magnify and transmit shocks
across borders at extraordinary speed. Often, these dynamics are benign. But
in the late 1990s, the Asian crisis showed us how powerful economic forces
have the ability to wreak havoc across borders, with a crisis in one country
spreading like wildfire to other economies that had been perceived as sound
until then. Although awareness of these global dynamics is growing, national
policymakers are inherently ill equipped to deal with them.

This is where the IMF comes into the picture. The IMF was set up in the wake
of the Second World War—an event that many historians consider rooted, in
part, in the Great Depression—to help ensure global monetary stability. The
founding fathers were particularly keen to avoid competitive devaluations,
which had worsened the crisis and helped make it global. While this basic
goal remains the same today—exchange rates have again become the subject of
often-heated international debate—the way the IMF goes about promoting
global economic stability has evolved in response to the new landscape of
international trade and finance.

In recent decades, the IMF was often seen as a global financial firefighter
or aid catalyst. But providing financial assistance to countries in need has
always been a means to an end. Today, the IMF's business model is undergoing
a wide-ranging reexamination to ensure that it can continue to fulfill its
core mandate of promoting international financial stability.

A universal code of conduct

In 1945, the emphasis was on avoiding the competitive devaluations that had
marred the 1930s. Under the Bretton Woods system, this objective was
achieved through fixed but adjustable exchange rates—a key pillar of the
original code of conduct that countries were encouraged to follow when they
joined the IMF. Changes in exchange rate parities exceeding 10 percent could
take place only with the IMF's approval. When the United States broke the
dollar's link to gold in 1971, this system broke down. As a result, a new
code of conduct had to be agreed upon. The outcome of those deliberations
was a revision of Article IV of the IMF's Articles of Agreement, which
became effective in 1978 and is still in force.

Under the revised Article IV, countries pledged not to run their policies in
blind pursuit of their own short-term interests, disregarding the effects of
their policies on neighbors or indeed on their own longer-term stability. In
particular, the new code of conduct encouraged member countries to promote
economic growth while maintaining reasonable price stability and orderly
financial conditions. It also directed member countries not to manipulate
their exchange rate for balance of payments purposes, for instance to gain
an unfair competitive advantage, and called on them to pursue exchange rate
policies that were compatible with domestic and external stability.

As for the IMF's own obligations, the revised Article IV mandated the
organization to assess whether country policies were consistent with the
code of conduct and to provide advice on economic policy. This process has
come to be known as country, or bilateral, surveillance, and it applies to
all member countries regardless of size and economic health. Article IV also
requires the IMF to oversee the functioning of the international monetary
system to ensure its effective operation—a mandate known as multilateral
surveillance.
Targeted policy advice

Through surveillance, the IMF provides an expert assessment of economic
conditions in member countries and identifies risks to stability and growth.
This analysis is packaged into policy advice delivered in high-level
discussions with policymakers in each member country and in written reports,
most of which are accessible on the IMF's website. Of course, there are many
other sources of assessment and advice, but the IMF has distinct comparative
advantages. These include access to economic policymakers and all the data
needed for thorough economic analysis; a perspective free of national,
political, or commercial bias that reflects the interests of the
international community as a whole; and the ability to draw on a vast stock
of knowledge, comprising not only a bird's-eye view of global economic and
financial conditions but also the accumulated experience of 185 member
countries in figuring out which policies work best in what circumstances.

The process of surveillance has the added benefit of giving all 185 member
countries—represented by 24 Executive Directors that sit on the IMF's
Executive Board—the opportunity to comment on each other's economic
policies. The views of the Board are communicated to the country's
authorities after the meeting.
Surveillance in the spotlight

The IMF's surveillance work has generally attracted much less public
attention than its external financing packages and the
sometimes-controversial policy conditionality attached to its loans. But in
recent years, countries' external financing needs have receded, putting
surveillance in the spotlight. The resulting scrutiny has led to a
recognition that IMF surveillance faces significant challenges to its
effectiveness. Some of these are long-standing whereas others are more
recent.

Persuasion. Surveillance is based on persuasion through dialogue and peer
pressure, not on penalties. Thus, it lacks the "teeth" that policy
conditionality gives to IMF-supported programs. This has led many observers
to ask whether surveillance can be effective at all when it lacks a proper
enforcement mechanism. This is a long-standing challenge, inherent in the
modus operandi of surveillance.

Leverage. The IMF has also suffered from a perception that it has more
leverage over some member countries than others—reflecting differences
either in the likelihood of countries having to resort to IMF financing down
the road or in countries' sensitivity to opinions voiced by the IMF about
their future access to financial markets. A related concern is a perception
that the IMF may not be as candid with its larger members as with the
smaller ones. Regardless of whether such perceptions are valid, the fact
that these views are out there is in itself a challenge to the institution's
effectiveness.

Higher expectations. The world has changed in ways that raise the bar for
IMF surveillance to add value. For example, the IMF can no longer claim a
monopoly in providing macroeconomic analysis and advice. Every day,
financial institutions flood markets—and policymakers—with new analysis of
economic developments, and an array of experts are on hand to offer advice.
And although 20 years ago many countries had to rely on external advice on
macroeconomic matters, most have now developed their own talent. Moreover,
there is an ever-growing number of regional and international
organizations—including the European Union and the OECD to mention but
two—that allow countries to tap many different sources of multilateral
policy advice. Finally, the world economy itself has changed significantly,
the most striking development being the enormous expansion of international
capital markets and the subsequent increase in cross-border capital flows.
Although the global economy presents countries with a host of new
opportunities, it has also created new risks to stability. These risks often
elude clear diagnosis because of their complexity and a lack of data, and
are therefore difficult to contain.

Taking action

All these challenges have increased the urgency of adapting surveillance to
the new realities of the 21st century. Making surveillance more effective is
a key goal of the IMF's Medium-Term Strategy (MTS), launched by Managing
Director Rodrigo de Rato in April 2005. The MTS encompasses ambitious
reforms in areas ranging from governance to lending. Reforms pertaining to
surveillance have centered on seeking clearer goals, better advice, and
better delivery.
Clearer goals. The idea behind the first set of reforms mirrors the one
behind public sector reforms introduced in recent years in many
countries—namely, that clearly spelling out the objectives expected to be
achieved will improve effectiveness and accountability in two ways: first,
by focusing on what is critical; second, by allowing various stakeholders to
monitor progress. In the case of surveillance, this clarification is taking
place at several levels.

• At the highest level, the IMF has just completed a major update of its
policy framework by adopting a new Decision on Bilateral Surveillance to
replace one that for 30 years, together with Article IV, provided the main
legal foundation for surveillance (see box). As a result, the IMF now has,
for the first time, a clear and detailed statement, endorsed by its
membership, of what constitutes best practice in surveillance. 

• One level down, the IMF has been considering the introduction of a
statement of time-bound surveillance priorities (a three-year horizon has
been mentioned as one possibility) that would help focus its work, clarify
responsibilities, and better integrate bilateral and multilateral
surveillance. These priorities would include both operational objectives
(such as improving the IMF's analysis of exchange rate issues) and economic
objectives (such as contributing to the reduction of current global
imbalances). 

• At the country level, the IMF recently introduced surveillance agendas, a
list of priority objectives that surveillance will promote over the next
three years for each member country, and a work plan for achieving these
objectives. 

Full at: http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/2007/09/cottarel.htm

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Jayson Funke

Graduate School of Geography
Clark University
950 Main Street
Worcester, MA 01610
 

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