IMF and World Bank Face Declining Authority as Venezuela Announces Withdrawal
By Mark Weisbrot
This article was published in the following news outlets:
May 1, 2007, McClatchy Tribune Information Services
May 10, 2007, Gulf Times (Qatar)
Venezuela's decision this week to pull out of the
IMF and the World Bank will be seen in the United States as just
another example of the ongoing feud between Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez and the Bush Administration. But it is likely to be viewed
differently in the rest of the world, and could have an impact on both
institutions, whose power and legitimacy in developing countries has
been waning steadily in recent years.
Other countries may follow. President Rafael Correa
of Ecuador announced last week that it was kicking the World Bank's
representative out of the country. It was an unprecedented action,
which President Correa punctuated by stating that "we will not stand
for extortion by this international bureaucracy." In 2005, the World
Bank withheld a previously approved $100 million loan to Ecuador to try
to force the government to use windfall oil revenues for debt
repayment, rather than the government's choice of social spending.
This is the way these two institutions have operated
for decades. With the IMF as leader, and the U.S. Treasury department
holding veto power, they have run a "creditors' cartel" that has been
able to exert enormous pressure on governments over a wide variety of
economic issues. This pressure has not only generated widespread
resentment, but has also often led to economic failure in the countries
and regions where the IMF and World Bank have had the most influence.
Over the last 25 years Latin America has had its worst long-term
economic growth performance in more than a century.
Venezuela also has specific grievances against the
IMF, which are likely to generate sympathy in other developing
countries with democratic, left-of-center governments. On April 12,
2002, just hours after Venezuela's democratically elected government
was overthrown in a military coup, the IMF stated publicly that it was "ready to assist the new administration [of Pedro Carmona] in whatever manner they find suitable."
This instantaneous show of financial support for a
newly installed dictatorship - one which immediately dissolved the
country's constitution, general assembly, and Supreme Court - was
unprecedented in the IMF's history. Typically the IMF does not react so
quickly, even to an elected government. It is no wonder that this move
was seen in Venezuela and elsewhere as an attempt by the IMF to support
the coup itself. Washington, which dominates the Fund, had advance
knowledge of the coup, supported it, and funded some of its leaders -
according to U.S. government documents.
In additions, Venezuela has not been happy with the IMF's consistently under-projecting its economic growth
in recent years, as the Fund has also done with Argentina. The IMF's
forecasts are widely used and can therefore influence investors.
But the resentment against the IMF and World Bank,
and demands for change, are worldwide. The scandal over Paul
Wolfowitz's leadership at the World Bank, which is about to topple the
Bank's most unwanted president ever, is just the tip of the iceberg.
Last month the IMF's Independent Evaluation Office stated that since
1999, nearly three-quarters of aid to the poor countries of Sub-Saharan
Africa are not being spent. Rather, at the IMF's request, it is being
used to pay off debt and accumulate reserves. This is a terrible thing
to do to some of the poorest countries in the world, who desperately
need to spend this money on such pressing needs as the HIV/AIDS
pandemic.
Venezuela's decision is likely to strengthen the
hand of developing nations within the IMF and World Bank who are
demanding serious reforms. Right now the United States, with less than
5 percent of the world's population, has more votes in the IMF than
countries representing the majority of the planet. The world's
developing countries, which bear the brunt of these institutions'
mistakes, have little or no voice in their decision-making. Venezuela's
move - and any other countries that follow - will show the IMF and
World Bank that the option of quitting these institutions altogether is
a real one.
Whether this will spur reform that can actually
change the colonial relationship that these institutions maintain with
their borrowers remains to be seen. More likely, they will simply
continue to become less relevant to the developing world, as has
happened drastically over the last decade.
Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC.
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