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  • IMF warning

    how come nuhbady nuh post this... wait a what a gwaan...
    IMF warning - US think tank says most countries worse off after IMF agreement

    Published: Tuesday | October 6, 2009


    Arthur Hall, Senior Staff Reporter
    Weeks before Jamaica completes its application for a US$1.2-billion standby agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), a United States think tank has issued a dire warning about the latest impact of the fund on developing countries.
    While making no direct reference to Jamaica's negotiations with the fund, the Centre for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) yesterday released a discussion paper in which it argues that 31 of 41 of countries with current IMF agreements have been subjected to harmful monetary and fiscal policies.
    That has been a fear of many Jamaicans since the Government announced plans to resume a borrowing relationship with the IMF.
    However, Prime Minister Bruce Golding and Finance Minister Audley Shaw have sought to allay the fears by arguing that the IMF has changed since its 'one size fits all' stance of the 1970s and 1980s.
    Golding and Shaw have further argued that the IMF no longer 'prescribes the pills' but allows countries to develop their 'individual prescriptions' to cure their ills.
    However, that view is not shared by the CEPR which claims that recent IMF prescriptions have exacerbated economic slowdowns in some countries.
    "More than a decade after the Asian Economic Crisis brought world attention to major IMF policy mistakes, the IMF is still making similar mistakes in many countries," CEPR co-director and lead author of the discussion paper, Mark Weisbrot, said.
    Overly optimistic forecasts
    "The IMF supports fiscal stimulus and expansionary policies in the rich countries, but has a much different attitude towards low- and middle-income countries," Weisbrot said.
    Yesterday, CEPR said that while it could not comment directly on the Jamaican situation, it has found that in some cases the IMF has relied on overly optimistic growth forecasts - significantly underestimating the impact of the world recession on borrowing countries.
    "Quite often, the negotiations aren't as transparent as they could be, so I'm not too familiar with what the IMF is putting on the table for Jamaica or what it is saying publicly," Dan Beeton, information officer at CEPR, told The Gleaner.
    Beeton also scoffed at claims of a new-look IMF.
    Shaw to return
    "Really, it is more of the same old IMF. It is time for the fund to re-examine the criteria, assumptions and economic analysis that it uses to prescribe macroeconomic policies in developing countries," added Beeton.
    The CEPR paper comes at a time when Shaw and other finance ministers from the more than 170 IMF member countries are meeting in Istanbul, Turkey, for the IMF/World Bank annual general meeting.
    Shaw is slated to return to the island this week to complete the preparation of the medium-term macroeconomic framework which will form the basis of Jamaica's request for the standby agreement.
    Jamaica's letter of intent should be with the fund before the end of this month with an agreement expected to be in place by November. arthur.hall@gleanerjm.com
    'to get what we've never had, we MUST do what we've never done'

  • #2
    "no so called third world country has been able to rid themselves of these money hogs" ....... mutabaruka - the people's court

    Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

    Comment


    • #3
      Despite the various duppy stories, has anyone considered the reality that we wouldn't be in such a hole if we were borrowing from the various multilateral agencies? How the hell can a country a borrow money at high interest rates when these agencies were lending money at 5% and less?

      Then to think we had clowns here talking bout progress?
      "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

      Comment


      • #4
        thats subjective might be worse, ask argentina

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        • #5
          Originally posted by 1of1 View Post
          thats subjective might be worse, ask argentina
          no sah , it betta fi get cheep loan from di imf , if u comply to dem structural
          agreement and meet dem targets ...u can get again but di man dem should
          have tried and raise 1 . 2 billion from the World Bank ...the world bank is not
          too draconian .
          Jamaica you mite get a Petroleum well with
          United Oil by 1.31.26;You also has a NNPC option with the Abuja accord from 2022.What
          happens then I don't know.A Petrol Well is
          Probably forthcoming...

          Comment


          • #6
            structural agreement and targets, mi worried still, nutten nuh free, just have to wait an see.

            Comment


            • #7
              We simply need fi eat what we produce. Manley and Golding preach it.
              We need fi produce more, sell more, grow productivity. Seaga achieve this in the late 80s.

              And we don't need to borrow money fi buy 30 bridge that will not install.

              If we had 5% growth every year in GDP in the last 15 years we would be in a position to borrow little or nothing. We need to hold our leaders to growing the economy as all they are focused on is how to get more money from whom.
              • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

              Comment


              • #8
                No need for Jamaica to panic - International Monetary Fund dismisses US think tank's criticism


                The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has fired back at claims made by a United States think tank that its programmes are doing more harm than good in many developing countries.
                The Washington-based Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) on Monday noted that a recent study found 31 of 41 countries with current IMF agreements have been subjected to harmful monetary and fiscal policies.
                However, yesterday the IMF, which is staging its annual general meeting in Turkey, told The Gleaner that the think tank had reached seriously misleading conclusions relying on faulty analysis and often inaccurate information.

                Claims rejected
                The IMF also rejected CEPR's claim that "growth forecasts were too optimistic when programmes were designed, leading to excessively tight fiscal and monetary policies".
                According to the IMF, the reality is quite the opposite.
                "In virtually all programmes, fiscal targets were quickly and substantially relaxed once the extent of the crisis became apparent," IMF spokesman William Murray said.
                "Monetary and fiscal policies have deliberately sought to offset the fall in global demand."
                Murray pointed to a recent internal review of IMF-supported programmes with low- income and emerging-market countries.

                IMF review
                Following that review late last month, the IMF boasted that a mix of increased resources, policy flexibility, and more focused conditionalities allowed it to better support emerging countries hit by the global financial crisis. In an analysis of 15 countries, the IMF said its supported programmes were delivering the kind of policy response and financing

                needed to help cushion the blow from the worst economic crisis since the 1930s.

                "What this study tells us is that, with IMF support, many of the severe disruptions characteristic of past crises have so far been either avoided or sharply reduced," IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said in the September 27 review.
                Jamaica is to approach the IMF for a US$1.2-billion standby agreement. arthur.hall@gleanerjm.com

                http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/glean...ead/lead4.html
                "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

                Comment


                • #9
                  Mi deh yah a pace misself.


                  BLACK LIVES MATTER

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Mosiah View Post
                    Mi deh yah a pace misself.
                    Best move dat.
                    "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

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                    • #11
                      Good move dat... mi nuh know how man can a post bout IMF after we guh through a decade of Omar Davis...

                      Dem man deh have dem house build by a river in Africa.. DeNile...

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