1st Edition

The International Monetary Fund And Latin America Economic Stabilization And Class Conflict

    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    The debt crisis in Latin America has rekindled debate about the effects of the IMF's stabilization programs in the Third World. Critics contend that these programs have short-run recessionary impacts and damage prospects for long-term growth. In response, Fund economists point to cross-country studies revealing mixed impacts on growth rates coupled with significant success in achieving the IMF's stated goals: current account and balance-of-payments improvements and inflation rate reduction. Dr. Pastor argues that the traditional growth-oriented critique is theoretically misplaced, and he recasts Fund activities in terms of class and income distribution. Applying the methodology of previous Fund studies, he evaluates the effects of IMF programs in eighteen Latin American countries in the pre-crisis period (1965-1981).

    l I WHAT IS THE IMF? 2 I THE IMF AND THE WORLD ECONOMY, 3 I THE EFFECTS OF IMF 'PROGRAMS: ALTERNATIVE MODELS 4 I THE EFFECTS OF IMF PROGRAMS: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE