The IMF is the new UN
Bill Easterly’s take on the new responsibilities delegated to the International Monetary Fund at this week’s G8 Finance Ministers conference: Of course, no G8 country would really yield sovereignty on policy to the IMF, or even allow it to determine its bilateral foreign aid policies. What seems to be going on is the same kind ...
Bill Easterly's take on the new responsibilities delegated to the International Monetary Fund at this week's G8 Finance Ministers conference:
Bill Easterly’s take on the new responsibilities delegated to the International Monetary Fund at this week’s G8 Finance Ministers conference:
Of course, no G8 country would really yield sovereignty on policy to the IMF, or even allow it to determine its bilateral foreign aid policies. What seems to be going on is the same kind of shadow play the Great Powers have long played with the UN: (1) a terrible international problem appears, (2) the Great Powers do not want to commit any real capital to reach a solution, or they cannot agree on a solution, or they simply don’t know the solution, (3) but the Great Powers must appear to act anyway, (4) so they put the UN in charge of the unsolvable problem, and then (5) blame the UN when the problem remains unsolved.
This five-act shadow play has worked out so well for the Great Powers in places like Somalia, the Congo, and Darfur that the G8 appears to have decided to try the same thing with the global financial crisis. Here, they don’t want to commit real capital to international coordination or cushioning the blow to poor countries, they can’t agree what to do anyhow, and they really don’t know the solution in the first place. So let’s put the IMF in charge! And then blame the IMF when things continue to go badly!
Joshua Keating was an associate editor at Foreign Policy. Twitter: @joshuakeating
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