The healing power of an IMF credit line
The IMF announced yesterday that it is extending a rapid credit line to the Kyrgyz Republic to help contain the economic impact of recent unrest. The political and ethnic turmoil earlier this year has taken a heavy toll on the Kyrgyz economy. Gross Domestic Product is likely to contract by 3½ percent in 2010 owing ...
The IMF announced yesterday that it is extending a rapid credit line to the Kyrgyz Republic to help contain the economic impact of recent unrest.
The IMF announced yesterday that it is extending a rapid credit line to the Kyrgyz Republic to help contain the economic impact of recent unrest.
The political and ethnic turmoil earlier this year has taken a heavy toll on the Kyrgyz economy. Gross Domestic Product is likely to contract by 3½ percent in 2010 owing to serious disruption in agriculture and damage to infrastructure as well as the adverse impact on trade and services stemming from a fragile security situation and border closures. The fiscal deficit is likely to rise sharply in the second half of the year whilst the current account balance and international reserves are expected to decline.
It appears that holding fair trials was not a condition of the loan.
David Bosco is a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. He is the author of The Poseidon Project: The Struggle to Govern the World’s Oceans. Twitter: @multilateralist
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