Hungary, Latvia, Ukraine Stifled by IMF Conditions, Study Says
Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Hungary, Latvia and Ukraine’s
financial aid from the International Monetary Fund bore
conditions that may have further hurt their economies, according
to a study by the Center for Economic and Policy Research.
The programs the Washington-based lender negotiated with
governments in exchange for standby credit arrangements included
measures ranging from fiscal tightening to restrictive monetary
policies, making a recovery more difficult, the study said.
“They don’t have as many conditions as they used to have
10 years ago, but the conditions they are using are still often
harmful,” said Mark Weisbrot, co-director at the Washington-
based center, said in an interview yesterday.
The amount the IMF agreed to lend to the three countries
last year accounts for about half the standby loan arrangements
the IMF had committed as of the end of July, according to IMF
figures.
“In all of these countries, it would appear that there
were more sensible responses to the crisis that would have
reduced the loss of employment and output, cuts in social
services, and political instability that have resulted from the
downturn,” the study said.
The nonprofit center, which gets about 80 percent of its
funding from foundations, lists Nobel laureates Robert Solow and
Joseph Stiglitz among the members of its advisory board.
To contact the reporters on this story:
Sandrine Rastello in Washington at
srastello@bloomberg.net;
Last Updated: September 11, 2009 00:42 EDT