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The Role Of International Financial Institutions | Model Diplomacy - YouTube
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The two major international financial institutions are the International Monetary Fund or IMF and the World Bank.
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Both were created in 1944 at the Bretton Woods international monetary conference.
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The U.S. Treasury was responsible for convening the conference. The Treasury believed that it was
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the currency trade wars of the early 1930s that spread the Great Depression globally and created
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the environment of misery and anger that paved the path to war. They were determined to stamp out economic
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aggression in the postwar landscape by creating these two new institutions, which they believed would stop
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countries from resorting to destructive measures like trade protectionism and competitive devaluation
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and would lead to more cooperation. The United States contributed the most capital and it also in consequence
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had the most votes. It was always the only country that had veto power over policy changes within the organizations.
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The international Monetary Fund was created to preside over a new fixed exchange rate system
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based on the United States dollar. Countries with temporary balance of payments deficits would be able to
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borrow from the IMF on concessionary terms. The IMF found itself taking on a very different role after the
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collapse of fixed exchange rates. International financial crises became much more frequent after the 1980s and
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the IMF was able to reinvent itself as an international crisis firefighter. The world Bank was established initially
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in order to assist in the reconstruction of Europe after the war. It was however the Marshall Plan that the United States
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instituted in 1948 that primarily filled this role and the World Bank went on to focus on other areas in particular
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economic development in poorer countries.
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In 2014 the so-called BRICS countries Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa created two new institutions.
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One is a so-called contingent reserve arrangement, which mimics the activities of the IMF. The resources behind it or rather minimal.
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They also established a so-called new Development Bank that will mimic the activities of the World Bank
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funding mainly infrastructure development in emerging economies.
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More recently in 2015, China spearheaded the establishment of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank or AIIB.
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The AIIB will also focus on infrastructure development, but mainly concentrated in the Asia-Pacific region.
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The new Development Bank and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank reflect the frustrations in particular
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of China, India, and Brazil over the unwillingness of the U.S. Congress to ratify IMF
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governance reform. They want more say in international financial diplomacy, so establishing their own institutions
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was their mechanism for securing greater voice. The World Bank I believe is going to be facing increasingly useful
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competition from other mechanisms in the coming years. The IMF however really is the closest thing we
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have and probably will ever have to a true international lender of last resort. We've seen over the decades that
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without the IMF the world is very dependent on either direct lending from the U.S. Treasury or from
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currency swaps authorized by the Federal Reserve, but if the United States wants to multilateralize these
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initiatives and not have the world dependent entirely on its own resources, it needs to ensure
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that major emerging economies have a voice commensurate with their new power in the global economy.
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