Difference between revisions of "Globalisation:International Monetary Fund:Case Studies"
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One of the regions where the IMF has attracted most criticism is for their heavy and unbalanced involvement state and financial structure of Mexico. | One of the regions where the IMF has attracted most criticism is for their heavy and unbalanced involvement state and financial structure of Mexico. | ||
In recent history, the IMF has granted over $5 billon (USD) to mexico in an attempt to give mexico less poverty, stability, economic gain and financial protection from declining oil revenues <ref>[http://www.imf.org/external/country/mex/index.htm] www.IMF.org activities in mexico, </ref> | In recent history, the IMF has granted over $5 billon (USD) to mexico in an attempt to give mexico less poverty, stability, economic gain and financial protection from declining oil revenues <ref>[http://www.imf.org/external/country/mex/index.htm] www.IMF.org activities in mexico, </ref> | ||
− | However many of the programmes undertaken as a result of IMF Stuctural Adjustment Policies (see policies section) have been subject to criticism. In fact the IMF could be considered liable as a large instigator of Mexico's financial crisis in 1994. The IMF advised that mexico should devalue the Peso; also by encouraging the privatisation of many state run banks and other industries the country built up a massive debt burden <ref>,[http://www.cato.org/pubs/journal/cj17n3-14.html] THE ORIGIN OF MEXICO'S 1994 FINANCIAL CRISIS Francisco Gil-Diaz, <ref | + | However many of the programmes undertaken as a result of IMF Stuctural Adjustment Policies (see policies section) have been subject to criticism. In fact the IMF could be considered liable as a large instigator of Mexico's financial crisis in 1994. The IMF advised that mexico should devalue the Peso; also by encouraging the privatisation of many state run banks and other industries the country built up a massive debt burden <ref>,[http://www.cato.org/pubs/journal/cj17n3-14.html] THE ORIGIN OF MEXICO'S 1994 FINANCIAL CRISIS Francisco Gil-Diaz, </ref> |
==notes== | ==notes== | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Revision as of 12:38, 11 March 2008
The Following are case studies of financial situations in the world market, the IMF involvement and responses of the organisation.
The east asian crisis
The global economic crisis began on July 2, 1997 in Thailand. Previous decades had seen the countries of East Asia improve dramatically, incomes had soared, health had enhanced and poverty had decreased rapidly. Some of the countries had not experienced a single year of recession in almost 30 years.[1]
Towards the beginning of the 1990s, East Asian countries had liberalized their financial and capital markets because of increased national pressure form the U.S Treasury Department.[2]
IMF involvement In Mexico
One of the regions where the IMF has attracted most criticism is for their heavy and unbalanced involvement state and financial structure of Mexico. In recent history, the IMF has granted over $5 billon (USD) to mexico in an attempt to give mexico less poverty, stability, economic gain and financial protection from declining oil revenues [3] However many of the programmes undertaken as a result of IMF Stuctural Adjustment Policies (see policies section) have been subject to criticism. In fact the IMF could be considered liable as a large instigator of Mexico's financial crisis in 1994. The IMF advised that mexico should devalue the Peso; also by encouraging the privatisation of many state run banks and other industries the country built up a massive debt burden [4]
notes
- ↑ Joseph Stiglitz "What I learned at the World Economic Crisis http://www.mindfully.org/WTO/Joseph-Stiglitz-IMF17apr00.htm 04/03/08"
- ↑ Joseph Stiglitz "What I learned at the World Economic Crisis http://www.mindfully.org/WTO/Joseph-Stiglitz-IMF17apr00.htm 04/03/08"
- ↑ [1] www.IMF.org activities in mexico,
- ↑ ,[2] THE ORIGIN OF MEXICO'S 1994 FINANCIAL CRISIS Francisco Gil-Diaz,