E-Book, Englisch, 185 Seiten, eBook
Drivers of Change in the Post- Washington Consensus
E-Book, Englisch, 185 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: International Political Economy Series
ISBN: 978-1-137-57750-4
Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
1. The IMF, LIDC Reform and the post Washington Consensus 1.1. What drives post Washington Consensus IMF LIDC reform and why does it matter 1.2. Contested areas of IMF LIDC policy in the post 2008 era 1.3 Who are the LIDCs 1.4 Organization, research design, and findings 2. The IMF and LIDCs 2.1 Mandate, quota system, and organizational structure 2.2 Organizational structure 2.3 Lending facilities, FSAPs and the PSI 2.4 Operational culture 2.5 1944-1952: The Bretton Woods framework and the rise of IMF conditionality 2.6 1953-1961: IMF ‘common sense’, the Polak Model, and SBAs 2.7 1962- 1971: Push back, early concessionary lending, and LIDC technical assistance 2.8 1971-1996: Breakdown of Bretton Woods and the Washington Consensus 2.9 Conclusion3. Theorizing post Washington Consensus LIDC Reform 3.1 What influences IMF policy? 3.2 Theorizing IMF LIDC reform: A rationalist approach 3.3 Theorizing IMF LIDC reform: A constructivist approach 3.4 Theorizing IMF LIDC reform: A historical structural approach 3.5 Conclusion4. The HIPC and HIPC II Initiatives 4.1 Setting the stage for HIPC and HIPC II: The breakdown of Bretton Woods hegemony 4.2 The Mexican Debt crisis, demand compression, and structural market reform 4.3 From bilateral debt restructuring to debt reduction 4.4 Rethinking IMF LIDC debt forgiveness: the HIPC initiative 4.5 ‘Faster, deeper, and broader debt relief’ with poverty reduction: the HIPC II 4.6 Conclusion5. ‘Pro-Poor’ Concessionary Lending: The PRGF 5.