This year’s 80th anniversary of the founding of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is an opportune moment to look both backward and forward—to acknowledge the remarkable resilience of the global economy after successive recent shocks.
But also, to deliberate on how the IMF and its members might build on that resilience to achieve greater shared prosperity.
Founded by 44 member countries to build a framework for economic cooperation in 1944 IMF is a major financial agency of the United Nations funded by 190 member countries with headquarters in Washington DC in the USA.
As per the data, Argentina is the biggest debtor to the IMF while Egypt is the second-largest debtor by amount.
The experience of the global economy since the end of the pandemic has been turbulent.
Strong policy frameworks in many countries contributed to global resilience. Nevertheless, many countries have come through this period with high debt levels and increased debt-servicing costs.
The challenge now is twofold. The first is to safeguard macroeconomic stability from further geopolitical shocks, disruptive fiscal adjustment, and the task of bringing inflation back to targets.
Populations that continue to live with the legacy of successive crises will need ongoing assistance, as will those low-income countries that have experienced the worst scaring effects.
The second is to take advantage of global economic resilience to confront and embrace transformative developments that demand our collective action—developments such as climate change, digitalization, and an artificial intelligence revolution that, for good or ill, could reshape the nature of work.
These transformations will require multilateral cooperation to mitigate risks and maximize opportunities.
The 2024 IMF Annual Report highlights the IMF’s work on these challenges.
The IMF is well placed to encourage cooperation with an objective to promote international monetary cooperation, trade, and prosperity for all.
The completion of the 16th General Review of Quotas demonstrated the IMF’s capacity to bring its members together in the spirit of global collaboration and multilateralism. That sense of international cooperation was similarly demonstrated in the actions of over 40 members, whose contributions up to 2023 supported the Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust by strengthening its capacity to mobilize concessional loans to its poorest members.
This achievement, and the work of the IMF in general, recognizes our mutual interconnectedness and—together with partner institutions such as the World Bank—cooperation with member countries to achieve shared economic stability and prosperity.
For the IMF, that stability and prosperity are promoted through its work analyzing and providing policy advice to its member countries, through its lending programs, and through its delivery of capacity development.
In an ever-changing world, the IMF also constantly examines its work and toolkit to ensure that, within its mandate, it remains responsive to its members’ needs today and well into the future.
In its April 2024 announcement appointing Kristalina Georgieva for a second five-year term as Managing Director of the IMF, the Executive Board commended her focus on ensuring that the Fund continues to adapt and evolve.
In FY 2024, the IMF continued to support its members in three core areas that are Economic surveillance: 128 country health checks completed.
Lending: US $70 billion to 30 countries, including about US $15 billion to 20 low-income countries, for a total of US $357 billion to 97 countries since the start of the pandemic.
Capacity development: US $382 million for hands-on technical advice, policy-oriented training, and peer learning.
The 2024 IMF Annual Report covers the activities of the Executive Board and IMF management and staff during the financial year May 1, 2023, through April 30, 2024, and in some cases more recently.
(Based on IMF information)
World Bank
Likewise, in July 2024 World Bank turns 80 years old.
July 1, 2024 marks the 80th anniversary of the opening of the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944. Seeking to help rebuild Europe and Japan after World WarII, this conference concluded to establish the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD).
Created in 1944 IBRD joining with IDA formed the World Bank. When the World Bank first began operations in 1946, it had 38 members.
Today, most of the countries in the world are in the World Bank on September 6, 1961.Asof 2022, the World Bank is run by a president and 25 executive directors, as well as 29 various vice presidents.
IBRD and IDA have 189 and 174 member countries, respectively.
The United States, Japan, China, Germany and the United Kingdom have the most voting power.
Being a Bank, its role is to lend funds for various sectors of development works mostly in low-income countries.
By the end of last fiscal year, Nepal’s total outstanding debt stood at Nepalese Rs. 2,299.35 billion, or 42.73 percent of the GDP, according to the PDMO.