Publication

1999

This paper argues that governments sometimes use International Monetary Fund (IMF) conditions to push through their preferred policies. After providing a background of IMF arrangements and the rationale for conditionality, the author presents case study and statistical evidence that there is more to signing an agreement than simply the need for foreign exchange. The author concludes that by tying their hands with IMF conditionality, governments can increase their bargaining leverage with domestic opponents of economic reform.

Download English (PDF, 49 pages, 169 KB)
Author James Raymond Vreeland
Series Leitner Program Working Papers
Issue 3
Publisher Leitner Program in International & Comparative Political Economy
Copyright © 1999 Leitner Program
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