Whilst
On July 24, the IMF approved a 20-month Stand-By Arrangement for
Central Bank chairman, Ajith Niward Cabraal was quoted as saying that the IMF’s decision is a “big victory” and a “huge boost in confidence” for
According to this logic, the IMF has decided to lend
“The IMF has accepted the Mahinda Chinthanaya policy for the country’s economic development,” Mr. Cabraal told the press.
As Mr. Takatoshi Kato, the IMF deputy managing director and acting chairman of the board, put it: "the government should take advantage of the opportunity created by the end of the conflict to ensure national reconciliation, restore macroeconomic stability, and promote strong and durable growth."
These beguilingly abstract words entail significant consequences for the Rajapske regime and the island’s near future.
A Global Focus
The IMF is the ‘lender of last resort’ for states that are unable to secure credit on the international market.
Formed after WW2, the IMF’s raison d’etre is ensuring global economic stability i.e. to ensure states’ mismanagement of their economies does not damage the global financial system.
In the past sixty years, the IMF has become a powerful proponent and enabler of neoliberalism, an ideology now adopted widely (and often reluctantly), that advocates the supremacy of markets and the minimizing of state interference in them.
This month’s $2.6bn loan to
Whilst there has been vocal criticism of
In this context, whilst the
Lender of Last Resort
Following the turmoil which began last year, several countries around the world have been reluctantly lining up to accept the IMF’s stringent terms for its support to get out of their predicaments.
It is only at times of acute crisis that countries have accepted the IMF’s punishing conditionalities. For example, several countries in
Sri Lanka is presently heavily in debt to foreign lenders, a condition made acute as the Rajapakse regime has been borrowing furiously on international markets to finance its high-intensity and bloody military onslaught against the Tamil Tigers.
Even by December 2008, Standard and Poor, the global ratings agency cut
At least two recent attempts by the Rajapske government to issue sovereign bonds produced lackluster interest from international markets. Even
Conditions
It is in this context, despite its public bravado that the
The $2.6bn Stand-By Arrangement is effectively a large credit card that can be used for specific purposes - and that only so long as
To begin with,
Secondly,
All this serves to ensure foreign lenders can extricate themselves from
As IMF deputy managing director Kato put it, one of the purposes of the loan is to ensure “restore [
Painful Future
But if borrowings are limited this way, in the absence of strong earnings, it is state spending that must be cut and it is in shaping domestic policy that the IMF’s medicine promises to be most bitter.
Amongst the agreements the IMF has forced from the Rajapkse regime are:
· To aim to contain 2009 central government deficit to 7 percent and to reduce the overall deficit to 5 percent of GDP by 2011 (from 7.7 percent in 2008). That means military spending will have to be curbed.
· To end the substantial state subsidies to state-owned commercial enterprises. Specifically, the Ceylon Electricity Board and the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation will have to break even, without state subsidy, by end-2011.]
· To increase tax revenue by at least 2 percent of GDP in 2011 with measures to broaden the revenue base, significantly reduce tax exemptions, and improve tax enforcement.
The consequences are clear; as one foreign headline put it: “
Moreover,
Quite apart from serving to dominate the island’s Tamil-speaking Northeast, the almost all-Sinhala army serves as indirect subsidy – by way of soldiers’ lavish salaries – for large sections of the rural Sinhala population.
Now that
All of this is the exact reverse of ‘Mahinda Chintana’ (‘Mahinda’s thinking’), the ultra-Sinhala nationalist manifesto put forward by the Rajapske for his presidential campaign.
Rather than private entrepreneurship, the economic developmental model laid out in Mahinda Chintana turns on Sinhala-nationalism’s veneration of the Sinhala peasant – of the ‘sons of the soil’ living by the temple, the tank and the paddy field.
President Rajapakse has been pictured ploughing furrows behind a pair of buffalo and visiting sites where the subsistence farming is encouraged – the vision embodied in the leader (king) himself.
Politics of Economics
Despite the supposed separation of economic and politics claimed by neoliberalism that the IMF’s calculations work on, the ethnopolitical crisis gripping
To this end, the IMF’s contribution to ending
As IMF acting chairman Kato put it, the bank’s loan seeks to “address the significant reconstruction needs of the conflict-affected areas, thereby laying the basis for future higher economic growth.”
In other words, quite apart from the beginning economic reforms on which the IMF newly-extended support depends,
To secure the loan
Few observers, however, expect this to be honored. Indeed, with the ink not yet dry on the loan agreement, the government has already reduced resettlement to 60%.
In reality, 2009 will in all likelihood end with the majority of Tamils locked up in the squalid camps.
Moreover,
Supervision
So what if
One analysis, by Reuters news agency, suggests “initially, the IMF is likely to be flexible, taking into consideration
The IMF discontinued a previous loan programme due to
That loan had been extended to President Chandrika Kumaratunga’s regime, which – despite its rhetoric ‘of the left’ – pursued the neoliberal agenda, some analysts say, more successfully than the pro-market opposition.
The question, then, is how firm the IMF will be with the Rajapakse regime, especially on resettling the incarcerated Tamils as a condition for future disbursements.
As Human Rights Watch has protested, given
Defending its loan against criticism, the IMF said this week it was in regular contact with humanitarian groups and diplomats over human rights worries.
Certainly, the terms of the loan – with its quarterly reviews and continuous IMF oversight – provide for powerful international leverage on the now beholden Sri Lankan state.
The point is underlined by the government’s agreement that if the global economy worsens and hurts
Moreover, the saga of
It has also shown that geopolitical analysis based on competing spheres of influence has its limits in a globalised 21st century.
No state, no matter how economically well off, can step in as the lender of last resort for another. That remains the sole preserve of the IMF – with its bitter medicine.