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To: Alex who wrote (40875)9/26/1999 8:43:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116768
 
:)



To: Alex who wrote (40875)9/26/1999 8:45:00 PM
From: Sawdusty  Respond to of 116768
 
I did not trust Kitco, so I verified it here:

quoteline.com



To: Alex who wrote (40875)9/26/1999 9:54:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 116768
 
Russia: The IMF's biggest
failure

Millions of people in Russia are living in poverty

Russia is the largest borrower from the
International Monetary Fund (IMF), but now
controversy over corruption threatens to deter
future loans. BBC International Business
Correspondent Peter Morgan examines what the
IMF has achieved so far.

The deal the International
Monetary Fund strikes with
its client states is a pretty
simple one.

It lends money in return for reforms
which will bring the economy of the
borrower closer into line with
standards of good practice in the
industrialised world.

It could insist, for example, that
inflation is reduced, banking standards are improved, tax
systems are changed and so on. It's a pretty
straightforward carrot and stick arrangement. The carrot
is the cash, the stick the IMF's insistence on economic
rigour.

The problem in Russia is that
the Government has
swallowed the carrot, but
ignored the stick. The IMF
has extended loans of around
$20bn, making Russia its
biggest borrower, and yet
reforms have been slight to
non-existent, and great
chunks of Russia's public
and private sectors continue
to be run by crooks.

Worse still, Russia's debts to
the IMF are now so big that
the only way to ensure repayment is to keep lending
more. The $4.5bn programme agreed on this summer
will go almost entirely towards meeting repayments on
previous IMF loans.

All this would be embarrassing enough in the only
conclusion being drawn was that the IMF has painted
itself into a tricky corner.

Like an addictive drug

Unfortunately for the Fund it doesn't stop there. It has
been accused of political meddling, of incompetence,
and of actually making Russia's economic problems
worse.

Star witness for the
prosecution is Boris Fedorov.
He has been a Minister four
times in President Boris
Yeltsin's fast changing
administrations. This year,
as Economics Minister he
was responsible for tax
collection.

He tells me that IMF money
has been an addictive drug
for the Russian economy.
With each new injection the
Government sees financial crisis averted, and abandons
any attempt at serious reform.

He makes the intriguing suggestion that, instead of
setting financial targets, the IMF should set goals for
convictions for corruption, and should release money in
proportion to the number of bent officials and gangsters
who are locked up.

Backing Yeltsin

The second charge, made regularly in the pages of the
Moscow Times, is that the IMF has effectively backed
Boris Yeltsin, closing its eyes to the lack of reform and
forking out huge wads of money any time their man is in
trouble.

True or not, this opinion is widely held, and with
Presidential elections due next year it could seriously
damage relations between the incoming President and
the IMF with its Western backers.

Garfield Reynolds, the Business Editor of the Moscow
Times says he's racked his brain to come up with an
example of any positive achievement of the IMF in
Russia, but can't come up with anything.

IMF version

The IMF, of course, vigorously disputes the version of
recent history being described by its detractors.

Martin Gilman, the head of the IMF in Moscow, invites
me to imagine what state Russia would have been in had
it not been for the IMF's billions.

Although a plausible defence the "it could have been a
whole lot worse" argument is by its very nature difficult to
prove.

He denies any political agenda on the part of the IMF,
and makes a point which is undeniably true.

That whatever pressure the IMF may bring to bear,
without the political will to introduce reform from the
Duma and from the President, no change for the better
will ever be achieved.

Furthermore the IMF has undoubtedly been a
mechanism through which Russia has engaged with the
West.

For an awesome nuclear power, which lives in the
constant shadow of anarchy this, can be no bad thing.

Global geo-politics

But it is wrong to think of Russia, the IMF and economic
reform purely in terms of global geo-politics. It is also a
matter of bread and butter, warmth and shelter for tens of
millions of ordinary people.

The World Bank estimates around 60 million Russians
have incomes of less than 800 roubles ($32) a month.
More than 20 million live in extreme poverty (with
incomes under 400 roubles, or $16 a month).

All the evidence shows that a successful market
economy can only be built upon firm foundations of law
and order.

If protection racketeering, tax fraud, bribery and
corruption are allowed to flourish the crooks will get rich,
and the weak will stay poor.

More than $20bn IMF dollars have failed to prevent
Russia from retaining the dubious distinction of being
one of the most corrupt nations on earth, in which tens
of millions of people are struggling to survive.

By any analysis that is not much of a return on our
investment.
news.bbc.co.uk.