A responsible financial institution would not extend a new loan of
between $17 and $40 billion to a borrower already struggling to pay back
an existing multi-billion dollar loan. Yet that is just what the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) did last month when it extended a new
loan to the government of Ukraine. This new loan may not make much
economic sense, but propping up the existing Ukrainian government serves
the foreign policy agenda of the U.S. government.
Since the IMF receives most of its funding from the United States, it is hardly surprising that it would tailor its actions to advance the U.S. government's foreign policy goals. The IMF also has a history of using the funds provided to it by the American taxpayer to prop up dictatorial regimes and support unsound economic policies.
Some may claim the IMF does promote free markets by requiring that countries receiving IMF loans implement some positive economic reforms, such as reducing government spending. However, other conditions imposed by the IMF, such as that the country receiving the loan deflate its currency and implement an industrial policy promoting exports, do not seem designed to promote a true free market, much less improve the people's living standards by giving them greater economic opportunities.
The problem with the IMF cannot be fixed by changing the conditions attached to IMF loans. The fundamental problem with the IMF is that it is funded by resources taken forcibly from the private sector. By taking resources out of private hands and giving them to IMF bureaucrats, government distorts the marketplace, harming both American taxpayers and the citizens of the countries receiving the IMF loans. The idea that the IMF is somehow better able to allocate capital than are private investors is just as flawed as every other form of central planning. The IMF must be repealed, not reformed.
Read more: http://www.baxterbulletin.com/story/opinion/2015/04/02/ron-paul-repeal-r...
Since the IMF receives most of its funding from the United States, it is hardly surprising that it would tailor its actions to advance the U.S. government's foreign policy goals. The IMF also has a history of using the funds provided to it by the American taxpayer to prop up dictatorial regimes and support unsound economic policies.
Some may claim the IMF does promote free markets by requiring that countries receiving IMF loans implement some positive economic reforms, such as reducing government spending. However, other conditions imposed by the IMF, such as that the country receiving the loan deflate its currency and implement an industrial policy promoting exports, do not seem designed to promote a true free market, much less improve the people's living standards by giving them greater economic opportunities.
The problem with the IMF cannot be fixed by changing the conditions attached to IMF loans. The fundamental problem with the IMF is that it is funded by resources taken forcibly from the private sector. By taking resources out of private hands and giving them to IMF bureaucrats, government distorts the marketplace, harming both American taxpayers and the citizens of the countries receiving the IMF loans. The idea that the IMF is somehow better able to allocate capital than are private investors is just as flawed as every other form of central planning. The IMF must be repealed, not reformed.
Read more: http://www.baxterbulletin.com/story/opinion/2015/04/02/ron-paul-repeal-r...
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