Explaining IMF Lending Decisions after the Cold War

Moser C, Sturm JE (2011)


Publication Language: English

Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2011

Journal

Book Volume: Vol. 6

Pages Range: 307-340

DOI: 10.1007/s11558-011-9120-y

Abstract

This paper empirically investigates the economic and political factors that affect a country’s likelihood to sign an arrangement with the IMF and the determinants of the financial size of such a program. Arguably the world and the global financial architecture underwent structural changes after the ending of Cold War and so did the role of the IMF. Hence, we update and extend the work of Sturm et al. (Economics and Politics 17: 177–213, 2005) by employing a panel model for 165 countries that focuses on the post-Cold War era, i.e., 1990–2009. Our results, based on extreme bounds analysis, suggest that some economic and political variables are robustly related to these two dimensions of IMF program decisions. Furthermore, we show that it is important to distinguish between concessional and non-concessional IMF loans.

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How to cite

APA:

Moser, C., & Sturm, J.-E. (2011). Explaining IMF Lending Decisions after the Cold War. Review of International Organizations, Vol. 6, 307-340. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11558-011-9120-y

MLA:

Moser, Christoph, and Jan-Egbert Sturm. "Explaining IMF Lending Decisions after the Cold War." Review of International Organizations Vol. 6 (2011): 307-340.

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