Professional ties that bind: how normative orientations shape IMF conditionality

被引:46
|
作者
Chwieroth, Jeffrey M. [1 ]
机构
[1] London Sch Econ, Dept Int Relat, London WC2A 2AE, England
关键词
conditionality; developing countries; professions; ideas; International Monetary Fund; organizational culture; INTERNATIONAL-MONETARY-FUND; POLITICAL-ECONOMY; EPISTEMIC COMMUNITIES; POLICY; CRISIS; TRADE; ORGANIZATIONS; DEPENDENCE; AMERICAN; REFORM;
D O I
10.1080/09692290.2014.898214
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Staff play a key part in designing IMF conditionality, and yet the literature provides a narrow view of their motivations. This article shows how the design of IMF conditionality is linked to the normative orientations of the staff and their common professional training. Professional ties from similar training help to bind the staff together around a shared set of normative orientations that inform the IMF's policy goals. When borrowing-country officials do not share these orientations, the staff are motivated to tighten conditionality. This behaviour also fits with staff concerns about time-inconsistency and moral hazard. I find robust statistical support for this argument using a dataset based on the professional ties that exist between the IMF staff and borrowing-country officials. Yet conditionality is not found to be more lenient when country officials share the normative orientations of the IMF staff. Staff concerns about time-inconsistent preferences and moral hazard likely weigh against more lenient treatment where normative adherence is stronger.
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页码:757 / 787
页数:31
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