Year: 2024

Making Sense of the IMF’s Interim Review of the Resilience and Sustainability Trust

By Jwala Rambarran This month, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) marks its 80th anniversary amid various proposals on how to reform the global financial architecture to make it fit-for-purpose in the 21st century. Climate change poses a particular, and urgent, opportunity for reform. Many of the IMF’s developing country members are grappling with severe fiscal and […]

Enough Voice for the Vulnerable? Why Climate-vulnerable Countries Need More Voting Power within the International Monetary Fund

By Timon Forster It has been three years since the International Monetary Fund (IMF) – the organization tasked with monitoring the international monetary and financial system – determined that its mandate encompasses the macro-economic consequences of global warming (e.g., the pressure of natural disasters on government coffers). In the meantime, the Fund has hired climate […]

Climate Policy at the International Monetary Fund: No Voice for the Vulnerable?

The climate crisis prompted the International Monetary Fund (IMF), an international lender of last resort, to implement wholesale reforms to incorporate climate policy into its operations. At the IMF, however, selected countries from the Global North, which are also historically the largest emitters of greenhouse gases, dominate decision-making. Given this, can the Fund implement an […]

The ‘New’ New Development Bank: A Decade Plus in the Making

By Gregory T. Chin When much of the world shut-down at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, in late 2021, the New Development Bank (NDB) welcomed four nations into its membership, Bangladesh, the United Arab Emirates, Uruguay and Egypt. These additions, with Uruguay pending, were the first new members since the creation of the Bank […]

The Evolution of the New Development Bank

 In July 2015, the New Development Bank (NDB), formerly the BRICS Development Bank, was established by the BRICS states (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa). Since then, the NDB has built an impressive record of milestones, each one laying the groundwork for careful institutional building.  Nearly a decade since the founding of the […]

How Central Bank Swaps Reinforce Inequalities in the Global Financial Safety Net

By Marina Zucker-Marques, Laurissa Mühlich, Barbara Fritz, Thomas Goda What once consisted of only the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has become a complex, multilayered and non-coordinated network of institutions aimed at supporting countries during times of financial distress. This network is known as the Global Financial Safety Net (GFSN), and comprises the IMF, regional financial […]