Authors: Ben Thirkell-White
ISBN-13: 9781403920782, ISBN-10: 1403920788
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Date Published: October 2005
Edition: (Non-applicable)
Ben Thirkell-White is Lecturer in International Relations at the University of St Andrews, Scotland.
Thirkell-White (international relations, U. of St. Andrews, UK) takes an explicitly political approach to evaluating the International Monetary Fund in this work. Instead of asking, as in most of the literature, whether the Fund's policies are effective relative to some technical criterion, he analyzes who is in a position to determine policies and what their motivations are in doing so, focusing on the question of political legitimacy as it played itself out during the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s. He begins the discussion with an examination of the Fund's own legitimating justifications and political challenges to the Fund as partial consequence of longer-term declines in it political legitimacy. Finally, he considers ways that the Fund's legitimacy can be reestablished. Annotation ©2006 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
1 | Introduction | 1 |
2 | IMF legitimacy : principles and institutions | 19 |
3 | An evolving IMF | 47 |
4 | The Asian crisis and the case studies | 77 |
5 | South Korea | 98 |
6 | Indonesia | 128 |
7 | Malaysia | 156 |
8 | The United States | 179 |
9 | From crisis to a new architecture? | 205 |
10 | Conclusions | 240 |