scholarly journals The Complexity and Instability of Policy Conditionality and Transfer: IMF Interventions in the Political Economy of South America.

2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 14
Author(s):  
David Alemna ◽  
Kepa Artaraz ◽  
Philip Haynes ◽  
Shadreck Mwale

International Monetary Fund (IMF) interventions have evolved in the last sixty years based on the predominant orthodoxy in world political economy with a focus in recent decades on encouraging liberal market conditions to secure inward investment and capital flows. This has resulted in a dominant model of policy conditions and transfer, but with a debate about the contextual relevance. This paper uses an innovative approach to longitudinal research, called Dynamic Pattern Synthesis, to compare the economic performance of South American nations between 2000-2015. The results from using this method illustrates multifinality in the IMF outcome of encouraging foreign direct investment. A complex configuration of influences on this outcome are evidenced. Complexity theory is used to explain the results, with the continent defined as a complex system that does not respond to simple causal policy mechanisms, but rather displays different patterns of political and economic influence in the context of global market instability. Different foreign direct investment configurations result, and these illustrate that international monetary and policy interventions need to be contextual and cannot make simplistic and universal assumptions about policy problems and their mechanistic solutions. 

2011 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 146-150

Raymond Robertson of Macalester College reviews “Unequal Partners: The United States and Mexico” by Sidney Weintraub. The EconLit Abstract of the reviewed work begins, “Examines the repercussions of the dependent-dominant relationship between Mexico and the United States. Discusses Mexico's political economy; trade--from closure to opening; foreign direct investment and finance--from resistance to welcome; narcotics--effects of profits from U.S. consumption; energy….”


2013 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 912-914

Presents an analysis of South Korean economic growth. Discusses the aggregate sources of growth; the changing structure of growth; the service sector and economic growth; exports and economic growth; foreign direct investment and economic growth; and crises and growth. Eichengreen is George C. Pardee and Helen N. Pardee Professor of Economics and Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley. Perkins is Harold Hitchings Burbank Professor of Political Economy, Emeritus, at Harvard University. Shin is Professor of Economics at Korea University.


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