Lessons from the Asian contagion helped the IMF tackle global financial crisis




Asia's Developing Future show

Summary: The International Monetary Fund learned a thing or two from the 1997 Asian financial crisis, which helped it respond better to the 2008 global financial crisis. Thanks to IMF assistance, troubled countries were in a better position to weather the global crisis. The IMF provided financing to more than 30 countries that saw investors and capital flee financial markets. On average, IMF financing after the global crisis was larger than after the Asian crisis by more than 3 percentage points of gross domestic product. The IMF lent to countries beyond normal limits and increased the size of assistance in several instances when the initial amount wasn’t enough to curb capital outflow and stabilize exchange rates. The bigger financing packages and other innovations it introduced from 2008 to 2011 showed the IMF had learned its lesson from the Asian financial crisis, when inadequate financing contributed to the failure of IMF programs to stop capital outflows and currency free-falls. Read the transcript https://bit.ly/2uiB0JC Read the working paper https://www.adb.org/publications/assessing-effectiveness-imf-programs-following-global-financial-crisis About the authors Carlos De Resende is a senior economist at the Institute for Capacity Development of the International Monetary Fund. Shinji Takagi is professor emeritus of economics at Osaka University and visiting research professor at the Asian Growth Research Institute, Fukuoka, Japan. Know more about ADBI’s work on the global financial crisis https://bit.ly/2m8OSlL https://bit.ly/2J6XC5e