- Key Issues
- Lending
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IMF Support for Greece Moves Ahead with €3.24 Billion Disbursement

In
recent months, Greece has made impressive progress under the new coalition
government in terms of restoring fiscal sustainability and agreeing labor market
reforms that are providing a much needed boost to competitiveness.
Where the Money Goes
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New $369.8 Million IMF Loan Backs Yemen's Reform Efforts
Yemen’s oil reserves are expected to run out within a decade in the absence of new oil discoveries
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IMF Board Approves € 108.9 Million Stand-By Arrangement for Kosovo
Kosovo's economy remains undiversified and dominated by the trade and services sectors
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IMF Approves €30 Bln Loan for Greece on Fast Track
Joint financing means Greece will not have to tap international financial markets until 2012
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Jamaica Reaches Broad Agreement on $1.3 Billion IMF Loan
Program seeks to resolve Jamaica's problem of an unsustainable debt position
Problem-Solving Ideas
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Terms of IMF Lending Seen as More Focused, Better Tailored
The IMF has largely learnt lessons from previous crises to improve the way it lends to countries
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Review of Recent IMF-backed Crisis Programs
Asks if policies and conditionality are properly tailored to individual country circumstances
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IMF Backs New Package To Support World's Poorest During Crisis
Changes in IMF lending instruments for low-income countries
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IMF Overhauls Nonconcessional Lending Facilities and Conditionality
Modernized conditionality, higher access limits for nonconcessional lending
Need to Know
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Lending Reform Questions & Answers
So what is the rationale for "precautionary" lending?
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List of Current IMF loans
Who is borrowing, and how much
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Crisis Lending and the IMF
The difference between economic and financial crises
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IMF Lending
When can a country borrow from the IMF?
Who Said That?
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Increased IMF Lending Announced (July 31, 2009)
Blog post by Pooja Gupta in ONE blog
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Framing the IMF Debate (July 16, 2009)
Op-ed by John Rapley in the Jamaica Gleaner
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Reforming the IMF (February 6, 2009)
Op-ed by John Williamson, Peterson Institute for International Economics
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Supersize the IMF (November 13, 2008)
Op-ed by Sebastian Mallaby in Washington Post
Core role: crisis resolution
A country in severe financial trouble, unable to pay its international bills, poses potential problems for the stability of the international financial system, which the IMF was created to protect. Any member country, whether rich, middle-income, or poor, can turn to the IMF for financing if it has a balance of payments need—that is, if it cannot find sufficient financing on affordable terms in the capital markets to make its international payments and maintain a safe level of reserves.
IMF loans are meant to help member countries tackle balance of payments problems, stabilize their economies, and restore sustainable economic growth. This crisis resolution role is at the core of IMF lending. At the same time, the global financial crisis has highlighted the need for effective global financial safety nets to help countries cope with adverse shocks. A key objective of recent lending reforms has therefore been to complement the traditional crisis resolution role of the IMF with more effective tools for crisis prevention.
Related Links
- Blog: crisis prevention in an age of uncertainty
- Video: IMF strengthens its crisis prevention lending toolkit
- Lending reforms Q&A
- The IMF’s mandate: the future financing role—reform proposals
- The IMF’s mandate: the future financing role—revised reform proposals and revised proposed decisions
- Public information notice: the IMF’s mandate—future financing role
Research & Publications
Write to us
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