The document discusses market integration and key terms and institutions related to international economic cooperation and development. It provides details on the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), International Financial Institutions (IFIs) such as the World Bank and regional development banks, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the relationship between the IMF, World Bank, and World Trade Organization (WTO) in promoting global economic growth and development.
The document discusses market integration and key terms and institutions related to international economic cooperation and development. It provides details on the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), International Financial Institutions (IFIs) such as the World Bank and regional development banks, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the relationship between the IMF, World Bank, and World Trade Organization (WTO) in promoting global economic growth and development.
The document discusses market integration and key terms and institutions related to international economic cooperation and development. It provides details on the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), International Financial Institutions (IFIs) such as the World Bank and regional development banks, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the relationship between the IMF, World Bank, and World Trade Organization (WTO) in promoting global economic growth and development.
The document discusses market integration and key terms and institutions related to international economic cooperation and development. It provides details on the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), International Financial Institutions (IFIs) such as the World Bank and regional development banks, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the relationship between the IMF, World Bank, and World Trade Organization (WTO) in promoting global economic growth and development.
Integration is taken to denote a state of affairs or a process
involving attempts to combine a separate national economies into larger economic regions (Robson, 1990). Integration shows the company’s market relationship. The extent of integration affects the company’s status and thus their marketing efficiency. Markets differ in the degree of integration, and thus their degree of efficiency varies. Common Term in Market Integration: ▪ General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) is a legal agreement between many countries, whose overall purpose was to promote international trade by reducing or eliminating trade barriers such as tariffs or quotas. Signed by 23 countries in 1947 at Geneva canton, Switzerland and was implemented in 1948 (Wikipedia).
▪ International Financial Institutions (IFIs) are institutions
that provide financial support and professional advice for economic and social development activities in developing countries and promote international economic cooperation and stability. The term international financial institutions typically refers to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the five multilateral development banks (MDBs):
1.World Bank Group
2. African Development Bank 3. Asian Development Bank 4. Inter-American Development Bank 5. European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
The last four of these, focus on a single world region and
hence are often called regional development banks. The Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) provide financing for development through developing countries through the following: 1. Long-term loans (with maturities of up to 20 years) based on market interest rates. To obtain the financial resources for these loans, MDBs borrow on the international capital markets and re-lend to borrowing governments in developing countries. 2. Very-long-term loans (often termed credits, with maturities of 30 to 40 years) at interest rates well below market rates. These are funded through direct contributions by government in the donor countries. 3. Grant Financing is also offered by some MDBs, mostly for technical assistance, advisory services, or project preparation. All IFIs are active in supporting programs that are global in scope, in addition to their primary role of financing and providing technical assistance to programs at the country level. Some other publicly owned international banks and funds also lend to developing countries, and these are often grouped together as other multilateral financial institutions rather than as IFIs. Among these are: the European Investment Bank, International Bank for Agricultural Development, Islamic Development Bank, Nordic Development Fund, Nordic Investment Bank, and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries Fund for International Development. THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND IMF was established by international treaty in 1945 as the central institution of the international monetary system, the system trading and exchange rates that enables business to take place between countries with different currencies. IMF aims to prevent crisis in the system by encouraging countries to adopt sound economic policies and monitoring their adherence to such policies. IMF headquartered in Washington D.C. and is governed by its almost-global membership of 184 countries. International Monetary Fund statutory purposes include the ff: 1. Promoting the balanced expansion of world trade; 2.The stability of exchange rates; 3.The avoidance of competitive currency devaluations; and 4. The orderly correction of balance of payments problems. IMF engages in three types of activities to serve its purposes. 1. It monitor economic and financial developments and policies, both in its member countries and at the global level, and offers policy advice to its members based on its more than 50 years of experience; 2. It lends to member countries experiencing balance of payments problems, not just to provide temporary financing but also to support economic adjustment and reforms aimed at correcting the underlying problems; and 3. It provides the governments and central banks of its member countries with technical assistance and training in its areas of expertise. THE WORLD BANK GROUP Founded in 1945, the World Bank at first was involved mainly in the construction of countries devastated by World war II. As those countries recovered, the bank turned its primary focus to its second tasks for the economic development of the World’s non industrialized countries, with the goal of lifting the world out of poverty. The World Bank is organized much like a cooperative, whose shareholders are the same 184 countries that make up IMF’s membership. The shareholding countries are represented by a Board of Governors, which is the Bank’s ultimate policy making body. The World Bank Group, which is also headquartered in Washington D.C. is made up of five institutions: 1. International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) focuses on middle-income countries and creditworthy low-income countries. 2. International development Association (IDA) focuses on the poorest countries in the world. It is the largest source of interest-free loans and grant assistance to the government of poorest countries. 3. International Finance Corporation (IFC) focuses on financing private sector projects, in which it may take an equity stake in addition to lending. 4. Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) promotes foreign direct investment in developing countries by insuring investors against political or noncommercial risk in those countries. 5. International Centre for Settlement of Investment disputes (ICSID) provides a forum for mediating disputes between investors and governments, and advises governments in their efforts to attract investment (Bhargava 2006). RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE IMF AND WORLD BANK The World Bank was formed to help with European post-war reconstruction. It later shifted its focus to assisting development efforts in the Third World. In the 1980s, while continuing the project lending, the bank began shifting its loans toward structural adjustment and sectoral adjustment loans. Presently, two-thirds of the bank’s lending goes to both adjustments. The IMF and World Bank jointly administer a program called the Heavily Indebted Poor Country/ Poverty Reduction and Growth Fund that provides very modest debt relief to the world’s poorest countries. 1. A structural adjustment is a set of economic reforms that a country must adhere to in order to secure a loan from the International Monetary Fund and/or the World Bank. Structural adjustments are often a set of economic policies, including reducing government spending, opening to free trade, and so on. 2. Sectoral adjustment means a settlement of a claim or debt relating to the various economic sectors of a society or to a particular economic sector. The World Bank respects the IMF’s role and generally will not make loans to countries that have not received an IMF seal of approval. THE IMF AND WORLD BANK’S RELATIONSHIP TO THE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION (WTO) The IMF, World Bank and the WTO share a commitment to “free trade” and binding developing countries into the global economy. The WTO implements agreements governing world trade and administers a binding mechanism to resolve trade disputes between nations. In Nov. 1999, the IMF, World Bank and WTO announced a new “coherence agreement” in which they pledged to coordinate future activities, that the first two may incorporate the very particularized elements of WTO agreements into their lending conditions. REFERENCES ▪ Andrada, J.F. , et. al. 2018. The Contemporary World. Philippines: Mutya Publishing House.
▪ Castells, M. 1998. End of Millenium . Vol. III of The
Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, Oxford: Blackwell.