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Examining the effect of IMF conditionality on natural resource policy

Can International Monetary Fund (IMF) lending improve natural resource governance in borrowing countries? While most IMF agreements mandate policy reforms in exchange for financial support, compliance with these reforms is mixed at best. The natural resource sector should be no exception. After all,...

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Published in:Economics and politics 2023-03, Vol.35 (1), p.227-285
Main Author: Goes, Iasmin
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Language:English
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description Can International Monetary Fund (IMF) lending improve natural resource governance in borrowing countries? While most IMF agreements mandate policy reforms in exchange for financial support, compliance with these reforms is mixed at best. The natural resource sector should be no exception. After all, resource windfalls enable short‐term increases in discretionary spending, and office‐seeking politicians are often unwilling to forgo this discretion by reforming the oil, gas, or mining sector. I investigate how and when borrowers go against their political interests and establish natural resource funds—a tool often promoted by the IMF—in the wake of a loan agreement. Using text analysis, statistical models, and qualitative evidence from natural resource policy and IMF conditionality for 74 countries between 1980 and 2019, I show that borrowers under an IMF agreement are more likely to create or regulate a resource fund, particularly if the agreement includes binding conditions that highlight the salience of natural resource reforms. This study contributes to extant research by proposing a new method to extract information from IMF conditions, by introducing a novel dataset on country‐level natural resource policy, and by identifying under what circumstances international reform efforts can help combat the resource curse.
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Business Source Ultimate; EconLit with Full Text; Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
subjects Agreements
Expenditures
Financial support
Governance
IMF
international organizations
international political economy
macroeconomic political economy
microfoundations of political economy
Mining
Natural resources
political business cycles
Reforms
rent‐seeking
title Examining the effect of IMF conditionality on natural resource policy
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