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IMF & World Bank — Functions & India’s Role

📌 Topic 03 of 6 · Chapter 11 · International Trade

IMF & World Bank — Functions & India’s Role

IMF — SDR, quota, conditionality. World Bank — IBRD, IDA, IFC. India’s relationship with both institutions.

🏛️ Bretton Woods Institutions

The IMF and World Bank were both established at the Bretton Woods Conference (1944) in New Hampshire, USA. They are called “Bretton Woods Institutions” or “twin sisters.” Both are headquartered in Washington D.C., USA.

FeatureIMFWorld Bank
Full NameInternational Monetary FundWorld Bank Group
Established1944 (operational 1945)1944 (operational 1946)
HQWashington D.C., USAWashington D.C., USA
Members190 countries189 countries
FocusMonetary stability, BoP supportLong-term development, poverty reduction
LoansShort-term (BoP crisis)Long-term (development projects)

💰 IMF — International Monetary Fund

The IMF’s primary purpose is to ensure the stability of the international monetary system — the system of exchange rates and international payments.

Key Functions of IMF:

  • Surveillance: Monitors global economy and member countries’ economic policies
  • Lending: Provides short-term loans to countries facing BoP crises
  • Technical assistance: Helps countries improve economic management
  • SDR allocation: Creates and allocates Special Drawing Rights
⭐ SDR (Special Drawing Rights): SDR is an international reserve asset created by IMF. It is not a currency but a claim on freely usable currencies. SDR value is based on a basket of 5 currencies: USD, Euro, Chinese Yuan, Japanese Yen, British Pound. India’s SDR allocation is ~$17.9 billion.

IMF Quota System:

Each member country has a quota — based on its economic size. Quota determines: (1) voting power, (2) maximum borrowing, (3) SDR allocation. USA has the largest quota (~17.4%) — giving it effective veto power over major decisions.

🌍 Real-World Example — India and IMF (1991)

During the 1991 BoP crisis, India borrowed $2.2 billion from IMF under a Structural Adjustment Programme. IMF imposed “conditionalities” — India had to reduce fiscal deficit, devalue rupee, and liberalise economy. This forced India to undertake the LPG reforms. Today, India is a net creditor to IMF — it lends to IMF rather than borrowing.

🌍 World Bank Group

The World Bank Group consists of 5 institutions:

InstitutionFull NameFocus
IBRDInternational Bank for Reconstruction and DevelopmentLoans to middle-income countries at market rates
IDAInternational Development AssociationConcessional loans/grants to poorest countries
IFCInternational Finance CorporationPrivate sector investment in developing countries
MIGAMultilateral Investment Guarantee AgencyPolitical risk insurance for investors
ICSIDInternational Centre for Settlement of Investment DisputesArbitration for investment disputes
🇮🇳 India and World Bank: India is one of the largest borrowers from World Bank. World Bank funds major infrastructure projects in India — highways, rural water supply, urban development, education. India borrows mainly from IBRD (middle-income) and IDA (concessional). World Bank also publishes the Ease of Doing Business Index (discontinued 2021).
🌍 Real-World Example

World Bank funded the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (rural roads), Delhi Metro, and various state-level water supply projects in India. These projects improved connectivity and quality of life for millions of rural Indians.

🔑 Key Terms

  • Bretton Woods: 1944 conference that created IMF and World Bank
  • SDR: Special Drawing Rights — IMF’s reserve asset; basket of 5 currencies
  • Conditionality: IMF’s conditions attached to loans — fiscal discipline, structural reforms
  • IBRD: Loans to middle-income countries (India borrows from IBRD)
  • IDA: Concessional loans to poorest countries
  • IFC: Private sector arm of World Bank
  • Quota: IMF member’s contribution — determines voting power and borrowing limit