Bailing Out the Bailers

Bailing Out the Bailers

Could the IMF run out of money?

Posted Wednesday, October 29, 2008 - 5:21pm

Who’s your bailout daddy? Well, if you’re Ukraine, Iceland, Hungary, Belarus, and Pakistan right now, it’s the International Monetary Fund. New loan commitments made by the IMF in the last two weeks already exceed $30 billion; requests for billions more could be forthcoming. Which raises a troubling question: Could the IMF run out of cash?

Unlikely, but the IMF may have seen its financial heyday. It was created during the 1944 Bretton Woods conference to help manage the international monetary system and accumulated healthy reserves of currency after World War II. It continues to be funded by “quotas” charged to each member country largely based on the size of its economy. The quotas are a one-time charge, though. If the IMF needs more money, it has to go back to its member countries, and they’re in tough shape right now. The most powerful among them—the United States and the European Union—are shoveling money out the door to deal with their own problems, creating new debt to buy bank shares.

That said, right now the fund is flush and the balance sheet is strong. It now has the equivalent of $201 billion available to be lent out. (It calls this its “one-year forward commitment capacity.”) Before the meltdown, there was “only” around $18 billion in debt outstanding, half from Turkey and the remainder from poorer African, Caribbean, and Central Asian countries.

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