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An Identity Crisis? Testing IMF Financial Programming

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  • William Easterly

    (Center for Global Development)

Abstract

The IMF uses its well-known "financial programming" model to derive monetary and fiscal programs to achieve desired macroeconomic targets in countries undergoing crises or receiving debt relief. Financial programming is based on monetary, balance of payments, and fiscal accounting identities. This paper subjects the identity-based framework to a variety of tests. All of the identities contain large statistical discrepancies, which weakens the case for them as a "consistency check." Financial programming assumes a one for one relationship from the identity between the policy variable (e.g. domestic credit) and the outcome variable (e.g. money supply) posited by financial programming, because the other variables in the identity are assumed to be exogenous with respect to the policy variable. This assumption fails in the data, as all the coefficients of outcome variables on policy variables depart from a unitary coefficient. The elasticity of inflation with respect to excess money growth (money growth — real output growth) is significantly less than one, and shows a high variance in the data. Changes in velocity account on average for 57% of the change in the price level. Velocity is non-stationary. Imports are not significantly related to long-term disbursements in most countries. The median income elasticity of imports is 1.36 and the dispersion of import elasticities in the data has a majority of the distribution outside the usual range used in country projections. Using import availability to predict growth leads to a forecast error more than twice that of the naïve model that growth is a random walk. Government deficits do not have a one for one link with domestic credit creation, as predicted by the identity approach. In sum, the financial programming approach is flawed because it does not take into account the endogeneity of virtually all the variables in each macroeconomic identity, the instability of its simple behavioral assumptions, and the large statistical discrepancies in all the identities. Accounting identities do not a macro model make.

Suggested Citation

  • William Easterly, 2002. "An Identity Crisis? Testing IMF Financial Programming," Working Papers 9, Center for Global Development.
  • Handle: RePEc:cgd:wpaper:9
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    Cited by:

    1. Graham Bird, 2007. "The Imf: A Bird'S Eye View Of Its Role And Operations," Journal of Economic Surveys, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 21(4), pages 683-745, September.
    2. James Heintz & Léonce Ndikumana, 2010. "Working Paper 108 - Is there a Case for Formal Inflation Targeting in Sub-Saharan Africa?," Working Paper Series 245, African Development Bank.
    3. James Heintz & Léonce Ndikumana, 2010. "Is There a Case for Formal Inflation Targeting in Sub-Saharan Africa?," Working Papers wp218, Political Economy Research Institute, University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
    4. James Heintz & Gerald Epstein, 2006. "Monetary Policy and Financial Sector Reform For Employment Creation and Poverty Reduction in Ghana," Working Papers wp113, Political Economy Research Institute, University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
    5. James Heintz & Robert Pollin, 2008. "Targeting Employment Expansion, Economic Growth and Development in Sub-Saharan Africa: Outlines of an Alternative Economic Programme for the Region," Published Studies targeting_employment_expa, Political Economy Research Institute, University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
    6. Ramaharo, Franck M., 2021. "A simple macroeconomic framework for Madagascar," MPRA Paper 112092, University Library of Munich, Germany.
    7. James Vreeland, 2006. "IMF program compliance: Aggregate index versus policy specific research strategies," The Review of International Organizations, Springer, vol. 1(4), pages 359-378, December.
    8. Gerald Epstein & James Heintz, 2006. "Monetary Policy and Financial Sector Reform for Employment Creation and Poverty Reduction in Ghana," Research Report 2, International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth.

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