The IMF
How the International Monetary Fund works, its lending programs, and the controversy over conditionality.
What the IMF Does
The IMF's primary role is maintaining global financial stability. It conducts economic surveillance (monitoring member economies), provides technical assistance (helping countries build economic institutions), and — most controversially — lends money to countries in financial crisis.
The IMF has 190 member countries, but voting power is weighted by financial contribution (quota). The US holds about 16.5% of votes — enough to veto major decisions, which require an 85% supermajority. European countries collectively hold another large block. This means that the countries most likely to borrow from the IMF have the least say in how it operates.