Working
Paper 01-2
by Joseph P. Joyce
Article forthcoming in Review of International Economics.
The programs of the International Monetary Fund were
originally designed to provide short-term assistance
to countries implementing policies to address balance
of payments disequilibria. In recent decades, however,
the Fund has instituted new facilities with longer time
horizons, while many developing countries have adopted
consecutive programs. As a result, the length of time
spent by countries in IMF programs has grown. This paper
analyzes the IMF program spells for a group of emerging
economies over the period of 1982 to 2000. Duration
models are used to investigate the time dependence of
the failure rate of the spells and the factors that
affect the duration of program spells. The hazard ratio
of program spells has a non-monotonic shape, first rising
and then falling over time. A spell’s duration
is independent of a previous spell length or the number
of previous spells. Program duration is extended for
those countries with lower per-capita income, exports
concentrated in primary goods, landlocked geographic
status and autocratic regimes. Governments that are
ideologically divided have shorter spells, which may
reflect a breakdown in governance.
This paper was revised in May 2003.
JEL classification codes: F33, O19
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