Scaling up global social health protection : prerequisite reforms to the International Monetary Fund

Authors & affiliation

Gorik Ooms, Rachel Hammonds

Abstract

People living in low-income countries require protection from the economic and social impacts of global economic competition, yet., historically,. the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) fiscal austerity programs have weakened the potential for redistribution both within poor countries and between rich and poor countries. The current development paradigm's focus on "sustainability" is an obstacle to developing systems of global social protection and an impediment to future progress. Reforming IMF policy conditionality and democratizing the IMF's decision-making processes will be necessary for offsetting growing inequalities in health financing among poor nations.

Publication date:

2009

Staff members:

Link to publication

Open link

Attachments

34.pdf (restricted)

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