After decades of failing to fulfill the explicit purpose for which it was created, the International Monetary Fund now finds itself uniquely positioned to facilitate a globally coordinated response to the COVID-19 crisis. But to make good on its potential, the Fund first needs to abandon some bad old ideas.
NEW DELHI β The COVID-19 pandemic has thrust the entire world β rich and poor β into uncharted territory, prompting extraordinary policy responses almost everywhere. The looming economic fallout will be more severe than that of the Great Depression, the 2008 global financial crisis, and perhaps even the two world wars. After all, none of these previous epochal crises involved a simultaneous global collapse of both demand and supply, with little certainty of how long the sudden stop would persist.
NEW DELHI β The COVID-19 pandemic has thrust the entire world β rich and poor β into uncharted territory, prompting extraordinary policy responses almost everywhere. The looming economic fallout will be more severe than that of the Great Depression, the 2008 global financial crisis, and perhaps even the two world wars. After all, none of these previous epochal crises involved a simultaneous global collapse of both demand and supply, with little certainty of how long the sudden stop would persist.