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What types of financing does the IMF provide?

Article summary

This background article explains how IMF lending works and sets out the differences between the main types of IMF lending.

According to its website, the IMF lends money to member countries to help them through economic crises or to prevent crises occurring. The IMF only lends to governments, not the private sector or civil society, and all IMF financing is fungible – meaning the loan itself is not tied to any specific project or expenditure – unlike loans by development banks which are often used to support specific projects. Almost all IMF loans come with stringent conditions (i.e. conditionality) attached related to policy changes that governments are required to make in order to receive the funding. For ongoing coverage of IMF conditionality issues, see BWP’s Conditionality page, and for background on conditionality critiques, see Inside the Institutions, What are the main criticisms of the World Bank and IMF?

The IMF offers a number of different types of loans (called instruments or programmes) to governments, depending on their circumstances and income classification. All IMF member countries are eligible to borrow from the IMF’s General Resources Account (GRA) at market-based interest rates, while only low-income countries are eligible to borrow at concessional rates (currently at 0 per cent interest rates through June 2021) through the Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust (PRGT). How much a country can borrow under each instrument depends on their IMF quota share, which is determined by a formula that considers the size of their economic output and other factors (see Inside the Institutions, IMF and World Bank decision-making and governance).

The IMF’s main lending instruments are: