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Cover for 9781107005402 Cover for 9780521183062 Cover for 9780691095288 Cover for 9780691095295 Cover for 9780691044149
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How is the United States able to control the IMF with only 17% of the votes? How are the rules of the global economy made? This book shows how a combination of formal and informal rules explain how international organizations really work. Randall W. Stone argues that formal rules apply in ordinary times, while informal power allows leading states to exert control when the stakes are high. International organizations are therefore best understood as equilibrium outcomes that balance the power and interests of the leading state and the member countries. Presenting a new model of institutional design and comparing the IMF, WTO and EU, Stone argues that institutional variations reflect the distribution of power and interests. He shows that US interests influence the size, terms and enforcement of IMF programs, and new data, archival documents and interviews reveal the shortcomings of IMF programs in Mexico, Russia, Korea, Indonesia and Argentina.

Hardcover:

9781107005402 | Cambridge Univ Pr, March 31, 2011, cover price $110.00 | About this edition: How is the United States able to control the IMF with only 17% of the votes?

Paperback:

9780521183062 | Cambridge Univ Pr, March 31, 2011, cover price $44.99

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Product Description: With the end of the Cold War, the International Monetary Fund emerged as the most powerful international institution in history. But how much influence can the IMF exert over fiercely contested issues in domestic politics that affect the lives of millions? In Lending Credibility, Randall Stone develops the first systematic approach to answering this question...read more (view table of contents, read Amazon.com's description)

Hardcover:

9780691095288 | Princeton Univ Pr, June 1, 2002, cover price $55.00 | About this edition: With the end of the Cold War, the International Monetary Fund emerged as the most powerful international institution in history.

Paperback:

9780691095295, titled "Lending Credibility: The International Monetary Fund and the Post Communist Transition" | Princeton Univ Pr, June 24, 2002, cover price $43.95 | About this edition: With the end of the Cold War, the International Monetary Fund emerged as the most powerful international institution in history.

Why did the Soviet Union squander the political leverage afforded by its trade subsidy to Eastern Europe? Why did Soviet officials fail to bargain with resolve, to link subsidies to salient political issues, to make credible commitments, and to monitor the satellites' policies? Using an unprecedented array of formerly secret documents housed in archives in Moscow, Warsaw, and Prague, as well as interviews with former Communist officials across Eastern Europe, Randall Stone answers these questions and others that have long vexed Western political scientists.Stone argues that trade politics revolved around the incentives created by distorted prices. The East European satellites profited by trading on the margin between prices on the Western market and those in the Soviet bloc. The Soviet Union made numerous attempts to reduce its implicit trade subsidy and increase the efficiency of the bloc, but the satellites managed consistently to outmaneuver Soviet negotiators. Stone demonstrates how the East Europeans artfully resisted Soviet objectives.Stone draws upon recent developments in bargaining and principal-agent theory, arguing that the incentives created by domestic institutions weakened Soviet bargaining strategies. In effect, he suggests, perverse incentive structures in the Soviet economy were exported into Soviet foreign policy. Furthermore, Stone argues, incentives to smother information were so deeply entrenched that they frustrated numerous attempts to reform Soviet institutions. (view table of contents)

Hardcover:

9780691044149 | Princeton Univ Pr, February 1, 1996, cover price $65.00 | About this edition: Why did the Soviet Union squander the political leverage afforded by its trade subsidy to Eastern Europe?

Paperback:

9780691095981 | Princeton Univ Pr, April 1, 2002, cover price $38.95

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