This is the podcast for the Notes on the Crises newsletter published by Nathan Tankus. The newsletter (and now the podcast) is devoted to covering the ongoing effects of the Coronavirus Depression and various other related and intersecting crises Nathan will interview guests on a variety of related topics and take the opportunity of speaking to experts, authors and academics to explore issues the newsletter doesn‘t usually cover at a deeper level. Support the podcast and Newsletter by Subscribing at https://www.crisesnotes.com/#/portal
Episodes
Wednesday Mar 02, 2022
Wednesday Mar 02, 2022
In our third episode Nathan spoke to Karina Patricio Ferreira Lima, a law professor at the University of Leeds, and Chris Marsh, a macroeconomist at Exante Data, about their paper questioning the legality of the International Monetary Fund’s 2018 program in Argentina. The interview runs through the important background history to the IMF’s most recent Argentine program, the questionable changes which have been made to the IMF’s operating procedures in the past few decades and the legal constraints which are supposed to exist for IMF programs. Our guests went on to explain the specifics of the 2018 stand-by arrangement with the IMF and the reasons they think this program was particularly egregious economically, to the point of being illegal. Finally, we discussed the limited legal recourse Argentina has to challenge the legality of an IMF program and the implications all this has for the IMF’s Coronavirus response. This interview was recorded before the recent Ukraine crisis, but has obvious implications there too.
You can find their paper here. You can follow Professor Lima here and Chris Marsh here.
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Produced & Edited by Lina Nehlich
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