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Overview

The IMF is fully committed to supporting our member countries, particularly the most vulnerable; we have the tools to help; and we are coordinating closely with our partner institutions.

    Highlights

    News & Publications

    Spatial Inequality in South Africa: Causes and Policy Option
    March 6, 2026

    South Africa exhibits one of the highest levels of income inequality globally, reflecting persistent spatial exclusion. This paper examines the extent and causes of spatial inequality using household microdata, microsimulations, and a structural spatial general-equilibrium model. The microdata analysis indicates that inequality within (rather than across) urban and rural areas accounts for the majority of overall inequality, with long commuting times strongly associated with higher unemployment and lower incomes. The simulation analysis suggests that reducing commuting costs can meaningfully lower unemployment and inequality. The structural modeling results point to transportation and housing policies as effective tools to promote spatial integration and reduce income inequality.

    The Macroeconomic Consequences of Undermining Central Bank Independence: Evidence from Governor Transitions
    March 6, 2026

    This paper studies the macroeconomic consequences of undermining central bank independence through politically motivated transitions of central bank governors. Leveraging a new panel dataset covering 132 central bank governor transitions in 28 advanced and emerging market economies since 2000, we document the timing, frequency, and political drivers of these leadership changes. Tenures of governors with politically motivated appointments are associated with higher and more volatile inflation, realized and expected. Professional forecasters also tend to expect such governors to be more dovish when responding to shifts in inflation. Using local projections in a difference-in[1]difference setting, we find that following the announcement of a politically motivated governor transition nominal and real short rates decline and expected and realized inflation rise. At the same time, GDP growth increases in the aftermath of such transitions, consistent with an expansionary short-run macroeconomic impulse. These effects are more pronounced when the incoming governor professes unorthodox views on monetary policy, suggesting that political interference in central bank leadership induces a temporary growth–inflation trade-off. Long-term inflation expectations only rise in the case of unorthodox governors with politically motivated appointments, suggesting costs to central bank credibility are much more pronounced in those cases.

    Sovereign Debt Sustainability and Redistribution
    March 6, 2026

    This paper develops a theory of sovereign debt sustainability driven by the government’s motive for redistribution. It studies a heterogeneous-agent small open economy in which redistribution relies on distortionary labor taxation and the government lacks commitment in its fiscal policies. Access to international credit markets lowers the cost of redistribution, while default into financial autarky raises it, generating an endogenous cost of default. Quantitatively, the model accounts for the buildup of Italy’s external debt and the positive cross-country correlation between pre-tax income inequality and external debt. Optimal austerity is more gradual when distributional concerns are present.

    Blogs

    Adequate Reserves Shield Economies From Shocks and Strengthen Resilience
    March 5, 2026

    Building foreign exchange reserves requires sound policies and takes time, but global efforts to lower the cost of holding them can help

    Debt Confronts Policymakers With Difficult Trade-offs
    March 4, 2026

    There are few elegant, easy, or politically attractive ways to reduce debt

    Stock-Bond Diversification Offers Less Protection From Market Selloffs
    February 18, 2026

    Diversification has become harder since 2020 as stocks and bonds tend to move in tandem during sharp selloffs, adding to financial stability concerns

    Global Economy Shakes Off Tariff Shock Amid Tech-Driven Boom
    January 19, 2026

    But risks are rising, including from the concentration of tech investment and the negative effects of trade disruptions, which may build over time

    New Skills and AI Are Reshaping the Future of Work
    January 14, 2026

    Policy choices will determine whether workers and firms are adequately prepared for the AI revolution

    Top 10 Blogs of 2025
    December 29, 2025

    Debt, Stablecoins, AI, and Global Economy’s New Era Drew Blog Readers

    Multimedia

    Podcast: Navigating a More Fragile World

    With shock upon shock hitting the world economy in the last three years, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva's customary opening speech to the Annual Meetings warned of a darker global outlook and emphasized the need for the world to come together to deal with the consequences.