The In
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9.1
World Bank
Loans funds to states proposingeconomic development projects
International Finance
Corporation (IFC)Provides loans to
promote growth of privateenterprises in developing
countries
InternationalDevelopment
Association (IDA)Provides interest-freeloans to the poorest
countries
Multilateral InvestmentGuarantee Agency (MIGA)Encourages the flowof private equity capital todeveloping countries
International
Monetary Fund (IMF)
Original purpose was to guarantee
exchange-rate stability; today purposeis to act as lender of last resort to keep
debtor countries from
collapsing
World Trade
Organization (WTO)
Replaced GATT as forum for
negotiating new trade agreements;
includes stronger dispute-settlement procedures
General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
Series of multilateral trade negotiations
designed to stimulate trade by
International Tr lowering trade barriers
ade
Organization(was not formed)
At the Bretton Woods Conference in July 1944, world leaders agreed to create three institutions to facilitate worldwide economic coordination and development. Two of these institutions—the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund—were created shortly after the conference. Although the third institution proposed at Bretton Woods—the International Trade Organization—was never created, the principles behind it were later incorporated in the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, which in 1995 became the World Trade Organization. The latter is not technically part of the Bretton Woods institutions.