Letter From the Editor

AuthorIan S. McDonald
PositionEditor-in-Chief

In February 2000, Michel Camdessus retired after 13 years at the helm of the International Monetary Fund. An extraordinary Managing Director in an extraordinary time, he placed a distinctive mark on both the evolution of the IMF as an institution and the global economy. While it may be some time before a final evaluation of the Camdessus years can be made, in this issue of Finance & Development, the IMF's Historian, James M. Boughton, provides a preliminary assessment that brings out both Camdessus's considerable contribution in the international sphere and the strong sense of humanism that he brought to his work.

The countries of Latin America and the Caribbean have weathered the economic crises of the past few years more successfully than might have been expected. This resiliency in the face of external shocks is due, in large measure, to the reforms that most of these countries had undertaken earlier. The pattern of reform and recovery in the region, and its global implications, is the focus of most of the articles in this issue of Finance & Development. In their overview of the situation and prospects in Latin America and the Caribbean, Claudio Loser and Martine Guerguil discuss the reforms of the 1980s and 1990s, their economic benefits, and the pending agenda at the dawn of a new century, particularly the need for further measures to consolidate reform and put the region on course for sustainable growth.

Four finance ministers or central bank governors from the region-Pedro Pou of Argentina, Arminio Fraga of Brazil, Eduardo Aninat of Chile (who was recently appointed an IMF...

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