IESET.
Policies·kr_imf_standby_1997

South Korea IMF Standby Arrangement December 1997

KOR·1997 ·enacted 1997-12-03·NKP under President Kim Young-sam (lame-duck)candidate
movesfinancial deregulationlabour market flexibilitycentral bank independence

What the policy did

IMF Standby Arrangement signed 3 Dec 1997 for Korea providing $21bn IMF + $10bn IBRD + $4bn ADB + $23.4bn bilateral (G7 'second line') totalling $58.4bn — largest IMF package to that point. Conditionality: floating exchange rate, inflation targeting, chaebol governance reforms, financial-sector restructuring including closure of 9 merchant banks, labour-market flexibility, capital-account opening completion. Crisis-resolution within 4 years; framework reshaped under subsequent Kim Dae-jung government.

Policy-content fingerprint — what this policy moved, on which axes

Per invariant 3, reforms are scored by what they did on each channel-separated axis, not by the party that enacted them. This fingerprint is how the policy-match engine finds historical analogues.

intended
financial deregulation
regulatory.financial_deregulation
Financial-sector regulation — banking separation, capital requirements, cross-border activity rules, derivatives oversight.
increased · strong
tighter financial regulation
Chaebol governance and financial-restructuring conditionality.
labour market flexibility
regulatory.labour_market_flexibility
Ease of hiring/firing, collective-bargaining scope, minimum wage rigidity, temporary/permanent contract regulation.
increased · moderate
more flexible (easier hiring/firing, less rigid bargaining)
Labour-market flexibility conditionality under IMF programme.
central bank independence
monetary.central_bank_independence
De jure and de facto independence of the central bank from fiscal authority. Per D.1.5 scope, one of the framework's defensible monetary positions.
increased · strong
greater independence (legal, operational, personnel)
Bank of Korea Act revision 1997 granted statutory independence and inflation-targeting mandate.

Enacted by

Empirical evidence — linked hypotheses

Explicit links are curated by the author. Inferred links are hypotheses in the library that test the same axes this policy moved — the framework's answer to "what does the data say about a policy like this?".

In a broad-country panel 1990-2019, greater labour-market flexibility — measured by lower OECD EPL overall strictness, higher ease-of-hiring scores, and absence of centralized wage bargaining — predicts higher employment-to- population ratios and faster real GDP per capita growth, controlling for institutional quality, education, and trade openness.
labour_market_flexibility_employment_growth_panelinferred
viaregulatory.labour_market_flexibilityregulatory.financial_deregulation
PARTIAL — coef=-1.251, p=0.162 (above α=0.1); direction inconclusive
partial
Countries with stricter employment protection legislation — measured by the OECD EPL indicator (or comparable alternatives where OECD EPL is missing) — experience longer average unemployment duration, holding other controls constant.
labour_market_flexibility_unemployment_durationinferred
viaregulatory.labour_market_flexibility
INCONCLUSIVE_DATA_PENDING — interaction term requested but no loadable constructed interaction variable is defined. The generic panel_fe runner would otherwise …
run pending
Liberal democracies experience monotonic positional drift toward larger, more redistributive states across multi-decade horizons.
liberal_democracy_managerial_flywheel_driftinferred
viaregulatory.labour_market_flexibilityregulatory.financial_deregulationmonetary.central_bank_independence
REFUTED — median final drift = -3.00 (13/26 positive, share = 50%). The corpus does not show monotonic statist drift across the liberal-democracy panel.
refuted
Germany's Agenda 2010 labour-market reforms worked within the Ordoliberal framework precisely because they preserved collective-bargaining institutions and vocational-training architecture; the same reforms imposed on UK-style labour markets produced larger inequality increases.
labour_market_reform_institutional_complementarityinferred
viaregulatory.labour_market_flexibility
PARTIAL — coef=-7.366e+04, p=0.927 (above α=0.1); direction inconclusive
partial
Strong employment-protection legislation (EPL) with high union wage-setting coverage and limited at-will dismissal produces a three-order causal chain in Southern European labour markets.
strong_union_labour_law_youth_unemployment_south_europeinferred
viaregulatory.labour_market_flexibility
PARTIAL — coef=+2.943, p=0.252 (above α=0.05); direction inconclusive
partial
Labour-market flexibility (ease of hiring and firing, low EPL, decentralised wage bargaining) improves long-run employment rates, productivity growth, and GDP per capita only when paired with complementary adjustment institutions: active labour-market policy (retraining, job search assistance), relocation support, or income-smoothing mechanisms (unemployment insurance, portable benefits).
labour_flexibility_security_complementinferred
viaregulatory.labour_market_flexibility
PARTIAL — coef=+1.306e-16, p=0.339; effect magnitude effectively zero
partial
Labour-market flexibilisation reforms improve unemployment outcomes in countries with strong active-labour-market-policy (ALMP) complementarities (Denmark flexicurity post-1994, Germany Agenda 2010 / Hartz I-IV 2003-2005) but produce inequality increases without commensurate employment gains in countries lacking institutional ALMP infrastructure.
labour_market_reform_almp_complementarity_effectinferred
viaregulatory.labour_market_flexibility
SUPPORTED — coef=-5.815 (sign matches claim -), p=8.21e-05
supported
Major episodes of financial deregulation — the 1999 US Gramm-Leach- Bliley repeal of Glass-Steagall, the 1986 UK Financial Services Act ("Big Bang"), Chile's 1974-1981 banking liberalisation, Sweden's late-1980s credit-market liberalisation, and Japan's 1996-2001 Big Bang — are followed within 10 years by higher-than-baseline incidence of banking crises, measured by the Laeven-Valencia Systemic Banking Crisis Database, and by elevated credit-to-GDP gaps per BIS.
financial_deregulation_crisis_vulnerabilityinferred
viaregulatory.financial_deregulation
SUPPORTED — sign matches claim +, ATT=+0.04145, p=3.34e-07, N=302, treated_countries=8
supported

Similar historical policies

Ranked by axis-fingerprint overlap with this policy. Direction match bolded — those are the closest historical analogues. Shape of the match is what drives policy-outcome comparison, not the country or party label.

References