The IMF does not exist for the well-being of (former) third world countries. It exists for the well-being of its masters, i.e. the US and Western Europe. This explains most of the policies that the IMF likes to push on developing countries.
Note that IMF-type policies of austerity can theoretically "work", if there are sufficient net exports. Even when domestic demand is savaged by austerity measures, the economy can grow by producing goods for the US and the EU at cheap prices. But net exports-led recoveries are a typical case of fallacy of composition: if there is a world-wide recession, then going for net exports will fail (unless we somehow manage to export to Mars...).
The problem facing the US and EU these days is that people seem to have forgotten that austerity was only ever a policy meant for the others.
Note that IMF-type policies of austerity can theoretically "work", if there are sufficient net exports. Even when domestic demand is savaged by austerity measures, the economy can grow by producing goods for the US and the EU at cheap prices. But net exports-led recoveries are a typical case of fallacy of composition: if there is a world-wide recession, then going for net exports will fail (unless we somehow manage to export to Mars...).
The problem facing the US and EU these days is that people seem to have forgotten that austerity was only ever a policy meant for the others.