20. The U.S. dollar has been considered a reserve (key) currency because trading nations have been
willing to hold it as an international reserve asset.
21. The U.S. dollar, Japanese yen, British pound, and Mexican peso are the major reserve currencies of the
international monetary system.
22. By the 1990s, the British pound had replaced the U.S. dollar as the world’s key currency.
23. A goal of the International Monetary Fund is to make short-term loans to member nations so as to
allow them to correct balance of payments disequilibriums without resorting to measures that would
destroy national prosperity.
24. When granting loans to financially troubled nations, the International Monetary Fund requires some
degree of conditionality, meaning that the borrowing nation must agree to implement economic
policies as mandated by the IMF.
25. The International Monetary Fund has sometimes demanded that financially-troubled nations, that
borrow from the IMF, undergo austerity programs including slashing of public spending and private
consumption.
26. The main purpose of the International Monetary Fund is to grant long-term loans to developing nations
to help them finance the development of infrastructure such as roads, dams, and bridges.
27. Gold is currently the most widely used asset in the international monetary system.