The Washington Consensus emerged from the intellectual convergence of monetarist macroeconomics, supply-side fiscal theory, and rational-expectations market efficiency — the intellectual framework that dominated economic policy in the Reagan and Thatcher era and was extended to international institutions through the 1980s. The policies were applied to Latin American debt-crisis countries in the 1980s, to post-Soviet transition economies in the 1990s, and to Asian crisis countries in the late 1990s. In each case, the outcomes were substantially worse than the consensus had predicted: lost decades of growth in Latin America, catastrophic transition in Russia, deepening of the Asian crisis by IMF-imposed austerity.
Stiglitz's critique identified three analytical failures. First, the framework assumed institutional prerequisites — competition, information symmetry, enforcement capacity, democratic accountability — that developing economies often lacked, producing predictable pathologies when market-based solutions were imposed without the institutional infrastructure that makes markets function. Second, the framework treated economic policy as technocratic, excluding democratic input from populations bearing the costs and producing backlash that undermined the political sustainability of the reforms. Third, the framework conflated American institutional arrangements with universal market requirements, imposing American-style institutional choices on societies whose development trajectories required different arrangements.
The AI governance parallel is structural. The contemporary AI governance framework — the EU AI Act, American executive orders, voluntary industry commitments, multilateral principles — treats AI policy as technocratic, designed by a combination of regulators and industry representatives with limited input from affected populations. The framework is applied universally across contexts that vary substantially in institutional capacity, economic structure, and cultural preference. The outcomes reproduce the Washington Consensus pattern: gains concentrated among the powerful, costs absorbed by the less-powerful, and governance structures that preserve rather than correct the concentration. The Lagos developer whose capability expanded but whose capture remained constrained by institutional infrastructure is the AI analog of the Indonesian worker whose economy was liberalized but whose welfare deteriorated.
The framework's decline is instructive for what comes next. By the mid-2000s, even the IMF had begun acknowledging that the Washington Consensus had overreached, and the post-2008 policy discourse has largely abandoned the framework's most confident prescriptions. The replacement has not been a coherent alternative but a more pragmatic, context-sensitive approach that Stiglitz's work helped enable. The AI governance discourse is still in its Washington Consensus phase — confident universal prescriptions, technocratic development, industry capture, predictable distributional consequences. The transition to a more pragmatic alternative will require the accumulation of documented failures that the Washington Consensus critics spent two decades compiling.
John Williamson coined the term in a 1989 paper for the Institute for International Economics, intending it to describe the convergence of opinion among Washington-based economic institutions rather than to prescribe a universal policy framework. The term escaped Williamson's control, becoming shorthand for aggressive market-liberalization policy and the intellectual framework supporting it. Stiglitz's critique, developed through his World Bank tenure and subsequent academic work, was the most influential internal dissent within the economic establishment.
Universal prescription without institutional context. The framework assumed market-based solutions would work anywhere, ignoring the institutional prerequisites that markets require.
Technocratic governance without democratic input. Policies were developed by institutions accountable to wealthy-country finance ministries rather than to the populations bearing the costs.
Predictable distributional consequences. Gains concentrated among the already-advantaged, costs flowed to populations lacking political power to resist them.
Intellectual framework failure. The theoretical foundations — rational expectations, market efficiency, institutional universality — did not survive empirical examination.
AI governance parallel. The current AI policy discourse reproduces the same structural pattern, suggesting similar outcomes absent significant reform.
Defenders of the Washington Consensus argued that its failures reflected implementation problems rather than framework flaws, and that the alternative — interventionist policies — had its own record of failure. Stiglitz's response acknowledged the mixed record of alternatives while arguing that the Washington Consensus framework was systematically worse in the cases where its failures were documented, and that the alternative — pragmatic, context-sensitive policy attentive to institutional infrastructure — had been foreclosed by ideological commitments rather than empirical failure.