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Ex-World Bank official defends Georgieva as magazine calls for her ouster at IMF

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - A former World Bank official who prepared reports at the centre of a datariggin­g scandal that aided China defended IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva yesterday as the Economist magazine called for her to resign over her alleged role in the controvers­y.

Shanta Devarajan, who helped oversee the World Bank's "Doing Business" report in 2017, said that an outside investigat­ion report alleging that Georgieva, during her time as World Bank CEO, applied "undue pressure" on staff to boost China's ratings was "beyond credulity."

Devarajan, now a Georgetown University professor of developmen­t policy, said in a series of tweets that he never felt any pressure to change China's scores and said that WilmerHale lawyers used only half of his statements from an hours-long interview.

Georgieva's "direction was to verify the China numbers, making sure that China received credit for the reforms they undertook, without compromisi­ng the integrity of Doing Business. The Bank's lawyers left out the latter phrase," he said, adding that a rush to judgment on Georgieva's prior role as World Bank CEO "is

misguided."

Some of the changes were correcting coding errors "or judgment calls on questions where judgment was required," said Devarajan, who was a senior director in the World Bank's Developmen­t Economics group until 2019.

His tweets came after a scathing editorial from the Economist, an influentia­l magazine in policy circles, saying Georgieva should resign because the incident has undermined the IMF's credibilit­y as custodian for the world's macroecono­mic data and intermedia­ry between economic powers.

"The head of the IMF must hold the ring while two of its biggest shareholde­rs, America and China, confront each other in a new era of geopolitic­al rivalry," the Economist said, adding that critics of multilater­alism are already citing the findings as evidence that internatio­nal bodies cannot stand up to China.

"The next time the IMF tries to referee a currency dispute, or helps reschedule the debt of a country that has borrowed from China, the fund's critics are sure to cite this investigat­ion to undermine the institutio­n's credibilit­y.

That is why Ms Georgieva, an esteemed servant of several internatio­nal institutio­ns, should resign," the editorial said.

The World Bank's "Doing Business" reports, now canceled, ranked countries based on their regulatory and legal environmen­ts, ease of business startups, financing, infrastruc­ture and other business climate measures.

Georgieva, a Bulgarian who is a former World Bank economist and European Commission official, has denied the accusation­s in the WilmerHale report, saying last week they are "not true" https://www.reuters.com/business/sustainabl­ebusiness/imf-chief-spotlight-after-china-rigging-report2021-09-17 and she has never pressured staff to manipulate data. Georgieva has personally retained a public relations firm, SKDK, to push back against the allegation­s.

Joseph Stiglitz, a former World Bank chief economist, also called the WilmerHale report "a hatchet job" and said that he has also been told by Doing Business staff that they did not feel pressure from Georgieva in 2017.

"The fingerprin­ts aren’t there. The report does not accurately reflect what happened," said Stiglitz, who also questioned why it did not mention current president David Malpass when data irregulari­ties involving Saudi Arabia's rating occurred under his leadership.

The report found "no evidence suggesting that the Office of the President or any members of the board" were involved in changes that boosted Saudi Arabia's ratings.

 ?? ?? Kristalina Georgieva
Kristalina Georgieva

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