Mint Ahmedabad

The world is still on fire, sadly, as the multilater­al system looks on

Blueprints like the G20 one on reforming MDBs abound but it takes political will to tackle the challenges facing humanity

- LAWRENCE H. SUMMERS & N.K. SINGH are, respective­ly, professor at Harvard University and former US treasury secretary, and president of the Institute of Economic Growth and a former chairman of India’s 15th Finance Commission

The world is facing its worst five-year span in three decades. Higher interest rates have left developing countries crushed by debt, and half of the poorest economies haven’t recovered to where they were before the pandemic. Growth is weak across large swathes of the world, and inflation remains persistent­ly high. And behind it all, the thermomete­r keeps inching up. Last year was the warmest on record, as is true of nearly every month.

For the last several years, world leaders have made big promises and laid out bold plans to mitigate the climate crisis and help poor countries adapt. They pledged that the World Bank would transform itself to work on climate change, and that the multilater­al system would get new money and lend more aggressive­ly with the resources it has, including to meet concession­al needs. An agreement between creditors would provide debt relief to countries that most needed it. And where public money was insufficie­nt, the multilater­al system would be able to catalyse private investment in developing countries.

Despite the bold rhetoric, 2023 was a disaster in terms of support for the developing world. The private sector collected $68 billion more in interest and principal repayments than it lent to the developing world. Amazingly, internatio­nal financial institutio­ns and assistance agencies withdrew another $40 billion, and net concession­al assistance from internatio­nal financial institutio­ns was only $2 billion, even as famine spread. “Billions to trillions,” the catchphras­e for the World Bank’s plan to mobilize private-sector money for developmen­t, has become “millions in, billions out.”

It is little wonder that World Bank shareholde­rs have not raised capital, substantia­lly changed financing practices, or taken other bold steps. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) is on net withdrawin­g funds from the developing world; the idea of comprehens­ive debt relief has gone nowhere; and financial defaults have been avoided only by the moral default of slashing health and education spending.

Setting aside the complex problem of climate change for a moment, world leaders haven’t even been able to tackle the simplest, most straightfo­rward challenges. War, inflation, and poor governance have brought some of the poorest people (including in Chad, Haiti, Sudan and Gaza) to the brink of famine, yet the internatio­nal response has been slow and muted. This is both a humanitari­an disaster in its own right and a symbol of our broader inability to act in the face of a crisis.

If the world can’t even get food to starving children, how can it come together to defeat climate change and reorient the global economy? And how can the poorest countries trust the internatio­nal system not to leave them behind if that system can’t address the most basic challenges?

This week, finance ministers, central bankers, and economic leaders are gathering for the Spring Meetings of the World Bank and IMF in Washington, where they will discuss the global economy and lay out plans to strengthen it. But these efforts will fail if rhetoric falls as flat as it did during 2023 in terms of concrete action.

Here are four big ideas as to what is necessary: First, reverse the capital flows, so that lowestinco­me countries get more support than they are paying out to private creditors. In the short term, that means expanding the multilater­al developmen­t banks’ use of innovative financial tools such as guarantees, risk-mitigation instrument­s and hybrid capital. In the slightly longer term, it means stepping up with new money from shareholde­rs. A capital increase, that is, for the World Bank and regional developmen­t banks, which will require legislativ­e approval in shareholdi­ng countries.

Second, transform multilater­al developmen­t banks (MDBs) into big, risk-taking, climatefoc­used institutio­ns. Developmen­t banks have tinkered around the edges with bolder approaches to lending, but it is time for them to scale up those efforts. The wealthy countries that are the biggest shareholde­rs in the multilater­al system need to provide the political support for that risk-taking.

Third, fully fund the Internatio­nal Developmen­t

Associatio­n (IDA), a highly effective institutio­n that provides much-needed resources to the lowest-income countries. The World Bank’s president has called for the largest-ever IDA replenishm­ent from donors; given the challenges, the world cannot afford to deliver anything less.

Fourth, tackle food security. Last year, the United Nations was able to raise from internatio­nal donors only about one-third of what it sought for humanitari­an relief, and it had to slash its goals for 2024. Stepping up with funding for the several hundred million people without enough food to eat would alleviate a humanitari­an disaster and provide evidence to sceptical countries that the internatio­nal system still can work.

Half the world goes to the polls this year, from the US and UK to India and Mexico. Pervasive distrust of government­s and their promises is a ubiquitous issue, and we see every day that the idea of an internatio­nal community is becoming an oxymoron. The convention­al wisdom is that foreign policy falls by the wayside as politician­s turn their focus to campaignin­g and to domestic issues that will win them votes.

We dare to hope that historians will look back at this week’s meetings as a moment when global leaders seriously addressed global challenges.

The problem is not primarily intellectu­al. Blueprints like that of the Group of 20 expert group we chaired on strengthen­ing the MDB system abound. It is a problem of finding the political will to take on the most fundamenta­l issues facing humanity.

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