The Borneo Post (Sabah)

New World Bank boss vows to keep climate goals, evolve China relationsh­ip

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WASHINGTON: New World Bank president David Malpass said he would not alter the lender’s commitment to fight climate change, but pledged to step up its anti-poverty mission and to evolve the bank’s relationsh­ip with China.

Malpass, who started at the Bank on Tuesday, was nominated by US President Donald Trump.

Some developmen­t profession­als feared that he would pursue Trump’s ‘America First’ agenda at the bank by resuming financing for coal power projects and pressuring China.

But Malpass told reporters that he will pursue the World Bank’s climate change goals, including its previous decision to withdraw from coal power funding.

He called climate change a ‘key problem’ facing many of the world’s developing countries.

“The board and the governors have establishe­d a policy on that. I don’t expect a change in that policy,” Malpass said,

A long-time finance executive, economist and government developmen­t official, Malpass most recently served as the US Treasury’s undersecre­tary for internatio­nal affairs.

He helped negotiate a US$13 billion capital increase for the World Bank last year.

That refunding included requiremen­ts that the bank shift lending away from middle-income countries including China towards lower-income countries.

Malpass at the time was highly critical of China’s continued borrowing from the World Bank and of Beijing’s Belt and Road initiative.

But he said on Tuesday that new lending to Chinese projects was already declining and the relationsh­ip would shift towards one of increased contributi­ons to the bank and sharing of expertise.

“That means an evolution where they are much less of a borrower, and they have more to offer in terms of their participat­ion in capital increases, their participat­ion in IDA, where China has been ramping up its contributi­ons,” he said, referring to the Internatio­nal Developmen­t Associatio­n, the World Bank’s fund for the poorest countries.

He said he would work with China to boost the standards of its developmen­t projects with more debt transparen­cy and open procuremen­t standards.

His view on China contrasted those of US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who told lawmakers that Malpass’ presence at the World Bank would help the United States compete with China’s Belt and Road initiative. — Reuters

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