The Borneo Post

US slams World Bank lending to rich countries like China

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WASHINGTON: World Bank lending to countries like China that are rich enough to finance their own developmen­t hurts poor countries that need help, a senior US Treasury official said.

David Malpass, Treasury’s under secretary for Internatio­nal Affairs, cited China as a prime example of the practice, as the World Bank’s biggest borrower with US$2.4 billion in loans this year.

The Trump administra­tion will push the World Bank to move countries towards graduation, as their economies grow and they are able to access private sources of financing, he told a House subcommitt­ee.

“Many graduation-eligible countries, even those with strong market access, have continued to demand (World Bank) financing,” he said in prepared testimony.

“Adherence to the graduation policy has progressiv­ely weakened.”

Malpass said that since 2009, countries eligible for graduation from World Bank aid have received, on average, 40 per cent of the institutio­n’s lending. Currently 25 countries have incomes above the graduation threshold, and six are considered high income, exceeding US$12,475 per capita.

However, income is only one factor taken into considerat­ion when the World Bank decides whether to graduate a country.

And some countries that graduated had to resume borrowing,

Many graduation-eligible countries, even those with strong market access, have continued to demand (World Bank) financing. David Malpass, Treasury’s under secretary for Internatio­nal Affairs

including South Korea during the Asian financial crisis of the 1990s.

The current income level to begin to consider graduation is US$6,895 per capita, and while Malpass singled out China, it was just over US$8,200 last year. Uruguay was nearly double that figure at US$15,200, according to World Bank data.

A World Bank spokesman told AFP the institutio­n’s shareholde­rs – of which the United States is the largest – “are engaged in ongoing discussion­s over how to support countries in moving up the developmen­t spectrum to increase their contributi­on to global growth and stability” and to “maximise finance for developmen­t.”

Malpass, however, said the World Bank has failed to follow its own guidance and pursue discussion­s with countries ready to graduate, to phase them out of the lending programme.

“Treasury has not found these graduation discussion­s to be serious or meaningful,” he said. “We have strenuousl­y argued for a more rigorous, transparen­t, and rules-based process.”

He acknowledg­ed that lending to richer countries helps the quality of the institutio­n’s portfolio, but said, “We think the World Bank can do a better job meeting its commitment­s to poorer countries while still pursuing a financiall­y sound business model.”

“An overriding objective for the administra­tion is to ensure the World Bank is directing its resources to the people who need them most in the countries with the least access to private capital.”

Malpass, who was a senior economic advisor to President Donald Trump during his election campaign, also raised concerns about China slowing the pace of its economic reforms.

While Beijing has made some progress in promoting consumptio­n and addressing financial sector risk, he said, the US is “concerned that the liberaliza­tion seems to have slowed or reversed.”

“China’s unfair trading practices are unsustaina­ble and harmful to the growth and prosperity of the US and many other nations,” he said.

“The administra­tion is committed to achieving a fair and reciprocal trading and investment relationsh­ip with China, including through market-based reforms.” — AFP

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