The Pak Banker

A better WB is needed to address global challenges, Ajay Banga says

- WASHINGTON

The World Bank must become a better institutio­n to address the “intertwine­d challenges the world faces today”, the group's president Ajay Banga said while speaking on the reforms the entity has made in the last year.

Since becoming World Bank president a year ago, Mr Banga has sought to transform the institutio­n into a larger and more efficient one. His nomination came as the World Bank faced calls for reform as well as criticism over its response to the Covid-19 pandemic, which resulted in dozens of countries facing high levels of debt.

And G20 nations last year backed a joint agreement that called for a “better, bigger, more effective World Bank” to increase its lending capacity.

“The G20 leaders challenged the World Bank to change and to be a bigger part of the solution. They gave us a road map to evolve, an ambition for speed, simplicity levelling up our balance sheet by engaging partners and the private sector,” Mr Banga told reporters.

The World Bank, whose core value historical­ly been poverty reduction,

has has also recently expanded its focus on climate change, food security and future pandemics.

“We need a better bank to address all these challenges, but also a better bank for the challenges of tomorrow,” he told reporters. Mr Banga hopes to display this new-and-improved version of the World Bank during the Spring Meetings in Washington next week, where finance ministers and central bankers are expected to gather to discuss a range of global issues, from debt distress to price stability. He noted several reforms the World Bank has made since last year, including quickening its approval process for projects and establishi­ng a liveable fund that can be funded by govts and charities.

Meanwhile, a top US Treasury official warned of the “generation­al challenge” debt-laden developing nations face today. “And like prior generation­al challenges in debt and developmen­t, it calls for the internatio­nal community to step up and take decisive, co-ordinated actions,” Jay Shambaugh, US undersecre­tary for internatio­nal affairs, said at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics in Washington.

According to a World Bank analysis, developing countries spent a record $443.5 billion on debt in 2022. More than 50 low and middle-income countries faced net outflows of public debt to bilateral lenders from 2021 to 2021, which Mr Shambaugh said was the largest amount in two decades.

During his remarks, which largely focused on China's emergence as a creditor, Mr Shambaugh highlighte­d the debt burdens that many developing nations currently face.

“Many countries operating in good faith are caught in these conditions with significan­t official bilateral and market debt and facing alarming trade-offs due to falling flows and rising debt service,” he said at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics in Washington.

Cumulative net debt flows from China since 2019 are now negative for more than 40 low and middle-income countries, Mr Shambaugh said, noting that most of these countries have had recent Internatio­nal Monetary Fund programmes, he said.

Outlining the US vision for global debt, Mr Shambaugh said private creditors should join efforts by multidevel­opment banks like the World Bank to incorporat­e debt clauses into loan agreements.

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