The Manila Times

Trump’s World Bank pick echoes calls for reform from other critics

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WASHINGTON, DC: President Donald Trump’s choice to lead the World

largest anti-poverty lender — an institutio­n he has called wasteful, corrupt and overly generous to China.

Those criticisms are similar to those expressed by others in the developmen­t community. But that does not mean they have found a new ally in David Malpass, the

pledged to reform the bank.

Nancy Pelosi, the newly reinstalle­d Democratic speaker of the US House of Representa­tives, says Trump’s choice threatens to “undermine the institutio­n’s mission.”

And Liberia’s former minister of public works W. Gyude Moore tweeted that “an incorrigib­le ar-

Still Malpass’s many criticisms of the Washington-based lender echo familiar refrains.

Many activists have long called for reforms at the World Bank, citing a litany of alleged human rights failures and scandals, and saying projects all too often left the world’s poorest even worse off, harmed the environmen­t or entrenched the power of oligarchie­s and despots.

Those critics might well have nodded their heads in accord in 2017 when Malpass said internatio­nal financial institutio­ns such as the World Bank “spend a lot of money”

“They are often corrupt in their lending practices and they don’t

in the countries,” he said in congressio­nal testimony.

However, when pressed for examples, he cited situations in Venezuela and South Africa, countries that do not have programs with the World Bank.

Internal audits and outside reports have tied World Bank funds to forced labor in Uzbekistan, death squads in Honduras and a Chadian oil pipeline that enriched the undemocrat­ic local government all while child mortality rose, to name just a few examples. So is Malpass a kindred spirit? Analysts and activists say probably not.

David Pred, head of Inclusive Developmen­t Internatio­nal, which has accused the World

likely to spur global warming, questioned Trump’s choice.

“While some of Malpass’s past critiques of the World Bank may be valid, the former chief economist of a financial institutio­n whose recklessne­ss helped blow up the global economy in 2008 is one of the last people we can count on to make the bank more accountabl­e,” he told AFP.

Malpass served as chief economist at the former investment bank Bear Stearns, whose collapse marked the start of the global financial crisis.

‘Fundamenta­lly opposed’?

Malpass a critic.

Moore, the former Liberian minister, told AFP that Malpass’ opposition to lending to China could be incompatib­le with the bank’s business model.

Returns from those loans provide helps to fund for assistance to low-income countries, many of which are now concentrat­ed in Africa, he said.

“He’s never put forth an alternativ­e about how the bank is going to grow its reserves,” Moore said.

“To have a person who is fundamenta­lly opposed to the way the bank does business raises questions for me and is alarming.” is not viewed simply as

The bank did not respond to Malpass’s criticism in 2017 but it touts the precipitou­s drop in extreme global poverty — which it says fell to 10 percent from 36 percent between 1990 and 2015 — as evidence of its success.

The global lender also routinely blacklists corrupt companies and says it scrutinize­s projects for corruption risk.

Malpass told reporters last week that the bank had changed since his 2017 testimony.

“There were criticisms that I had that were addressed in the reform package” of 2018, he said, adding that he wanted to focus on the bank’s “core mission” of poverty eradicatio­n.

The bank’s board will accept nomination­s for through midMarch, but under an unwritten rule Washington has anointed World Bank’s president since its creation following World War 2 — a practice that faces mounting opposition.

Elana Berger, executive director of the Bank Informatio­n Center, which scrutinize­s World Bank lending, also is dubious about Malpass, despite sharing some of his concerns.

“I agree that the World Bank frequently falls short of achieving its mission because its projects are very often not well targeted” towards the goal of poverty reduction, she told AFP.

But it was unclear whether Malpass shares the bank’s goals.

In accepting Trump’s nomination last week, Malpass hailed the bank’s new Saudi- supported Women Entreprene­urs Finance Initiative, spearheade­d by the president’s daughter and advisor Ivanka Trump.

Berger said that $1 billion fund represente­d “a drop in the bucket” compared to the billions the bank spends in a given year.

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