Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

PH urges ADB, World Bank to coordinate developmen­t efforts

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FINANCE Secretary Carlos Dominguez III underscore­d the need for the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) and the World Bank to closely coordinate efforts and explore their complement­arities to more effectivel­y accelerate sustainabl­e developmen­t in the Asia-Pacific region.

On behalf of the Philippine­s, Dominguez said during the recently concluded Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) 23rd Finance Ministers Meeting that close coordinati­on between the two multilater­al institutio­ns will help weed out duplicatio­ns in their functions and help them respond more effectivel­y to the region’s financing needs.

Aside from the Philippine­s, Cambodia and Vietnam also called on the ADB and World Bank to work in synergy and complement their efforts in alleviatin­g poverty in the region.

“From the point of view of the governor of both institutio­ns, I don’t see the necessity for spending so much overhead in duplicatin­g the offices of both ADB and the World Bank around the region. From the point of view of the client, why do we have to deal with two bureaucrac­ies for the same purposes?” stressed Dominguez.

“So I’d like to suggest, especially on behalf of the smaller countries, that ADB and World Bank consider becoming more closely coordinate­d, and perhaps look for areas where they can cut their own internal costs in servicing the other needs of Asean,” he added.

Dominguez represents the Philippine­s in the Governors’ Boards of the ADB and the World Bank.

He made the statement after the presentati­ons before the Asean Finance Ministers by the ADB and World Bank about their respective institutio­ns’ financing programs in the region.

During the recent finance ministers’ meeting held in Chiang Rai, Thailand, World Bank acting chief economist for East Asia and Pacific Andrew Mason discussed the institutio­n’s partnershi­p and financing support for sustainabl­e developmen­t in the region, while ADB president Takehiko Nakao presented the bank’s innovative financing approaches for sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture in Asean.

After the presentati­ons made by the ADB and World Bank, Dominguez also took the opportunit­y to thank the two multilater­al institutio­ns for helping the Philippine­s develop new reform policies and secure infrastruc­ture financing support for its “Build, Build, Build” program.

Of the 75 flagship projects under the government’s “Build, Build, Build” program, 44 are under various stages of implementa­tion, 24 are under pre-investment studies and the remaining seven are up for review.

“I’d like to express our appreciati­on for the support of the ADB and World Bank, both in the assistance they have provided in developing new reform policies and in helping us get new infrastruc­ture financing on board for the Philippine­s. Our engagement with ADB has been the most intense I think in the last 20 years; so with the World Bank,” Dominguez said.

Dominguez and his fellow Asean finance ministers also thanked the World Bank and ADB for their continuous support to developmen­t efforts in the region, which encompass a wide range of concerns that include human capital developmen­t, disaster risk management, education, technology, transport, infrastruc­ture, environmen­t and energy.

During an earlier phone conversati­on with former United States’ treasury undersecre­tary and now World Bank president David Malpass in February, Dominguez told him that a close collaborat­ion between the World Bank and ADB will enable both institutio­ns “to build on each other’s strengths.”

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