Sun.Star Cebu

ADB hopes US will step up, help

- /AP

The head of the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) said Sunday he is hoping the United States will step up and support the regional lender despite President Donald Trump’s avowed preference for bilateral cooperatio­n.

ADB President Takehiko Nakao told reporters at a news conference wrapping up the bank’s annual meeting that it “isn’t really good” that the second largest shareholde­r in the developmen­t bank is lacking a permanent appointee to the US executive directorsh­ip.

Nakao said he hoped Washington would nominate an ambassador soon. Many such positions have yet to be filled, and the pre- vious US ambassador to the ADB was ordered back to the US along with many other appointees of the previous administra­tion.

For a country that is a co-founder of one of the world’s most influentia­l lending institutio­ns, the US presence at the ADB annual meeting—one marking its 50th year of operations — was low-key.

Japan is the largest donor to the ADB and plays a leading role in its management. It is unclear what Trump’s “America First” foreign policy stance means for the ADB, or even for Asia in general.

Soon after taking office in January, Trump announced the US would withdraw from the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p regional trade agreement, saying he prefers country-to-country trade deals.

Trump recently appointed Eli H. Miller, chief of staff at the Treasury Department, as acting director of both the ADB and the European Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t pending a permanent appointmen­t. Miller did not attend the ADB’s annual meeting.

The top US representa­tive in Yokohama was Robert Kaproth, US deputy assistant secretary for Asia.

The ADB is preparing to set its long-term strategy for the years leading to 2030, and Nakao said he intends to make the lender “stronger, better and faster.”

He said the regional bank, which has dozens of member countries from the Asia-Pacific region and beyond, has been a relatively efficient source of support for developmen­t of a region that once was characteri­zed by extreme poverty. A priority for the ADB and other regional institutio­ns is to help countries weather natural disasters and other threats. Apart from investing in infrastruc­ture such as power plants, bridges and hospitals, the ADB provided support for countries during the 1997 Asian financial crisis.

I hope the US Government will continue to invest in the ADB. TAKEHIKO NAKAO Asian Developmen­t Bank president

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