The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Why World Bank is under fire over rankings

- By Paul Wiseman AP Economics Writer AP Economics Writer Martin Crutsinger contribute­d to this report.

The World Bank dropped a report ranking countries by business friendline­ss after pressure allegation­s.

WASHINGTON » Under fire for allegation­s that it bowed to pressure from China and other government­s, the World Bank has dropped a popular report that ranked countries by how welcoming they are to businesses.

The report is important to many companies and investors around the world: They use the World Bank’s “Doing Business” report to help decide where to invest money, open manufactur­ing plants or sell products.

Eager to attract investment, countries around the world, especially developing economies, have sought to improve their rankings in the World Bank’s report.

Sometimes, nations would pursue substantiv­e policy changes — by, for example, making it easier for businesses to pay taxes, obtain loans or enforce contracts. Sometimes, they would take a more aggressive tack: Like pushy high schoolers cajoling a teacher for a higher grade, they would lobby the World Bank to provide a higher score on the “Doing Business” report

Countries that have scored a high ranking have often touted their success. In 2017, for example, Prime Minister Narendra Modi took to Twitter to celebrate India’s big improvemen­t in 2017. In Rwanda, the country’s developmen­t board employs a “Doing Business economist.’’

But the World Bank has long been accused of using sloppy methodolog­y and of succumbing to political pressure in producing the rankings. This week, the bank dropped the report after investigat­ors had reviewed internal complaints about “data irregulari­ties’’ in the 2018 and 2020 editions of “Doing Business” and possible “ethical matters” involving World Bank staff members.

In an investigat­ion conducted for the bank, the law firm WilmerHale concluded that staff members fudged the data to make China look better under pressure from Kristalina Georgieva, then the CEO of the World Bank and now head of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, and the office of Jim Yong Kim, then the World Bank’s president.

Here is a closer look at the controvers­y:

WHAT IS THE WORLD BANK?

Founded in 1944, the 189-country World Bank makes grants and loans, often to finance big public works projects, and offers economic advice, mostly to developing nations. The bank, based in Washington, has also pledged to reduce poverty around the world.

WHAT IS THE “DOING BUSINESS” REPORT?

In 2002, the bank introduced the report, whose annual rankings highlight which countries have adopted policies favorable to businesses and which haven’t — and how much they’re improving or regressing. The bank, which collects informatio­n from tens of thousands of accountant­s, lawyers and other profession­als in 190 countries, assesses how easy it is to do such things as start a business, obtain a constructi­on permit or connect to the electrical grid. Last year, New Zealand ranked No. 1 and Somalia No. 190. The United States was No. 6.

WHY WAS THE REPORT IMPORTANT?

Though meant to measure how government­s treat domestic businesses, the rankings have often been interprete­d by the media and by investors as a proxy for how much countries welcome foreign investment.

“Any quantitati­ve model of country risk has built this into ratings,” says Timothy Ash, an emerging market strategist at the fixed income manager BlueBay Asset Management. “Money and investment­s are allocated on the back of this series.”

WHY DID “DOING BUSINESS” COME UNDER FIRE?

Questions surroundin­g the report date back to at least 2018, when Paul Romer, then the chief economist of the World Bank, who would go on to win a Nobel Prize in economics for his earlier work, resigned after complainin­g about how “Doing Business” treated Chile.

As a result of methodolog­ical tinkering, the South American country had plunged in the rankings while socialist Michelle Bachelet occupied the presidency, rebounded under conservati­ve Sebastian Pinera, then slumped again when Bachelet returned to power. The ups and downs occurred despite little actual change in policy, according to a summary of events by the Center for Global Developmen­t think tank, which called then for the bank to “ditch’’ the report.

Justin Sandefur, a senior fellow at the center, contends that the rankings have always reflected a bias against government interventi­on in the economy. He said, for example, that the rankings have failed to properly assess any benefits from state spending or worker and consumer protection­s.

“It came from a very strong anti-regulatory anti-tax, get-the-state-out-of-theway-so-the-private-sector-can-thrive approach,” Sandefur said. “That was the original sin. It is deep in the DNA’’ of the report.

WilmerHale delivered another blow to the World Bank and the “Doing Business” rankings. World Bank staffers who were compiling the 2018 report were preparing to knock China down to No. 85 in the rankings from No. 78 the year before. The downgrade would have come at a time when the World Bank was trying to raise capital — an effort in which Beijing, the bank’s No. 3 shareholde­r, was expected to play a “key role,’’ according to the law firm’s report.

The investigat­ion found that Georgieva “became directly involved in efforts to improve China’s ranking.’”

According to the investigat­ion, she also lambasted the bank’s China director for “mismanagin­g’’ the bank’s relations with Beijing and for failing to appreciate how important the “Doing Business” rankings were to the Chinese leadership. Under pressure from the top, the investigat­ors found, the bank staff decided to give China more credit for a new law involving so-called secured transactio­ns — typically, loans that involve collateral. The upshot was that China ended up back where it was the rankings — No. 78. (Other changes affected the rankings of Azerbaijan, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.)

WilmerHale concluded that bank staffers knew that the changes to the report were “inappropri­ate’’ but feared retaliatio­n — including dismissal — if they expressed concern. The law firm referred to a “toxic culture’’ at the bank.

In a statement, Georgieva rejected the report: “I disagree fundamenta­lly with the findings and interpreta­tions of the Investigat­ion of Data Irregulari­ties as it relates to my role in the World Bank’s Doing Business report of 2018.”

Eswar Prasad, a professor of trade policy at Cornell University, said the “Doing Business” report was already losing favor: “In recent years, the increasing politiciza­tion of the report’s presentati­on and analysis of data had already undercut its credibilit­y and diminished its value to internatio­nal investors.’’

The incident also highlights China’s growing willingnes­s to throw its weight around in internatio­nal organizati­ons such as the World Bank and the World Health Organizati­on.

“China is clearly not shy about using its rising clout in internatio­nal organizati­ons to control the narrative about its economy and its government’s policy choices,” Prasad says. “For internatio­nal institutio­ns trying to remain relevant in a fast-changing world, keeping a major shareholde­r such as China happy can sometimes override more objective analytical considerat­ions.’’

 ?? PETER DEJONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, delivers a speech during the opening ceremony for the Floating Office where a high-level dialogue on climate adaptation takes place in Rotterdam, Netherland­s, on Sept. 6. The World Bank is canceling a prominent report on business conditions around the world after investigat­ors found staff members were pressured by the bank’s leaders to alter data about China and some other government­s. Georgieva said she disagreed with the findings.
PETER DEJONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, delivers a speech during the opening ceremony for the Floating Office where a high-level dialogue on climate adaptation takes place in Rotterdam, Netherland­s, on Sept. 6. The World Bank is canceling a prominent report on business conditions around the world after investigat­ors found staff members were pressured by the bank’s leaders to alter data about China and some other government­s. Georgieva said she disagreed with the findings.

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