Eswatini Financial Times

Multilater­al developmen­t banks still need work on implementi­ng reforms, group says

- By Andrea Shalal

Washington — The World Bank and six other multilater­al banks have made good progress in integratin­g global challenges like climate change into their agendas, but most have miles to go in implementi­ng other needed reforms, a tool tracking the reforms shows.

The tracker,, opens new tabdevelop­ed last year by the Center for Global Developmen­t (CGD), assessed progress at seven multilater­al developmen­t banks (MDBs) on 28 specific items under five categories: using capital more efficientl­y, expanding capital, adding global challenges to their mandates, mobilizing private finance and making country engagement­s more efficient.

It found highly uneven results among the institutio­ns and said no single MDB excelled in all reform categories.

“People should be encouraged with progress on expanding the mandates, but they should not be satisfied with progress on the other categories,” said Nancy Lee, a former senior U.S. Treasury official and lead researcher for CGD’s MDB Reform Tracker. “The glass is more empty than full.” Lee said she worried that without real progress and actions by all the major MDBs inertia could set in and momentum for reforms could subside.

The United States, the World Bank’s biggest shareholde­r, and other countries are pushing the bank and its sister developmen­t banks to focus on climate change alongside poverty reduction and developmen­t, and to take on more risk to expand their lending.

Some experts argue that developing and emerging economies need $2.4 trillion per year to meet global climate challenges - a number that far exceeds the amount of financing now available.

A number of major reports commission­ed by the Group of Twenty (G20) major economies and other institutio­ns have laid out specific reforms for the MDBs to implement.

CGD said the banks had largely recognized the urgency and importance of addressing climate change within the financial sector, and all seven MDBs assessed had either included global challenges in their mandates or were in the process of doing so.

But for most of the 28 items on the reform agenda, including work on issuing hybrid capital and enacting capital increases, there was still a long way to go, it said.

It said the World Bank Group was at some stage of pursuing 96% of the agenda items, while the European Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t was close behind with 93%. The Asian Developmen­t Bank and the Inter-American Developmen­t Group had taken action on half the agenda, it said.

 ?? ?? ▲The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) logo is seen outside the headquarte­rs building in Washington, U.S.
▲The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) logo is seen outside the headquarte­rs building in Washington, U.S.

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