Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Ivanka Trump ‘in the running for World Bank presidency’

- Chiara Giordano in New York

DONALD Trump’s daughter Ivanka is reportedly one of a handful of people being considered as the new head of the World Bank.

The US president’s eldest daughter has been mentioned as a possible successor to Jim Yong Kim, who stood down last week, three and a half years before his term was up.

The sudden departure last week of Mr Kim, who was first appointed by Barack Obama in 2011 and re-elected in 2016, means Mr Trump can now choose a successor. According to the Financial Times, names being thrown into the mix for the role include Ivanka Trump, Treasury official David Malpass, former UN ambassador Nikki Haley and head of the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t Mark Green.

Historical­ly, the person that the US — the biggest shareholde­r — puts forward to be considered for the role is approved by the board, and the European shareholde­rs select someone to lead the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

However, this deal has received increasing criticism from countries such as China, which led to the board introducin­g a new process in 2011, which promises to be “open, merit-based and transparen­t”.

In this process, if there are more than three candidates there will be a shortlisti­ng process where the board will narrow the field through an informal straw poll or vote. The shortliste­d candidates will be interviewe­d by the board before it makes a final selection. It is believed the new president will begin a new five-year term once selected.

The World Bank (formerly called the Internatio­nal Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t) was founded in 1944 to give loans to help rebuild countries devastated after the Second World War.

Today, the World Bank group has long-standing relationsh­ips with more than 180 member countries and helps developing countries by giving them funding and technical assistance.

Its mission by 2030 includes ending extreme poverty by decreasing the number of people living on less than €1.66 a day to no more than 3pc of the global population.

According to World Bank data, the percentage of people living in extreme poverty globally fell to a new low of 10pc in 2015 — the most recent figure available — which was down from 11 per cent in 2013. The number of people living on less than €1.66 a day fell during this period by 68 million to a total of 736 million.

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