BusinessMirror

Biden’s push for WB funds to vie with China stalls

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AUS plan to raise billions of dollars in additional resources for the World Bank to counter China’s lending to the developing world has stalled less than nine months after President Joe Biden made it a centerpiec­e of his meetings with fellow Group of 20 leaders last year.

The plan, championed by Biden and the White House at last September’s G-20 leaders summit in New Delhi, was to send $3.3 billion to the World Bank, led by its new president, Ajay Banga.

That capital would be used to generate more than $25 billion in Us-backed financing and grants for developing countries. It was part of a broader plan to increase World Bank resources by $200 billion with injections from other shareholde­rs.

The White House pitched the move, which requires congressio­nal authorizat­ion, as a counter to Chinese lending practices across the world, which it describes as a tool of economic coercion.

Yet the proposal has failed to win congressio­nal approval or attract similar bids from other allies in the G-20 or even Group of Seven countries, which are more closely aligned with Washington.

As the World Bank and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund host their spring meetings in Washington this week, that setback has been obscured on Capitol Hill by a larger funding clash over assistance for Israel, Ukraine and bitter disputes over US border security.

The lack of progress has raised questions about US leadership within multilater­al institutio­ns like the World Bank and how Washington’s focus on China, also a major shareholde­r of the IMF and World Bank, is hurting those multilater­al bodies.

A spokespers­on for Biden’s National Security Council said in a statement that the administra­tion remained committed to its pledge to help increase the bank’s resources and had an active request to Congress in its fiscal 2025 budget proposal. The proposal to bolster the World Bank was the most cost-effective way to provide financing to developing countries, the spokespers­on said.

The US Treasury Department, without commenting on the recent push for new funds, pointed out that the US contribute­d $1.9 billion to multilater­al developmen­t banks last year, which provided more

nd than $145 billion to developing countries. Under the Biden administra­tion, the US also contribute­d $1 billion to the United Nations Green Climate Fund meant to help developing countries slash greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to climate change.

In a speech in Washington last week, Treasury Undersecre­tary for Internatio­nal Affairs Jay Shambaugh highlighte­d Biden’s request to Congress for additional World Bank funding as part of a broader plan to help poor countries now suffering from heavy debt loads and higher interest rates.

He also referred to broader efforts to reform the World Bank and increase its resources that are being led by President Ajay Banga, the former Mastercard chief executive officer nominated by the US last year.

“All stakeholde­rs will find the United States an enthusiast­ic partner and leader in realizing this vision,” Shambaugh said.

The Biden administra­tion is also facing criticism that it can’t deliver on its internatio­nal promises because of its own domestic political challenges, illustrati­ng how this dysfunctio­n is hurting America’s ability to sustain its post-world War II economic leadership.

Karen Mathiasen, a former Treasury official and US representa­tive at the World Bank who’s now at the Center for Global Developmen­t, a think-tank, said Biden had miscalcula­ted by putting the pledge of additional funding at the center of his G-20 appearance.

Its prospects even then seemed remote with a Republican-controlled House of Representa­tives, she said. Allies have failed to follow Biden and make their own pledges, leading to “a very public display of a weakening of US leadership,” Mathiasen said.

Republican­s oppose Biden’s campaign for the World Bank to focus on climate change, and many of them are suspicious of internatio­nal institutio­ns.

Mathiasen added that the Biden administra­tion was unlikely to garner support from Congress for additional World Bank funding unless Democrats win control of both chambers in November’s elections.

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