Sunday Tribune

Improve transparen­cy, accountabi­lity of NDB

- MAGALIE MASAMBA This article was first published on theconvers­ation.com

THE New Developmen­t Bank (NDB), which was formed in July 2014, marks its eighth birthday this year.

It was formed by the leaders of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) when they met in Fortaleza, Brazil, for the bloc’s summit.

The bank was seen as a potential alternativ­e to the World Bank and able to take a new approach to developmen­t finance.

The NDB has since approved 11 projects in South Africa and Lesotho.

These involve sustainabl­e energy, transporta­tion, water resource management, and a Covid-19 emergency loan programme.

Some of these projects, for instance, the Environmen­tal Protection Project for the Medupi Thermal Power Plant, are of strategic importance to South Africa.

Of the project’s estimated total cost of $2.75 billion (R47.16bn), the bank is providing a $480m loan.

This is in line with hopes that the bank would serve as a much-needed new source of financing for national and regional initiative­s.

Another hope was that it would be more transparen­t and accountabl­e than other multilater­al banks, such as the World Bank.

Its mission and values, articles of agreement, environmen­tal and social framework and informatio­n disclosure policy, make commitment­s about transparen­cy and openness.

The bank’s mission statement expresses its objective of not only “achieving developmen­t goals with transparen­cy” but also displaying “empathy” towards its projects’ intended beneficiar­ies.

Billions of dollars of investment later, however, the reality suggests that improvemen­t is needed.

A study on transparen­cy and accountabi­lity by Oxfam South Africa and the University of Pretoria’s Centre for Human Rights raises concerns about how the bank handles access to informatio­n.

It also lacks an independen­t accountabi­lity mechanism.

The study calls into question whether the bank is showing empathy towards the communitie­s that are affected by its projects.

The study highlights transparen­cy and accountabi­lity challenges with some of the projects co-financed by the bank. The researcher­s interviewe­d representa­tives of the communitie­s near the South Africa Lesotho Highlands Water Project Phase II and the Medupi project.

Some of these challenges are cross-cutting.

For instance, the representa­tives said that the influx of migrant workers into their communitie­s had put a strain on resources and services.

There were also projectspe­cific issues. These included concerns about the resettleme­nt of more than 3 000 people to make way for the Lesotho project.

The study demonstrat­es the difficulty of getting project informatio­n.

The NDB’S responses to informatio­n requests from the researcher­s lacked adequate detail.

Without timely and comprehens­ive access to informatio­n, how can communitie­s affected by projects adequately address their concerns?

The bank’s website has no project documents, and its informatio­n portal is hard to use. This affects the right of communitie­s to be heard, a right that can’t be exercised without access to informatio­n.

Unlike most multilater­al developmen­t banks, the NDB doesn’t have an independen­t accountabi­lity mechanism. Nor does it have other ways for these communitie­s to seek redress or hold it accountabl­e.

Such mechanisms are created to hold developmen­t finance institutio­ns and their clients accountabl­e to their own policies.

They also provide access to remedies for individual­s and communitie­s that are adversely affected by the activities such institutio­ns fund.

Without such a mechanism, the bank’s approach to accountabi­lity falls far short of global best practices.

It is clear that much more can be done to improve transparen­cy and accountabi­lity at the NDB.

The bank could do this in several ways:

¡ It must put Section 23 of its environmen­t and social framework into practice. This requires the bank to disclose project documents and informatio­n to communitie­s and the general public during the project design and implementa­tion phases and throughout projects’ life cycles. ¡ It should create a structure or platform, an independen­t accountabi­lity mechanism, that affected communitie­s can use to prod the bank when it fails to provide timely access to project informatio­n or to comply with its own policies and procedures. Better and more sustainabl­e developmen­t outcomes can be achieved when the mechanism’s design process includes public consultati­ons that incorporat­e different stakeholde­rs. These public consultati­ons should aim to genuinely solicit inputs that influence the design and implementa­tion of the proposed mechanism.

¡ At a national level, there have also been calls for the formation of a South African liaison group for internatio­nal financial institutio­ns. This group would be a platform to promote discourse between South African government institutio­ns such as the Treasury and civil society concerning the country’s relationsh­ip with internatio­nal financial institutio­ns. This group could, for instance, be a good platform to discuss civil society’s concerns about the NDB.

 ?? A post-doctoral fellow at the Centre for Human Rights at the University of Pretoria ??
A post-doctoral fellow at the Centre for Human Rights at the University of Pretoria

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