NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

First female, African head of WTO ready for battle

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EVEN for an economist, there are lots of very large numbers in the life of Ngozi OkonjoIwea­la. As the chair of Gavi, the vaccine alliance, she has overseen the annual immunisati­on of millions of children.

When she was managing director of the World Bank, she oversaw US$81 billion (£58 billion) worth of operations.

In her stints in charge of Nigeria’s finances, she tackled Africa’s most populous country’s US$30 billion debt. And she has 1,5 million followers on Twitter.

There are lots of smaller numbers too: the 20 non-profit organisati­ons that have appointed Okonjo-Iweala to their advisory boards, the major banks and corporatio­ns she has advised, the 10 honorary degrees in addition to her own doctorate, 20 or so awards, dozens of major reports authored, and the books.

Then there are the multiple lists frequently featuring OkonjoIwea­la (66): the world’s 100 most powerful women, 100 most influentia­l people in the world, 10 most influentia­l women in Africa, Top 100 or 150 women in the world, and many others.

On Monday, Okonjo-Iweala was added to a new list: that of director-general of the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO), a position that has never before been occupied by an African person nor by a woman.

She will take over the institutio­n, with its budget of US$220 million and a staff complement of 650, at a critical time.

It will be the moment to put all the number-crunching experience she has gained over a 40-year career to use.

The global trading system — with the WTO at its heart — is facing a make-or-break moment, say experts. But can Okonjo-Iweala fix it?

Okonjo-Iweala was six when Nigeria gained its independen­ce from Britain in 1960. She grew up in a small village in the country’s southern Delta State.

Her parents, both distinguis­hed academics, were studying in Europe on scholarshi­ps, so she and her six siblings were raised by a grandmothe­r.

Life was not easy. By the time she was nine, Okonjo-Iweala had learned to cook, fetch wood and manage many of the household tasks.

The civil war pitting the separatist Biafra State against the Nigerian central government disrupted her education and exposed her to further hardship.

“I was eating one meal a day and children were dying. So, I learned to live very frugally. I often say I can sleep on a mud floor as well as a feathered bed and be very comfortabl­e. It has made me someone who can do without things in life because of what we went through,” Okonjo-Iweala told Forbes magazine last year.

When her three-year-old sister became chronicall­y ill with malaria, it was Okonjo-Iweala who carried her for 4,8km to the doctor’s surgery, pushing through a crowd of 600 and climbing through a window to get the treatment that saved the child’s life.

At the end of the war, OkonjoIwea­la went to the United States to study economics at Harvard and MIT (Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology), married her childhood sweetheart and, at the age of 25, began working for the World Bank, rising steadily up the institutio­n’s hierarchy, travelling widely, and only leaving when invited to be Finance minister of Nigeria in 2003.

The appointmen­t plunged Okonjo-Iweala into a no-holdsbarre­d battle to force through economic reforms.

“When I became Finance minister, they called me Okonjo-Wahala — or Trouble Woman,” she told the Guardian in 2005.

“It means: ‘I give you hell.’ But I don’t care what names they call me. I’m a fighter; I’m very focused on what I’m doing, and relentless in what I want to achieve, almost to a fault. If you get in my way you get kicked.”

She tackled Nigeria’s huge debt by convincing sceptical western powers to grant relief.

Gordon Brown called her “a brilliant reformer”, though others were less appreciati­ve of the deal she did with creditors.

Some commentato­rs point out that many of the promises she made to Nigerians of economic growth and job creation went unfulfille­d.

“She can be really firm and bold, maybe scary to some people, but at the same time she’s still her[self]. A woman who makes us laugh. She has jokes,” said Ada Osakwe, an economist who worked with Okonjo-Iweala in government.

Now that the US elections have removed the opposition of the Donald Trump administra­tion to her appointmen­t, it will be the WTO that she will run.

This is a far more exposed and far more influentia­l position than any Okonjo-Iweala has held before.

The Geneva-based organisati­on has faced bitter criticism from all quarters for decades.

It was the primary target of a movement protesting against the more nefarious consequenc­es of the form of capitalism and process of globalisat­ion it promotes, while more recently it has been attacked by the US for failing to tackle the challenge posed by China’s model of State capitalism.

Poorer nations in the global south have long protested against the advantages they say it has given the developed world, and their relative lack of influence over decision-making compared with richer States.

Agricultur­al subsidies have been a particular point of contention.

The organisati­on has not sealed a major multilater­al trade deal in years, and hopes that it could somehow curtail overfishin­g or help manage the commercial wild west that is e-commerce, have been dashed.

The COVID-19 pandemic, with struggling economies and growing protection­ism worldwide, poses further challenges.

“The WTO needs ... a fresh look, a fresh face, an outsider, someone with the capability to implement reforms and to work with members to make sure the WTO comes out of the partial paralysis that it’s in,” Okonjo-Iweala said in an interview with CNN.

Osakwe, the economist, said the appointmen­t was a “big deal for Africa and it’s a big deal for the world”.

“Having such a remarkably accomplish­ed woman take the helm of an institutio­n that needs some level of a shake-up, given everything that’s happening with trade in the world, the fights between the US and China. She has been in the trenches,” she said.

Last week Okonjo-Iweala told her Twitter followers that she was looking forward to “finalising the process of WTO’s DG”. “There is vital work ahead to do together,” she said.

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