Already
the air is thick with rumours, speculation and calculation. No sooner
did Robert Zoellick announce that he would step down as president
of the World Bank at the end of June than the jockeying for his
position began. US treasury secretary Timothy Geithner quickly announced
that the US government would put forward a candidate in the coming
weeks. This haste is to establish the US's claim to this post, through
the so-called "gentlemen's agreement" of the global elite
whereby Europe could put one of its own in the IMF and the US controlled
the leadership of the World Bank.
The arrangement was already called into question last year, when
Dominique Strauss-Kahn was forced to leave the IMF. Despite tentative
moves to have someone from the emerging world head the fund, France
quickly put forward its own candidate. Christine Lagarde then received
the backing not just of other European countries, but also of several
developing countries, through skilful diplomacy (including dividing
the opposition) combined with global fears about the impact of the
European financial crisis.
Now, once again, the same game has started. Since mid-2010 there
has been speculation that Hillary Clinton is eyeing the job, with
Larry Summers breathing down her neck. When it comes to the crunch,
the US will probably do its best to ensure that it remains in control
at the World Bank for as long as possible, and chooses who runs
the institution.
It is increasingly hard to justify this. In the early decades of
the Bretton Woodsinstitutions, when G7 ran the world, it could be
taken for granted, but not as other economies grow in size, international
reach and significance.
In the case of the international financial institutions, it has
been argued that since developing and emerging markets are more
likely to approach them for funds (indeed, the World Bank can only
lend to developing countries) it is better to avoid conflicts of
interest that may arise if the head of the institutions also comes
from that country or region. That particular argument made by developed
countries was blown apart last year, when Europeans insisted on
having Lagarde at the IMF precisely because Europe was in such a
huge economic mess that the services of the IMF would be required.
Suddenly conflict of interest was no longer a problem; instead it
even became a virtue, that of close knowledge and first-hand experience
of the issue.
This will make it harder to provide any logical or minimally ethical
reason for pushing to have an American at the head of the World
Bank. But then logic or ethics have never determined how these things
happen. An open letter to the World Bank's board of governors by
a group of international NGOs has made the plea that its members
"push for the selection of the best candidate through an open,
merit-based, transparent process, and to ensure that developing
countries play a central role in the selection process". The
letter notes that since the bank only operates in developing countries,
and has most impact in low-income countries, any candidate who is
not supported by these countries will seriously lack legitimacy.
And of course it makes most sense if the candidate is from a developing
country, since that person is more likely to understand at first
hand at least some of the difficulties that policy-makers in such
countries face.
Of course, having a person with a different nationality is nowhere
near enough. But since it is so clear that the World Bank needs
serious and substantial reform, this is one place to start. But
does this even matter? It could seem that the world economy is very
different today, when European leaders go cap-in-hand to China requesting
money for bailouts which they are unwilling to provide themselves.
But the sad truth is that institutions such as the World Bank and
the IMF remain very powerful despite this, not just in providing
resources to poor countries, but also in setting the development
agenda and determining policies.
Increasingly, this happens not because of open or direct conditionalities
imposed on countries that borrow from the World Bank (though that
still happens too), but because it has sought to centralise control
over research and policy analysis and put its own imprint on what
is considered "good" economic strategy. The fact it has
most often got things wrong has rarely been a problem, since it
has never been constrained by either accountability or shame.
So the World Bank, despite some hesitant and inconsistent occasional
moves to the contrary, remains fervently in favour of large private
capital. It continues to push countries down development trajectories
that have seriously negative medium- and long-term implications.
It continues to oppose or undermine genuinely progressive alternatives
that are slowly being built in different parts of the developing
world. And it seeks to justify this with paid research that is sometimes
only slightly better than the "paid news" that afflicts
a lot of private media.
These are Augean stables to clean up, and it may be too much to
expect any one new incumbent to be able to tackle this. But one
thing is for sure: with a nominee from the US administration at
the helm, such a clean-up is unlikely even to start.
*
This article was originally published in the Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/feb/17/world-bank-robert-zoellick