• | 8:00 am

Can this former CEO fix the World Bank?

In the midst of both a climate and debt crisis, former Mastercard CEO Ajay Banga has his work cut out for him.

Can this former CEO fix the World Bank?
[Source photo: Ajay Banga begins his term as president of the World Bank June 2. [Photo: Hollie Adams/Bloomberg/Getty Images]]

Over the past two years, calls for reforming the World Bank have pushed their way onto the front pages of major newspapers and into the agendas of heads of state.

Many low- and middle-income countries—the population the World Bank is tasked with helping—are falling deeper into debt and facing growing costs as the impacts of climate change increase in severity. Critics accuse the World Bank of failing to evolve to meet the crises.

The job of leading that reform now falls to Ajay Banga, an Indian American businessman and former CEO of Mastercard who was nominated by President Joe Biden to replace resigning World Bank President David Malpass.

Banga, the only candidate for the job, was confirmed by the World Bank’s executive directors on Wednesday. His five-year term as president begins June 2.

There is no shortage of advice for what Banga and the World Bank need to do.

The G-20 recently issued a report urging the World Bank and the other multilateral development banks to loosen their lending restrictions to get more money flowing to countries in need. A commission led by economists Nicholas Stern and Vera Songwe called for a rapid, sustained investment push that prioritizes transitioning to cleaner energy, achieving the U.N. sustainable development goals, and meeting the needs of increasingly vulnerable countries.

African ministers of finance will soon come out with their own “to do” list for the World Bank, and India’s minister of finance just pulled together an expert group to consider World Bank reform.

Banga will walk into the job with these and many other to-do lists. Yet he will inherit a corporate culture that makes the World Bank Group too inwardly focused and too slow to respond.

I have worked for the World Bank Group and with it from the outside. I see four key roles—four “C’s”—that Banga will need to master from the outset. From his track record and his reputation for deep thoughtfulness, I am confident that he can.

1. ACT AS A CEO AND GET THE ENTIRE WORLD BANK GROUP HOUSE IN ORDER

The World Bank Group is a conglomerate with four balance sheets, three cultures, and four executive boards, plus a dispute resolution arm.

Lending to low- and middle-income countries is just part of its role. The World Bank Group also provides technical assistance across all areas of economic development and invests in and provides risk insurance to encourage companies to invest in projects and places they might otherwise consider too risky. Its ability to mobilize private-sector finance and stretch every dollar is crucial for meeting the world’s development and climate adaptation and mitigation needs.

Banga will need to set clear goals for each part of the World Bank Group and get them working more effectively to help the world achieve its goals.

2. ASSUME THE MANTLE OF COLLABORATOR-IN-CHIEF TO TAKE ON THE DEBT AND CLIMATE CRISES

Many of the World Bank Group’s client countries are facing both mounting debt and rising costs from climate change.

The high cost of borrowing can hamper developing countries’ ability to invest in needed infrastructure to grow and protect their economies, and they fear being locked out of global trade as the U.S.’s green subsidies in the Inflation Reduction Act and Europe’s border carbon tax may make it more difficult for them to compete.

The solutions to cascading problems like these cannot be managed by one institution. However, the current multilateral development bank system—the World Bank Group and the regional development banks—is disjointed at best and competitive at worst.

In the past, the leaders of the development banks, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Trade Organization have cooperated, more or less, depending on crises and personalities, and have moved quickly when they needed to

During the global financial crisis of 2008 and 2009, for example, the then-heads of the World Bank and the WTO hurried to develop trade finance facilities to support banks in developing countries as capital fled to the U.S. and Europe. It took intense diplomacy to push wealthy countries and institutions to get money out the door to shore up businesses and trade. Success was measured not in months but in days.

The new president of the World Bank will need to support more radical collaboration among development financial institutions, including pooling capital and talent, to help respond quickly to countries’ needs.

It won’t be easy. Institutional rivalries run deep. But with budgets tight, there is growing clarity that there is no choice—the capital that is already in the system is the closest at hand and can be deployed to better effect if the institutions are willing to adapt.

3. BE A CONVENER

Overhauling how international finance works will require everyone to be on board—development banks, central banks, regulators, investment banks, pension funds, insurance companies, and private equity.

Banga and Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, can settle institutional differences and present a coordinated face to private investors and the major lending countries, including China—which has emerged as the biggest holder of developing country debt—to speed up support to struggling countries.

On other issues, such as nature-based solutions to climate change, building resilience, and economic inclusion, the World Bank Group can bring its significant resources and skills, including data analysis, to global conversations that it has been painfully absent from for the past four years.

4. BE A CHAMPION FOR THE MOST VULNERABLE

The world’s most vulnerable people are the World Bank Group’s ultimate beneficiaries. For those living on the front line of biodiversity loss and climate impacts, such as extreme heat, drought, and flooding, the current international financial system is proving inadequate.

The World Bank Group’s management incentives are still too oriented to lending approved by the board, not the outcomes of that lending, advice, and assistance.

Throughout the World Bank’s history, its leaders have been able to make rapid changes to better help vulnerable countries when they stay close to the needs of their ultimate beneficiaries and the goals that the world has set.

The next president faces turbulent times. Banga’s careful listening on his campaign tour signals that he understands the complexity. It’s an extraordinary moment in the history of the institution, with sky-high expectations of what one leader needs to do.


This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

  Be in the Know. Subscribe to our Newsletters.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rachel Kyte is dean of the Fletcher School at Tufts University. More

FROM OUR PARTNERS

Brands That Matter
Brands That Matter