Programmed to Fail
The World Bank Clings to a Bankrupt
Development Model
by Walden Bello and Shalmali Guttal
Multinational Monitor, July/August
2005
Bangkok - Like its sister institution
the IMF, the World Bank has seen its legitimacy, if not its authority,
sharply eroded over the last decade.
The tarnished image of the Bank marks
a major change from the state of affairs 10 years ago, when, to
great fanfare, Australian-turned-American James Wolfensohn assumed
the presidency of the Bank. With the help of a well-oiled public
relations machine headed by ex-Economist writer Mark Malloch-Brown,
he tried to recast the Bank's image as an institution that was
moving away from structural adjustment's emphasis on markets,
deregulation and privatization, and making poverty elimination
its central mission, while also promoting good governance and
supporting environmentally sensitive lending.
While Wolfensohn won some sympathizers
in the elite media, especially in the United States, his image
makeover failed. Intensifying street protests in developing countries,
and in the United States and Europe; biting criticism from the
U.S. Congress; corruption scandals; and betrayals of commitments
to good faith dialogue with civil society all overwhelmed the
Bank's PR offensive.
Most of all, the Bank's record of ongoing
failure - a debt relief program that did not deliver the goods;
ongoing support for environmentally destructive projects; its
ideological commitment to the "market-based" approaches
favored by big corporate interests, even as they left their purported
beneficiaries among the poor worse off; and a crushing burden
of global poverty that persisted not just despite but in part
because of Bank policies - destroyed the notion of a progressive,
poverty-alleviating Bank.
Reality Behind the Rhetoric
A report of a commission mandated by
the U.S. Congress to look at the international financial institutions
destabilized the Bank in early February 2000. Headed by academic
Alan Meltzer, the commission came up with a number of devastating
findings: 70 percent of the Bank's non-grant lending was concentrated
in 11 countries, with 145 other member countries left to scramble
for the remaining 30 percent; 80 percent of the Bank's resources
was devoted not to the poorest developing countries but to the
better off ones that have positive credit ratings and, according
to the commission, could therefore raise their funds in international
capital markets; the failure rate of Bank projects was 65 to 70
percent in the poorest countries and 55 to 60 percent in all developing
countries. In short, the commission found, the World Bank was
irrelevant to the achievement of its avowed mission of alleviating
global poverty.
Much to the chagrin of Wolfensohn, few
people came to the Bank's defense. Indeed, more interesting was
that many critics from across the political spectrum - left, right
and center - agreed with the report's findings, though not necessarily
with its recommendations. Among the critics was Wolfensohn's occasional
ally, financial guru George Soros, who agreed with the conservative
Meltzer that the Bank's "lending business is inefficient,
no longer appropriate, and in some ways counterproductive and
need[s] to be reformed to eliminate unintended adverse consequences."
Meanwhile, the political aftermath of
the Asian financial crisis wreaked havoc with the World Bank's
stated aim of promoting "good governance." This loudly
proclaimed goal was contradicted by sensational revelations regarding
the Bank's relationship with the Suharto regime in Indonesia -
an involvement that continued well into the Wolfensohn era. The
Bank had funneled some $30 billion to the dictatorship over 30
years. According to Jeffrey Winters and other Indonesia specialists,
the Bank accepted false statistics, tolerated the fact that Suharto
and his cronies siphoned off 30 cents of every dollar in aid for
corrupt uses, legitimized the dictatorship by passing it off as
a model for other countries, and was complacent about the state
of human rights and the Suharto clique's monopolistic control
of the economy. Suharto's loss of power in the tumultuous events
of 1998 and 1999 was paralleled by the erosion of the credibility
of the World Bank's rhetoric about good governance.
The Bank took more hits as news of corruption
and malpractice came to light in Bank-supported infrastructure
projects. Prominent among these were the Lesotho Highlands Water
Project (LHWP) and the Bujagali Falls dam in Uganda. In 2001,
the Lesotho High Court began investigating charges of bribery
against several major international dam-building companies and
public officials in connection with the LHWP. Meanwhile, the Bank
quietly conducted its own internal investigation of three of the
companies charged with paying bribes and concluded that there
was insufficient evidence to punish them for corruption. In 2002,
the Lesotho High Court eventually succeeded in convicting four
companies for paying bribes, among them Acres International, a
long-term ally and favored contractor of the World Bank - which
the Bank had cleared in its internal investigation. It took the
Bank well over a year to eventually announce that it would debar
Acres International from contracts for a period of three years.
The image of a new, environmentally sensitive
Bank under Wolfensohn also evaporated in the avalanche of criticism
that followed the Meltzer report. The Bank staunchly backed the
controversial Chad-Cameroon Pipeline, which would seriously damage
ecologically sensitive areas like Cameroon's Atlantic Littoral
Forest. Bank management was caught violating its own rules on
the environment and resettlement when it tried to push through
the China Western Poverty Reduction Project, which would have
transformed an arid ecosystem supporting minority Tibetan and
Mongolian sheepherders into land for settled agriculture for people
from other parts of China. Pressure from nongovernmental organizations
(NGOs) globally forced the World Bank's withdrawal from part of
the project that involved resettlement of 58,000 ethnic Chinese
to Qinghai Province's Dulan County, the home of Tibetan and Mongolian
sheepherders. However, other environmentally destabilizing components
of the project were approved.
A look at the Bank's loan portfolio revealed
the reality behind the environmental rhetoric: environmental loans
as a percentage of the Bank's total loan portfolio declined from
3.6 percent in fiscal year 1994 to 1.02 percent in 1998; funds
allocated to environmental projects declined by 32.7 percent between
1998 and 1999; and more than half of all lending by the World
Bank's private sector divisions in 1998 was for environmentally
harmful projects like dams, roads and power. So marginalized was
the Bank's environmental staff that Herman Daly, the distinguished
ecological economist, left the Bank because he felt that he and
other in-house environmentalists were having no impact on agency
policy.
The Failure of Debt Relief
A major World Bank-led initiative launched
under Wolfensohn's watch - the plan to reduce Third World debt
- also ran into trouble. The Bank initiative emerged in response
to the failure of initiatives such as the U.S.-government-supported
"Brady Plan" to make a dent in the massive debt of developing
countries that had sparked the Third World debt crisis of the
early eighties. With more and more voices demanding total debt
cancellation, the Bank sought to derail the potential insurgency
with the call for significant reduction of developing country
debt. When the call was turned into a concrete proposal after
consultation with creditor governments, the number of countries
eligible for debt reduction was reduced to 42 out of 165 developing
countries. Moreover, "HIPC," or the "Highly Indebted
Poor Countries" initiative, stipulated that debt reduction
of eligible countries would be granted by the large creditor countries
in exchange for "economic reforms" - more structural
adjustment - undertaken by the debtors.
Trumpeted at the G-7 meeting of rich countries
in Cologne in July 1999, the HIPC initiative was in trouble a
few years later. As of 2002, only 20 of the eligible 42 counties
were able to comply with the conditions imposed by the Bank and
the IMF. Of these 20, it was revealed that, despite reductions
in their overall debt stock under the program, four would actually
have annual debt service payments in 2003-2005 that would be higher
than what they paid in 1998-2000; five countries would be paying
as much in debt service as before HIPC; and six countries would
have their annual debt service reduced by a modest $15 million.
Not surprisingly, developing countries began to see HIPC as a
fraud.
Along with the British government, the
World Bank made a desperate effort to get the creditor countries
to revive the HIPC in 2005. Instead of expanding the number of
eligible countries, the G-8 announced before their summit in Gleneagles,
Scotland, in early July, that the number would be only 14 - those
that had fully implemented economic reforms demanded within HIPC.
An additional 13 might be added depending on their compliance
with "economic reforms." Critics pointed out that the
27 eligible and potentially eligible countries would cover less
than 10 percent of the population of the developing world, and,
what's more, that the total amount promised by the G-8 - $55 billion
- would come to little more than two years worth of interest payments
from the South to multilateral and bilateral creditors.
Recently leaked documents from the IMF
indicate that this already gutted G-8-World Bank proposal for
debt reduction may face trouble because of the reluctance of IMF
leadership to give up control over the policy environments of
indebted countries. A June 30 office memo to the IMF's Executive
Board from the Belgian, Swiss, Dutch and Norwegian executive directors
indicates that at least these directors oppose loosening policy
conditionalities on countries that receive full debt cancellation.
HIPC was one of the acronyms associated
with Wolfensohn; another was PRSP. His presidency brought with
it much rhetoric about the Bank adopting a new approach to development.
At the World Bank-IMF meeting in September 1999, the World Bank's
Structural Adjustment Program was renamed Poverty Reduction Strategy
Papers (PRSPs). The PRSP was a new incarnation of the standard
Bank-Fund adjustment paradigm with its trademark conditions: unilateral
trade liberalization, privatization of essential services and
deregulation of labor and financial markets. The new era was supposed
to signal a change in macroeconomic strategy. As U.S. Treasury
Secretary Larry Summers (formerly the chief economist at the World
Bank) put it, the new approach would consist of "moving away
from an IMF-centered process that has too often focused on narrow
macroeconomic objectives at the expense of broader human development."
It would be "a new, more inclusive process that would involve
multiple international organizations and give national policy
makers and civil society groups a more central role." The
Bank, instead of the Fund, became the new lead agency.
But the new approach, at closer inspection,
was suspiciously like the old one. Beneath the anti-poverty rhetoric,
not much changed.
Several comprehensive studies of PRSPs
have been released in recent years. Probably the most favorable
study was commissioned by the Strategic Partnership for Africa.
Yet a close reading shows very little actual progress. In summing
up the review of the results of PRSPs in eight African countries,
the study notes that "many of the corresponding gains in
terms of performance and results remain potential rather than
actual. Decisive further steps will be necessary to realize the
potential."
One of the few clearly positive elements
noted by the report is that PRSPs have achieved "a useful
mainstreaming of anti-poverty efforts in national policy processes
in Africa," though exactly what that means is unclear. More
centrally, the authors conclude, "whether or not vicious
circles of patrimonial politics, state weakness and ineffectual
aid can be replaced with virtuous ones, based on greater national
ownership of anti-poverty effort, is still uncertain."
Most other assessments are much more negative.
A study by the Economic Policy Empowerment Program of the European
Network on Debt and Development (Eurodad) noted that while the
PRSPs stress the importance of social safety nets and reducing
poverty, the prescribed macroeconomic reforms to achieve them
are "undiscussed" and are indistinguishable from the
previous macroeconomic frameworks focused on deregulation, trade
liberalization and privatization.
As for "process," most studies
confirm the Eurodad study's contention that the so-called "participatory
approach" of the PRSPs involve "little more than consultations
with a few prominent and liberal CSOs [civil society organizations]
rather than broad-based, substantive public dialogue about the
causes of incidence of poverty." Authentic local organizations
are routinely excluded: "Local, vernacular forms of civil
society organization such as labor unions, peasant organizations,
social movements, women's groups and indigenous peoples' organizations
have not been invited into the process, and the little public
discussion that has taken place has been limited to well-resourced
national and international non-governmental organizations."
Focus on the Global South conducted a
detailed look at the PRSPs for three transition countries - Vietnam,
Laos and Cambodia. The PRSP approach in those countries revealed
the same one-size-fits-all policy matrix emphasizing rapid growth,
the tearing down of the state sector in favor private enterprises,
deregulation, more liberal foreign investment laws, trade liberalization,
export-oriented growth, and commercialization of land and resource
rights. This time, however, the anti-poverty rhetoric was deployed
to drag in NGOs and people's movements so as to lend the content
and process legitimacy.
"The PRSP is upheld by the World
Bank and the IMF as a comprehensive approach," noted the
authors. "That it certainly is," the Focus analysis
concludes, "but not for poverty reduction. The PRSP is a
comprehensive program for structural adjustment, in the name of
the poor."
Managing Civil Society
Facing increasing dissatisfaction with
his so-called new approach, Wolfensohn tried to manage his critics
from civil society via "constructive engagements" and
"multi-stakeholder dialogues." Most prominent among
these were the Structural Adjustment Participatory Review Initiative
(SAPRI), the World Commission on Dams (WCD) and the Extractive
Industries Review (EIR). Although focused on different areas of
Bank operations, all three initiatives sought to bring Bank critics
to a negotiating table in a bid to prove that the Bank was willing
to listen to its detractors and become more responsive to criticisms
about its operations and polices. But the reality proved to be
quite the opposite. In all three cases, the Bank showed itself
to be unwilling to accept and act on the outcomes of these initiatives.
o The Structural Adjustment review
Wolfensohn's "feel good" approach
was put to a test - and by all accounts failed - in the very first
"constructive engagement" exercise he committed the
Bank to through the Structural Adjustment Participatory Review
Initiative (SAPRI). In 1996, Wolfensohn accepted a civil-society
challenge to conduct a joint Bank-civil society-government assessment
of the actual results of structural adjustment programs (SAPs).
The SAPRI initiative was launched in 1997.
SAPRI was designed as a tripartite field-based
exercise, and a civil society team worked with a Bank team appointed
by Wolfensohn to develop a transparent and participatory global
methodology for gathering and documenting evidence of the impacts
of World Bank-IMF SAPs in seven countries. This included local
workshops, national fora and field investigations. The process
was also undertaken by civil society organizations in two additional
countries where the Bank and governments refused to participate.
Despite agreement on the common rules
of the exercise and the review methodology, the World Bank team
played an obstructionist role throughout the SAPRI process. For
example, at public fora, instead of trying to listen to and learn
from the evidence presented by civil society representatives about
the impacts of SAPs, Bank staff almost always argued points and
in the end, claimed that the presentations (which were part of
the agreed-upon qualitative input) constituted "anecdotal
evidence."
While civil society at the national level
tended to accept joint research findings despite reservations,
the Bank almost always found extensive faults in the draft reports.
In Bangladesh, the Bank had over 50 pages of objections to the
joint report covering four or five topics.
Civil society groups, however, remained
firm that the Bank adhere to the commitments it had made to the
methodology and process, and pushed ahead with field investigations.
An increasing amount of data started to emerge about the impacts
of SAPs from farmers, workers, women's and indigenous peoples'
organizations, and even governments.
As the Bank's ability to control country
processes diminished, so also did its ability to control the output
of the review. Even before the final and concluding national fora
were reached, field investigations already indicated major problems
in all aspects of adjustment programs - from trade and financial
sector liberalization to the privatization of utilities and labor-market
reforms.
Reluctant to go public with these findings,
the Bank team backed off from an earlier (written) agreement to
present all SAPRI findings in a large public forum in Washington
D.C., with Wolfensohn present. Instead, the Bank team insisted
on a closed technical meeting and a small session in Washington
D.C. scheduled when Wolfensohn was not in town. Most important,
the Bank now insisted that it and civil society each write separate
reports. The Bank report used the Bank's own commissioned research
as the basis for its conclusions and barely referred to the now
five-year SAPRI process. In August 2001, the Bank pulled out of
SAPRI and buried the entire exercise.
In April 2002, the full SAPRI report (under
the name of SAPRIN, to include findings from the two countries
where civil society conducted investigations without Bank involvement)
was released to the public and received widespread media coverage.
The Bank entered the fray again and Wolfensohn requested a meeting
with SAPRIN members. He expressed regrets that he and his staff
had not been in touch with SAPRI and promised to read the report
and discuss it seriously in the near future. To date, however,
neither the Bank nor Wolfensohn have shown any commitment to review
and make changes to their adjustment lending. On the contrary,
structural adjustment policies continue to be the mainstay of
Bank-Fund lending.
o The World Commission on Dams
The WCD also proved to be a thorn in
the Bank's side. Established in 1997 following a meeting convened
in Gland, Switzerland by the World Bank and the World Conservation
Union (IUCN), the WCD was the first body to conduct a comprehensive
and independent global review of the development effectiveness
of large dams and to propose internationally acceptable standards
to improve the assessment, planning, building, operating and financing
of large dam projects.
Although co-sponsored by the World Bank,
the origins of the WCD lie in the numerous anti-dam struggles
waged by dam-affected communities and NGOs around the world, in
particular those targeting World Bank-funded projects from the
mid-1980s onwards.
Chaired by then-South African Minister
of Water Resources Kader Asmal, the WCD was comprised of 12 commissioners
from eminent backgrounds, and included representatives from the
dam building industry, anti-dam struggles, indigenous people's
movements, civil society organizations, the public sector and
academia.
Over a period of two and half years, the
WCD commissioned a massive volume of research and received nearly
1,000 submissions from around the world on the environmental,
social, economic, technical, institutional and performance dimensions
of large dams.
The WCD's final report, Dams and Development:
A New Framework for Decision-Making, was launched by Nelson Mandela
in London in November 2000. Despite deep differences in the backgrounds
and political perspectives among those involved in the WCD process,
the WCD reached a consensus on the need to massively curtail large
dam construction and protect the rights of those displaced by
large dams.
Although the WCD worked independently
from the World Bank, the Bank had played a more active role in
the development of the WCD Report than any other institution.
Bank representatives were active members of the WCD Forum, and
the Bank was consulted at every stage of the WCD's work program.
But the Bank was quick to distance itself from the WCD recommendations
- which would have required a major change in the way Bank does
business.
At the report's launch in November 2000,
Wolfensohn said that the Bank would consult its shareholders on
their opinions. The Bank's subsequent position on the WCD report
was based primarily on the responses of dam-building government
agencies in the major dam-building countries, which rejected the
report's findings and guidelines, and deemed them inapplicable
and even anti-development. In a March 27, 2001 statement, the
Bank stated that, "consistent with the clarification provided
by the WCD Chair, the World Bank will not 'comprehensively adopt
the 26 WCD guidelines,' but will use them as a reference point
when considering investments in dams."
The Bank is now actually planning to re-engage
in financing large-scale dams.
o The Extractive Industries Review
The experience of the WCD was relived
in yet another "dialogue between all parties" in the
Extractive Industries Review (EIR). The EIR was announced in September
2000 during the World Bank-IMF annual meeting in Prague.
Challenged in a public meeting by Friends
of the Earth International Director Ricardo Navarro on the impacts
of World Bank-financed oil, mining and gas projects, Wolfensohn
responded - to the surprise of his staff - that the Bank would
undertake a global review to examine whether Bank involvement
in extractive industries was consistent with its stated aim of
poverty reduction.
Led by Indonesia's former environment
minister Emil Salim - himself a controversial figure in the eyes
of peoples' environmental movements - the EIR process was less
thorough, less independent and less participatory than the WCD
process.
But despite Bank interference, the EIR
report turned out to be a surprisingly strong document. Although
the report did not respond to all the concerns and demands of
peoples' movements and NGOs, it contained strong language and
recommended that the Bank and its private sector arm, the International
Finance Corporation, phase out their involvement in oil, mining
and natural gas within five years and shift their financing to
renewable energy. The report resulted in a strong outcry among
several private financiers (such as Citibank, ABN Amro, WestLB,
Barclays) for whom Bank involvement in the oil, mining and gas
projects is essential before they are willing to extend financing.
As with the WCD report, the World Bank
ignored many of the EIR report's important recommendations. Following
the release of the EIR report, a leaked copy of the World Bank
management's response (prepared on behalf of President Wolfensohn)
flatly rejected the ambitious proposal that the Bank phase out
support for extractive industry by 2008. Ending the financing
of oil projects "would unfairly penalize small and poor countries
that need the revenues from their oil resources to stimulate economic
growth and alleviate poverty," the management report stated.
As an example, the report cited Chad and Cameroon, where the Bank
has financed an oil pipeline despite vociferous opposition by
local communities and environmental groups. The pipeline has been
dogged with controversies about violations of human rights and
environmental standards.
Quizzed about the Bank management's response
to the EIR report at an awards ceremony in Georgetown University
in Washington, D.C. in February 2004, Wolfensohn responded that
he had not seen the management response before it was leaked.
He also claimed that the Bank had an obligation to respond to
those in the process who were not part of the represented consensus
as well. Here too was a repeat of the post-WCD scenario as Wolfensohn
hid behind the "Southern countries" rhetoric: the World
Bank could not make firm commitments to implement recommendations
- such as respecting human rights and ensuring that oil, gas or
mining projects do not go ahead without the free, prior and informed
consent from local indigenous peoples - objected to by Southern
governments.
Though the Bank was an initiator and sponsor
of both the WCD and EIR, it refused to adopt their findings even
in principle, hiding behind the opposition of its larger developing
country clients such as China and India. In late 2004, the World
Bank announced that it will pursue a new framework for addressing
the social and environmental impacts of the projects it finances.
Its "country systems" approach would rely mainly on
borrower governments' social and environmental standards and systems
rather than the Bank's own policies for project implementation.
Thus the Bank is removing the minimal set of standards by which
its commitment to environmental and social sustainability can
be assessed. The new "country systems" approach will
likely let the Bank off the hook from such assessments; now it
can conveniently claim that it is driven by the wishes and needs
of its borrowers rather than its own centralized policies.
Not Feeling So Good
Arguably, the most important lesson to
be learned from the last decade is that the World Bank is much
too large and politically motivated an institution, and is too
central in the structure of U.S.-led global capitalism, to be
changed by a single individual, even one as charismatic and shrewd
as James Wolfensohn. In the last instance, the Bank, like the
IMF, serves as an extension of U.S. corporate and strategic interests.
Wolfensohn could only modify its performance at the margins.
Whatever his personal intentions, Wolfensohn's
institutional role increasingly determined his behavior. And the
increasingly conflictive relationship between him and civil society
came to a boil during the tumultuous World Bank-IMF annual meeting
held in Prague in September 2000, which had to be cut short owing
to massive demonstrations. Confronted with a list of thoroughly
documented charges by NGOs at the famous Prague Castle debate,
Wolfensohn lost his cool, exclaiming, "I and my colleagues
feel good about going to work every day." It was an answer
that was matched only by then-IMF Managing Director Horst Koehler's
equally famous line at the same debate: "I also have a heart,
but I have to use my head in making decisions."
No doubt Wolfensohn's replacement, former
U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, will continue to
feel good as he goes to work every day. The story will surely
be different for the millions of victims of World Bank policies
and projects.
The End of an Illusion
By 2005, efforts towards reform had ground
to a stalemate at both the Bank and the IMF. Perhaps nowhere was
this more evident than in the area of institutional control and
decision-making. In both institutions, voting power depends on
the size of a country's capital contributions. At the World Bank,
the U.S. share is 17.6 percent, above the critical 15 percent
needed to exercise a veto over major lending decisions. At the
IMF, the United States controls 19 percent of the vote, comfortably
above the 15 percent needed to veto vital policy and budgetary
decisions.
Even mild proposals for governance have
very little chance of passing. For instance, Joseph Stiglitz has
proposed that "pending a reexamination of the allocation
of voting, the direct voice of the borrowing countries in the
executive boards of the IFIs [international financial institutions]
be increased, e.g., by establishing two additional seats with
half votes or repackaging constituencies." But in the context
of the IMF and World Bank, such mild palliatives are considered
wild and radical notions.
Given the controversy swirling around
the relevance of the two institutions, one would have thought
that the rich minority would have been willing to do away with
particularly aggravating customs, namely that the head of the
Fund is always a European and that of the Bank must be from the
United States. On two occasions in the last few years, in 2000
and 2004, the European bloc had a chance to make the selection
of the managing director by merit rather than nationality. On
both occasions, Europeans were chosen: the German Horst Koehler
in 2000 and the Spaniard Rodrigo Rato in 2004.
The Europeans were not alone. Washington
had no intention of yielding the position of president of the
World Bank to anybody but an American when James Wolfensohn's
tenure was up. But no one could have expected that the choice
for president would be a man with no experience in development
and who was the very symbol U.S. unilateralism: Paul Wolfowitz,
formerly Bush's deputy secretary of defense. Indeed, Wolfowitz's
appointment signified that the future would belong not to reform
of the IFIs but to a more determined effort to transform them
into compliant instruments of U.S. foreign policy.
Most developing country governments now
view reform of the IFIs as something of a sick joke. In civil
society, the failure of reform has made the demands to abolish
the IMF and World Bank, as well as the World Trade Organization,
no longer seem like rhetorical outbursts of far-left groupings.
What would take the place of the current multilateral agencies
has become a respectable topic even among establishment academics.
No doubt the institutions will limp along in the next few years,
but the damage to their credibility appears to be mortal.
Walden Bello and Shalmali Guttal are members
of the staff of Focus on the Global South, a Bangkok-based analysis
and advocacy institute focusing on issues of trade, development
and security. Many of the themes touched on in this article are
further developed in Bello's most recent book, Dilemmas of Domination:
the Unmaking of the American Empire (New York: Henry Holt and
Company, 2005.
International Monetary Fund (IMF) & World Bank
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