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STATEMENTS of EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS and
PRESIDENT WOLFOWITZ
Washington, May 17, 2007
STATEMENT OF EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS
Over
the last three days we have considered carefully the report of the ad
hoc group, the associated documents, and the submissions and
presentations of Mr. Wolfowitz. Our deliberations were greatly assisted
by our discussion with Mr Wolfowitz.
He assured us that he acted ethically and in good faith in what he
believed were the best interests of the institution, and we accept
that. We also accept that others involved acted ethically and in good
faith. At the same time, it is clear from this material that a number
of mistakes were made by a number of individuals in handling the matter
under consideration, and that the Bank’s systems did not prove robust to
the strain under which they were placed. One conclusion we draw from
this is the need to review the governance framework of the World Bank
Group, including the role as well as procedural and other aspects of the
Ethics Committee. The Executive Directors accept Mr. Wolfowitz’s
decision to resign as President of the World Bank Group, effective end
of the fiscal year (June 30, 2007). The Board will start the nomination
process for a new President immediately.
We are
grateful to Mr. Wolfowitz for his service at the Bank. Much has been
achieved in the last two years, including the Multilateral Debt Relief
Initiative, the Clean Energy Investment Framework, the Africa Action
Plan, and the Avian Flu Initiative. 2006 was a record year for IDA
lending, especially in Africa. The Bank has launched emergency action
programmes in Liberia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the
Central African Republic, and played a key role in the Lebanon and
Afghanistan donors conference. In March, after an unprecedented global
consultation process, we adopted a new strategy for the Bank’s work on
Governance and Anti-Corruption. And we have new strategies for Rapid
Response in Fragile States, for the Health Sector and for the Financial
Sector. We thank Mr Wolfowitz for his leadership and for championing
the Bank’s work across so many areas.
It is
regrettable that these achievements have been overshadowed by recent
events. Mr Wolfowitz has stressed his deep support for and attachment
to the World Bank and his responsibility, as its President, to act at
all stages in the best interests of the institution. This sense of duty
and responsibility has led him to his announcement today. We thank him
for this and underscore our appreciation for his commitment to
development and his continuing support for the World Bank and its
mission.
STATEMENT OF PAUL
WOLFOWITZ
I
am pleased that after reviewing all the evidence the Executive Directors
of the World Bank Group have accepted my assurance that I acted
ethically and in good faith in what I believed were the best interests
of the institution, including protecting the rights of a valued staff
member.
The poorest people
of the world, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa deserve the very best
that we can deliver. Now it is necessary to find a way to move
forward.
To do that, I have
concluded that it is in the best interests of those whom this
institution serves for that mission to be carried forward under new
leadership. Therefore, I am announcing today that I will resign as
President of the World Bank Group effective at the end of the fiscal
year (June 30, 2007).
The World Bank Group
is a critical institution with a noble mission, that of enabling the
world’s poor – and particularly the more than a billion men, women and
children who struggle to survive on less than a dollar a day – to escape
the shackles of poverty. I have had the privilege of visiting World
Bank Group staff and programs in some 25 developing countries in the
last two years. I’ve had a chance to see with my own eyes and hear with
my own ears how eager people are to work hard if they have a chance for
a good job, how excited children are to have a chance for the first time
to go to school, and how willing parents are to sacrifice so that their
children can have a better future.
It has been truly
inspirational to be able to help them achieve their goals and it is a
privilege for all of us in the World Bank Group to have a chance, every
day that we come to work, to make a difference in the lives of those who
are less fortunate. I am grateful to have enjoyed that privilege for
nearly two years and I am proud of what we have accomplished together as
a team.
We provided record
levels of support last year to the poorest countries of the world, $9.5
billion, through the International Development Agency (IDA) and we are
headed to a new record this year. Half of that support is going to
Sub-Saharan African countries, also setting new records;
-
We are
further increasing support to the poorest countries through the
Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative completed last year which
canceled $38 billion of debt owed by the HIPC countries to IDA,
along with specific commitments by the IDA donors to provide
additional support to make up for the lost reflows to IDA on a
dollar-for-dollar basis;
-
And
last year we transferred a record amount of Bank Group income, $950
million, to IDA, including the first‑ever transfer from the IFC to
IDA;
We have not only increased the quantity
of resources available to the poorest countries through IDA, we are also
making those resources more effective, and we are providing greater
assurance to donors that they are being used properly:
·
By helping developing countries
strengthen systems of governance and supporting their efforts to fight
corruption and to recover stolen assets;
·
By placing greater emphasis on
measuring the results our support is producing, although much more work
needs to be done in this area; and
·
By strengthening cooperation among
donors, and particularly among the Multilateral Development Banks in
such areas as fighting corruption and averting unsustainable debt
burdens;
We have also strengthened our work
significantly in a number of important specific sectors, particularly:
·
Infrastructure – which was a major
concern of the Finance Ministers from Africa when I first met with them
two years ago;
·
Combating malaria, a preventable
disease that is killing 3,000 people a day, most of them children and
most of them in Sub-Saharan Africa. In the last 18 months we have
approved over $360 million in assistance for anti-malaria programs
compared to $50 million in the first five years of this decade.
·
Here, too, we are emphasizing quality
as well as quantity, pressing the development of a “malaria scorecard”
to track results and effectively coordinate the work of the many donors
so that gaps can be identified and filled.
Some of the work which has been most
inspiring to me has been the Bank Group’s response to countries emerging
from conflict, countries with new leadership which urgently need
assistance to consolidate peace and jumpstart recovery:
·
We have responded with unprecedented
speed to help fragile states with new leadership, such as Liberia, the
Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo;
·
We have adopted a new Rapid Response
and Fragile States policy to enable us to move faster in situations with
new opportunity and to encourage more of our staff to work in fragile
states.
·
We have helped lead successful donor
conferences for many post-conflict countries, including Afghanistan,
Lebanon and Liberia.
Our work is important, however, to more
than just the poorest countries. Indeed, the majority of the world’s
poor live in the more successful developing countries, our partners in
middle income countries, which borrow from the IBRD.
·
These countries still seek help to deal
with their large challenges to fight poverty and preserve their
environment, but the World Bank Group needs to be increasingly
innovative and flexible if we are to be useful to these countries which
are already highly sophisticated and have access to many other sources
of funds. To do that we developed a new “Middle Income Country
Strategy” last year and we are working hard on implementing it.
Some of our most important work has
been strengthening the development of the private sector, which is the
most important source of the growth and jobs that people need to escape
poverty:
·
The International Finance Corporation,
which works with the private sector, has been setting impressive
records, including $8 billion in new commitments this year.
·
What should inspire us even more than
the numbers is the greatly increased emphasis the IFC is placing on the
development impact of their work and on expansion into “frontier
markets.” Indeed, Africa is the fastest growing region for IFC work – a
five-fold increase in five years – and the IFC has greatly expanded its
field staff in Africa.
·
Perhaps most of all, I am proud of the
innovative work the IFC is doing, through the “Doing Business” report,
to help developing countries identify the obstacles to private sector
growth and I have been delighted at how eager many governments have been
to remove those obstacles once we help identify them.
This is not an exhaustive description
of the work of the World Bank Group – or even just the part that I have
been involved in – but I need to mention one more thing: the importance
of the World Bank partnership with the developed countries to promote
sustainable global development:
·
The Bank helps rich countries carry out
their obligation and their interest to help the world’s poor.
·
We support the interest of the
developed countries to mobilize global resources for common purposes,
such as containing the spread of Avian flu – where the Bank has played a
leadership role – or to preserving the planet’s environmental heritage,
as we are doing in Brazil and the DRC, by supporting Amazon Basin and
Congo River Basin initiatives.
·
Most important of all has been the
Bank’s development of the Clean Energy Investment Framework which we
were first asked to do by the Gleneagles Summit of the G-8 in July
2005. As the world mobilizes resources to diversify energy sources,
reduce carbon emissions, avoid deforestation and help countries deal
with the effects of climate change, most of those resources have to come
from the developed countries. The most productive place to invest them
will often be in developing countries. The World Bank Group has been
and continues to be in a unique position to facilitate those investment
flows and the Global Environment Facility and the Clean Energy
Investment Framework form the foundation on which the Bank Group can
build.
All of that work –
and much more – is only possible because of the dedicated efforts of
very hard‑working staff. I am particularly impressed by our staff in
country offices, including remarkable local staff members, many of whom
face daily risks to their health and security in order to help the poor
whom we strive to serve. They too have been treated unfairly by much of
the press coverage of the past weeks and they deserve better. I hope
that can happen now.
I have
made many strong appointments both from inside and outside the Bank of
which I am personally proud. My Senior Management Team is an
exceptional group of talented managers and devoted international public
servants who it has been an honor to have as friends and colleagues.
But, I
am particularly proud to have appointed two African women as
Vice-Presidents in key positions, each of them a former cabinet minister
with real world experience in solving problems in democratically elected
Sub-Saharan governments. Only when African voices with African
experiences are fully empowered at the Bank, will the Bank be seen as a
center for solutions in that part of the world. We need senior leaders
who have real-world experience in tackling the toughest challenges in
the poorest countries.
I am also grateful
for the dedicated professionalism of the many staff throughout the World
Bank Group who have stayed focused on their work during the recent
controversy. In the month of April alone, they delivered nearly $1
billion of support for Africa, an innovative new strategy for Bank work
in the health sector, and a strategy for Bank Group support for
financial sector work in developing countries, and much more. I am
particularly grateful to the entire staff of the President’s office who
have given me such strong professional support throughout the last two
years and particularly during the last month.
It is inspiring to
work with people like those and I will miss them.
Finally, I want to
say a special word of thanks to the many people inside and outside the
Bank who have publicly or privately expressed their support for me and
asked me to stay. One of the most moving was a phone call I received
from the democratically elected President of a Sub-Saharan African
country. It was a private call so I will not quote him by name. But he
thanked me for doing so much, in his words, to make the World Bank an
institution “that listens, that cares, that understands and that takes
action.” If that is true, and if I have “touched the hearts of
Africans,” as he told me, then the last two years have been worth it.
I hope I can
continue working with him and with the many other Africans, official and
non-official, who have been such an inspiration to me – although I will
have to find other ways to do so. They are the ones who have convinced
me that Africa has a real chance to turn a corner and join the progress
that we have seen in many other parts of the developing world in recent
decades. It is those Africans who are stepping up – often at great
personal sacrifice and even risk, to bring peace, good governance and
sound policies to their countries that are the reason for hope. They
deserve all the support that the World Bank Group can give them and I
hope they get it.
The next President
will have my full support. Hopefully the difficulties of the last few
weeks can actually strengthen the Bank by identifying some of the areas
of governance and human resource management where reform is needed.
Change should not be
feared, it is something to welcome. It is the key to keeping this
important institution relevant and effective in the future and meeting
the needs of the world’s poor, and of humanity as a whole. |