首页
登录
职称英语
The World Bank’s Real Problem The World Bank is undeniably in crisis. Bu
The World Bank’s Real Problem The World Bank is undeniably in crisis. Bu
游客
2024-12-29
6
管理
问题
The World Bank’s Real Problem
The World Bank is undeniably in crisis. But not because its president, Paul Wolfowitz, got his girlfriend a raise.
It is the Wolfowitz saga that has been grabbing all the headlines, of course. The Iraq-war architect was plucked from the Defense Department and deposited by President George W. Bush at the World Bank in 2005 (by tradition, the U.S. President picks the bank’s chief). At the time, Wolfowitz informed the bank’s ethics committee that he was seeing Shaha Riza, a communication adviser at the bank, and the in-house ethicists told him she should be moved to another agency and given a raise for her troubles. But the size of the pay hike (from $133,000 to $180,000, tax free) and other details about Riza’s transfer raised hackles among bank staff and sparked an investigation. The bank’s board will decide any day now whether Wolfowitz stays or goes.
This dragged-out mess, though, is a distraction. The bigger issue is that the Washington-based bank and its sister organization, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), are struggling to justify their continued existence.
The situation is most pressing for the smaller IMF, which pays its bills with the profits it makes by lending money to middle-income countries in financial trouble. With hardly any such countries in trouble these days, the organization is projecting a $224 million deficit for this fiscal year and asking its member nations if they can start selling off some of the gold they deposited with it after World War II (the answer so far: no).
The World Bank isn’t that desperate, but it faces similar pressure. Both organizations were created in 1944 by the soon-to-be-victorious Allied powers. At the time, says Harvard professor and former IMF chief economist Kenneth Rogoff, "global financial markets barely existed, and domestic financial markets barely existed in Europe."
The World Bank’s initial job was to finance reconstruction in Europe. The Marshall Plan rendered that task superfluous, so the bank—in the first of several reinventions—moved on to bankroll development in other countries. The idea was to lend to governments that were creditworthy but had no access to rich-country capital markets. "Now we live in a world where there are huge global capital markets, where, if anything, investors are too willing to invest in developing countries," says Adam Lerrick, a former investment banker who teaches economics at Carnegie Mellon University. The World Bank’s net lending has plummeted over the past few years, even as it keeps shopping loans to the likes of Brazil, Turkey, Russia and China, sometimes on hugely generous terms. This is the work of the biggest part of the World Bank, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. Member countries make deposits (the U.S. share is $2 billion down and $30 billion pledged); the bank sells bonds backed by those deposits and pledges, then lends the money out at a small profit. The other main arm of the World Bank, the International Development Association, gets regular infusions of cash from rich countries and lends funds on near giveaway terms to truly poor countries, mostly in Africa (the U.S. contribution is just under $1 billion a year, or 0.04% of federal spending).
Lerrick wants the World Bank to stop lending to middle-income countries and restructure its loans to the poorest nations as outright grants. Nancy Birdsall, a former World Banker who run a Washington think tank called the Center for Global Development, argues that the bank could have more impact on poverty by making better use of its best assets: the expertise of its staff and its ability to coordinate global action. "Lending and grantmaking at the country level should not be the end-all and be-all," she says. "It should be the vehicle for advice and constant rebuilding of the bank’s knowledge." Birdsall is a World Bank fan but agrees with critics like Lerrick that it must become smaller (it has a staff of 10,000) and less banklike to remain relevant.
Wolfowitz’s allies say he is the victim of backlash from entrenched bank staff upset that he is turning up the heat on an anticorruption campaign begun by his predecessor, James Wolfen-sohn. That’s probably overstating things. But the potential backlash against slashing the bank’s staff and getting it out of lending would surely be epic. Which may explain why no World Bank president, Wolfowitz included, has attempted it. [br] We can infer from the last paragraph that the author was_____the capability of the World Bank to solve its problems.
选项
A、confident in
B、indifferent to
C、optimistic about
D、pessimistic about
答案
D
解析
由最后一段可知,如果世行裁员并取消贷款,将会引来银行员工的强烈不满,因此,包括沃尔福威茨在内没有一位世行总裁敢于尝试这样的做法。由此判断,作者对世行能否解决其当前所面临的问题表现出悲观的态度。故D为正确答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3889652.html
相关试题推荐
Ⅰ.Urbanproblems1)problemstobothdevelopedanddevelopingcountries,like【
Peopledonotanalyzeeveryproblemtheymeet.Sometimestheytrytoremember
Peopledonotanalyzeeveryproblemtheymeet.Sometimestheytrytoremember
Peopledonotanalyzeeveryproblemtheymeet.Sometimestheytrytoremember
SomeProblemsFacingLearnersofEnglishAlthoughmanyEnglishle
SomeProblemsFacingLearnersofEnglishAlthoughmanyEnglishle
SomeProblemsFacingLearnersofEnglishAlthoughmanyEnglishle
SomeProblemsFacingLearnersofEnglishAlthoughmanyEnglishle
SomeProblemsFacingLearnersofEnglishAlthoughmanyEnglishle
Variationsamongstateinsurancelawscancauseproblemsforfamilies.Ifyou
随机试题
Accordingtothereport,peoplefromwhichcountryworkinthelongesthoursaw
A.detrimentalB.disastrousC.economicallyD.erosionE.highlight
Itdoesn’tcomeasasurprisetoyoutorealizethatitmakesnodifference
《红楼梦》共计120回,前80回的作者是曹雪芹,后40回由高鹗完成。Inthis120-chapternovel,ADreamofRedMans
已知矩阵,则A2-2A-2E(其中E为2阶单位矩阵)的特征值是( )A.2,2
对于桁架、薄腹梁等平面外稳定性较差的结构,应设置比设计要求更严密的平面外支撑,以
A.牵牛子苷B.巴豆油C.芫花酯甲D.硫酸钠E.番泻苷A牵牛子发挥泻下作用的主要
(2018年真题)未经国务院期货监督管理机构审核并报国务院批准,期货交易所不得从
人民检察院审查批准逮捕时,应当讯问犯罪嫌疑人的情形有哪些?()A.对是否符
管理人不能依法、公正执行职务或者有其他不能胜任职务情形的,有关主体可以申请人民法
最新回复
(
0
)