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World Bank chief warns of funding constraints
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 02 - 10 - 2009


World Bank president Robert Zoellick
warned Friday that the international lender could find
money running tight within a year if crisis-driven demands
on its funding keep up at their record pace and the richer
countries fail to stump up more cash, according to AP.
Speaking to reporters before the start of annual meetings
of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund annual
meeting here, Zoellick said the World Bank deployed a
record $33 billion in its fiscal year to June 2009 and is
already on course to lend a further $40 billion this year.
At present, the World Bank has $100 billion to lend to
middle-income countries _ the poorest countries get lending
from the World Bank by different means and at different
rates. If, and when, that money runs dry, the Bank may have
to resort to rationing.
«By the middle of next year, we will start to face
serious constraints,» he said. «We are seeing, as we look
into 2011, that we'll go through that $100 billion and
probably beyond.»
He said that the World Bank would be a worthy recipient of
funds as it had entered the financial crisis in a
well-capitalized position and was implementing reforms to
make it more efficient and more self-sufficient, such as
increasing the interest rate on loans and increasing the
voice of develping countries. The Group of 20 rich and
developing countries agreed last week to to increase the
share of developing countries in the World Bank by at least
3 percentage points by early next year to 47 percent.
«I think we have a good case to make,» said Zoellick.
«We have the ability for another strong year, but our
shareholders, both developed and developing countries, are
going to have to calculate how close they want to run us to
the edge in terms of being able to support developing
countries given an uncertain year in 2010.»
The World Bank seeks to help poor and developing countries
with low-interest loans, interest-free credits and grants
to pay for investments in education, health care,
infrastructure, agriculture and natural resources
management.
The pressures on the World Bank have escalated as the
financial crisis and the ensuing global recession hit
developing countries particularly hard. Prices of
commodities such as oil and metals _ often their economic
mainstay _ fell and trade slumped.
Those pressures are evident in the money that the bank is
burning through. In the fiscal year to June 2008, it handed
out some $13.5 billion _ in one week in September 2009
alone, loans totaled just over $7 billion, including a $4.4
billion set of loans to India.
Zoellick said he will be arguing that it is to the benefit
of the more advanced economies to provide the World Bank
with more resources, even though their budgets are strapped
as tax revenues have collapsed during the recession and
spending has increased on stimulus packages and higher
welfare payments.
«This is not a question of charity, it a question of
self-interest in that everybody is wondering where the
means will come from to make a stronger recovery,» he
said.
He said developing countries have room to expand domestic
demand and replace likely lower levels of consumption in
the U.S. «if they get the resources.»
Zoellick said talks are «well-advanced» with the
organization's 186 countries on a possible capital increase
of $100 billion over the next three years.
Elsewhere, the World Bank's chief warned that the major
danger in the world at the moment is that the fledgling
recovery reduces global cooperation and the need for
reform, particularly in the financial sector.
«The danger today is not one of a collapsing economy,
it's one of complacency,» he said.


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