Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, nominated for the top
job at World Bank, yesterday, faced a 25-man panel for an interview for
the top job at the bank.
She listed issues she would address at the bank to include job creation and poverty alleviation.
According to Okonjo-Iweala, during the years of her service at the
bank, she compiled a list of 11 major issues she said she found most
frustrating about the way the institution works and which she shared
with the bank’s board during her interview.
Top on the list of her “frustrations” was the lack of data to take
decisions on poverty reduction in low-income countries. She said:
“There’s a big gap there, we’ve not done enough. We haven’t come with
instruments to deal with regional integration. Why? Is that beyond what
we can think of?
“There are things that really frustrate me…You have to have the
courage to say: look, certain things that we’ve always made this way,
they have to go. The president has to be a leader, to have the vision,
to have the courage. It takes a lot of courage…You know the bank has
been around 60 years, there’s quite a bit of inertia.”
A group of 39 former World Bank officials, in a letter sent to bank
members last week, said they supported the Nigerian economist’s
candidacy because she has “deep experience in international and national
issues of economic management.”
Okonjo-Iweala said her vision for leading the World
Bank was influenced by her life story of growing up in a village in
Nigeria and her experiences as an international economist.
According to her, “it is not good enough to say you know about poverty. You have to live it.”
As head of the World Bank, Okonjo-Iweala said she would focus on job
creation, which was a problem facing rich and poor countries alike,
adding: “Across the globe, policy makers are grappling with one problem,
and that is the problem of job creation. I have yet to meet a single
poor person who did not want the dignity of a job.”
She said her experience as finance minister and as managing director
of the World Bank gave her unique insights into the complex problems
facing emerging markets and developing countries in Asia, Africa and the
Middle East.
Frustrating issues at the bank
She said the World Bank should also focus more on helping developing
countries build roads, railway systems and power grids to help their
economies grow, and it should invest more in education, health and
gender issues. Okonjo-Iweala noted that complex global problems facing
developing countries required a World Bank that could respond quickly
and creatively to the needs of the poor.
She said: “We need a Rolodex of experts that we can call on very
fast. The bank needs to be fast in delivering knowledge. Middle-income
countries are no longer willing to wait when they need a question
answered.”
While working at the World Bank, Okonjo-Iweala said she compiled a
list of 11 issues that frustrated her the most about the institution,
which she shared with the board during her interview, yesterday. On her
list of frustrations was the lack of data to make vital decisions on
poverty reduction in low-income countries.
US should break long tradition
She said the United States should take the lead and break the long tradition of an American always heading the World Bank.
After a “marathon” three-and-a-half-hour interview by the World Bank
board, Okonjo-Iweala said the decision on who leads the global
development institution should go to the candidate with the best skills
for the job.
During her interview with the board, Okonjo-Iweala said she did not
ask for the support of countries but pressed them to ensure that the
selection process was open and merit based.
Under an informal agreement between the United States and Europe, an
American has always headed the World Bank and a European has led the
International Monetary Fund, IMF, since their founding after World War
II. Rising economic powers such as China, India and Brazil have called
for an end to the long-standing tradition and are demanding more
influence in global finance institutions.
Okonjo-Iweala, who left a top post at the World Bank last year for a
second stint as Nigeria’s finance minister, is up against former
Colombian Finance Minister Jose Antonio Ocampo and US nominee
Korean-American health expert Jim Yong Kim. Ocampo and Kim were set to
be interviewed by the 25-member World Bank board yesterday and today
respectively.
It is the first time that candidates from developing countries have
challenged Washington for the top post. “Somebody has to break this”
agreement, Okonjo-Iweala told an event hosted by the Centre for Global
Development and Washington Post. “Therefore, who is the leader in this world? The US is looked on for that leadership,” she added.
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