1.The
Development Committee met today, October 12, 2013, in Washington DC.
2.Latest signs
of recovery among developed economies, encouraging as they are, remain uneven,
and the growth of some emerging economies is slowing. Addressing increased
volatility and achieving strong, balanced, and sustainable global growth, will
continue to require appropriate policy responses and reforms in countries of
all income levels. The World Bank Group (WBG) and the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) must remain vigilant to the emergence of new sources of
volatility and downside risks. We welcome the intensified focus of the IMF on
growth and job creation, as well as on the analysis of risks and
vulnerabilities and the assessment of the global impact of policy changes in
systemically important countries. Safeguarding and further building on the
openness and fairness of the international trading system remains vital to
global growth and in this context we look forward to progress at the World
Trade Organization’s upcoming Bali Ministerial Conference.
3.Tremendous
progress over the last two decades has reshaped the development landscape. It
has created new opportunities to help reduce poverty and promote shared
prosperity, but it has also introduced new risks to sustaining progress.
Although the global poverty rate has fallen by half since 1990, progress within
the developing world has been highly uneven. Roughly half of the low income
countries are classified as Fragile and Conflict-Affected Situations (FCS),
which pose particular challenges and are home to a growing share of the world’s
extreme poor.
4.In many
developing countries, growth has been accompanied by rising inequality.
Transitioning to middle-income status does not signal the end of poverty, as
the majority of the world’s poor still live in middle income countries. A
lack of sustained progress in building shared prosperity may eventually
obstruct growth by causing instability, distorting incentives and reducing
upward mobility. Job creation, especially for youth and women, and private
sector development are key for inclusive growth.
5.The two ambitious
goals for the WBG, to end extreme poverty by 2030 and promote shared prosperity
in an environmentally, socially and economically sustainable manner, endorsed
at our last meeting, offer an important contribution to the post
2015-agenda. In order to achieve the goals, we strongly endorse the new
WBG Strategy. We welcome the repositioning of the institution as “One World
Bank Group” that works with the public and private sectors in partnership,
contributes to the global development agenda through dialogue and action,
supports clients in delivering customized development solutions, and helps
advance knowledge about what works in development.
6.The WBG
has an important role to play in delivering global development results,
supporting countries with their specific development challenges, and helping
them eradicate poverty and build resilience to future financial, economic,
social, and environmental challenges. We stress the need for a continued strong
client orientation that recognizes the diversity and development needs of
countries. Special attention must be paid to countries and regions with the
highest incidence of poverty, to FCS, as well as to the unique challenges
facing small states. We also reaffirm the crucial role of the WBG in
helping the international community address major global challenges, including
climate change. To achieve maximum impact, the WBG needs to be selective
in its efforts, while collaborating with partner organizations and the private
sector at both national and global levels, and facilitating south-south
cooperation and regional integration in pursuit of its goals.
7.Success
of the Strategy requires effective, timely, and well-managed implementation,
including clear sequencing of reforms and specific metrics for major changes,
as well as regular communication with WBG stakeholders. An evidence-based,
country engagement model; supportive reforms to the WBG’s internal
organization, systems, processes and procedures; human resources and leadership
management in promoting and modeling the needed culture change will be crucial.
We call on the WBG to continue delivering on its mandate during the transition
period and to refine its monitoring and evaluation framework to measure
progress and assess performance, adjust actions and show results to better
satisfy clients’ needs. An updated Corporate Scorecard reflecting the new
Strategy should be in place by our next Spring Meetings.
8.A robust
IDA 17 replenishment, with strong participation from all members, is
fundamental for delivering on the WBG Strategy. Needs and demands among IDA
countries remain high, and we must seek replenishment with the scale, quality
and policy content that will allow IDA to achieve substantial results.
9.We welcome
measures to utilize existing resources better and strengthen the WBG’s
financial capacity to align it with the ambition of its strategy. We call on
the WBG to pursue a finance work program that envisages lifting the growth
trend of revenues, resetting expenditures to a leaner cost base by improving
organizational and operational efficiencies, and better mobilizing internal and
external resources to enhance the WBG’s capacity to deliver more development
assistance while paying due attention to risk. We welcome the WBG work on
innovative approaches to mobilize and catalyze additional long term financing
for infrastructure, which is critical for growth, prosperity and poverty
reduction in emerging and low income countries.
10.We emphasize
the importance of further mainstreaming and strengthening WBG support for
gender equality through better analysis, targeted actions, and more robust
monitoring and evaluation. Gender equality is important, both in its own right
and also as a means of pursuing the overarching goals for poverty reduction and
shared prosperity. We welcome continuing work on updating and renewing the
WBG’s strategy for promoting gender equality and look forward to a progress
report in a year.
11.We commend
the WBG and its staff for their initiatives in fragile situations like the Great
Lakes and the Sahel Region and for their work with refugees in the Middle East.
We also welcome the WBG’s strengthened support to Myanmar after its
reengagement. We call on the WBG to deepen further its commitment in the Sahel
and the Horn of Africa through initiatives that, in coordination with the UN
system, address vulnerability and resilience, and promote economic opportunity
and integration. We welcome renewed WBG support to transformative regional
projects, including for sustainable and affordable energy solutions. We urge
the WBG and IMF to scale up their efforts in the Middle East and North Africa
region, including support for sound economic reform, job creation,
capacity-building programs, and the basic human needs of conflict affected
people as well as mitigation of the impact on neighboring countries.
12.The
next meeting of the Development Committee is scheduled for April 12, 2014, in
Washington DC..
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