Bill Gates, Co-Chair
of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, joined top development and finance
leaders in a conversation on a new vision for financing development at the
Spring Meetings in Washington D.C.
Panelists included Jim
Yong Kim, President of the World Bank Group; Justine Greening, UK Secretary of
State for International Development; Ghana’s Minister of Finance and Economic
Planning, Seth Terkper; and Raghuram Rajan, Governor of the Reserve Bank of
India.
Mr. Terkper’s
contribution focused on domestic revenue mobilization and leveraging
international financing for emerging economies to drive entrepreneurship and
job creation.
He particularly wants the World Bank’s financial
inclusion agenda to take into consideration the capacity of the mobile
telephony and microfinance businesses to grow the small and medium enterprises.
“We are moving to a point where mobile money is not
merely a transfer but because money is held in the pocket books – they are moving
towards a savings approach – and therefore the central bank is stepping in,
working with the mobile companies and the microfinance companies which are entrepreneurial
entities and are spread all over,” Mr. Terkper stated. “What we need from the
support perspective from institutions like the World Bank is to build a
platform for supervision so that you do not experience charlatans coming into
the field”.
The conversation focused
on reshaping the development landscape and a vision for delivering a world free
of extreme poverty where there is opportunity for all.
For Jim
Yong Kim,
the game changer is to double the IDA financing to 100billion dollars. The
International Development Association (IDA) is a financial institution offering
concessional loans and grants to the world’s poorest developing countries.
The World Bank President, however, expects governments in
low-income economies to drift towards borrowing to invest in health and
education, instead of their fixation to infrastructure development.
“We hear often from countries that they don’t want to
take World Bank loans and invest in soft things like health and education; they
want to invest in hard things like roads and bridges…but one thing you can
count on is human capital and it’s still very difficult to make a case despite
all the studies that are now available that show that health and education are
critical to, at least, medium and to certainly long term economic growth,” said
Mr. Yong Kim.
The concern for the
global financial institutions is how to continue to build on the progress made whilst
ensuring the gains are not eroded away by the current challenges.
The UK’s Justine
Greening observed that the broader global economic challenges are going to make
life for emerging economies in particular more challenging.
She is however emphatic on the need to tackle
corruption, which she believes deprives poor people of the benefit to
development support.
One means to tackle corruption, according to Governor Raghuram Rajan, is to improve
access to opportunities, especially access to finance.
World leaders, last
year, adopted a bold set of global goals to end extreme poverty and create a
more sustainable, prosperous world – under the Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs).
However, the world’s development
structures and their financial supports are under increasing pressure and
facing strong headwinds in the shape of a challenging global economy, rising
inequality, conflict and fragility as well as natural disasters and pandemics.
Bill Gates says there are great examples in poor
countries indicating that by adopting the right methodologies and using expertise
conditionality can help drive best practices faster.
“If we have the best tax systems, the best primary
healthcare systems, the best educational system of countries at every level of
income, adopted by others, then this development game will proceed very quickly”
he stated.
Story by Kofi Adu Domfeh/Washington DC
Listen to audio report...
https://soundcloud.com/kofi-adu-domfeh-1/new-vision-for-financing-development
Listen to audio report...
https://soundcloud.com/kofi-adu-domfeh-1/new-vision-for-financing-development
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