World Bank chief Kim heads for 2nd term
World Bank President Jim Yong Kim effectively won a second
five-year term after nominations to lead the global development bank closed
Wednesday with no other candidates proposed.
The World Bank executive board said in a statement that,
following official procedures, it would formally meet with Kim as a candidate
“with the expectation of completing the selection process by the 2016 Annual
Meetings,” which take place on October 7-9.
Kim, 56, a Korean-American medical doctor who has focused
the World Bank on programs to reduce extreme poverty, earned solid backing for
a second term from the United States, France, Germany, China, and other major
shareholders of the bank.
But as with his first nomination in 2012, the bank was
criticized from inside and outside for not truly opening the selection process
to all comers and not managing it in a fully transparent mode.
Following an unwritten rule, since the World Bank was created
in the wake of World War II to help rebuild the global economy, its leader has
always been an American chosen by Washington.
In 2012, Kim did face competition when Nigerian Finance
Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala also contended for the presidency.
But no rivals surfaced during the three-week nomination
period this time around, leaving Kim virtually assured of continuing in the job
when his first term ends on June 30, 2017.
In an open letter in August, the 15,000 member World Bank
Group Staff Association called for a more open and focused search and selection
process that did not repeat “decades of backroom deals which, 12 times in a
row, selected an American male.”
Kim’s first term has been marked by his campaign to
eradicate extreme poverty by 2030; the bank’s leadership in a 2014 campaign to
halt the deadly outbreak of Ebola in West Africa; and its initial resistance
to, and then tentative partnership with, the China-created rival Asian
Infrastructure Bank.
But he has also faced rebellion from within the
Washington-based bank over an ambitious and still-incomplete restructuring of
how the huge organization manages its poverty-fighting and development
programs. Lending for those programs is expected to hit $46 billion this year.
In an employee survey, staff have reported feeling detached
from senior management and unsure of the direction of policy.
“Only one in three understand where the senior management
team is leading us,” the Staff Association said in its letter.
“Even fewer believe that our senior management creates a
culture of openness and trust.”
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