Tag: Jim Yong Kim

  • World Bank President Kim quits Feb. 1

    World Bank Group President, Jim Yong Kim, will resign effective from February 1, more than three years ahead of the expiration of his term in 2022, the multilateral lender said on Monday.

    Kim, 59, announced that he will immediately join a firm and focus on increasing infrastructure in developing countries, but the bank did not provide further details.

    Kristalina Georgieva, the World Bank’s chief executive officer, will assume the role of interim president when Kim departs.

    The Korean-born American will leave the role at the end of January, the Washington-based World Bank said in a statement.

    The resignation comes as a surprise, as Kim was voted in for a second five-year term in the role in 2016.

    The World Bank’s main role is to finance projects to fight poverty and its causes around the globe.

    Kim was born on Dec. 8, 1959 and also a Korean-American physician and anthropologist who, serving as the 12th and current President of the World Bank since 2012.

    Read Also: World Bank’s $3m project for Ekiti

    On Jan. 7, he announced that he will be stepping down from his current role as President, effective from Feb. 1, 2019.

    A global health leader, he was formerly the Chair of the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School, and a co-founder and executive director of Partners In Health.

    Kim was named the world’s 50th most powerful person by Forbes Magazine’s List of The World’s Most Powerful People in 2013.

    He was awarded an M.D. at Harvard Medical School in 1991, and a PhD in anthropology at Harvard University in 1993.

    He was among the first enrollees of Harvard’s experimental MD/PhD programme in the social sciences.

    NAN

  • Buhari’s discussion with World Bank chief twisted – Presidency

    Buhari’s discussion with World Bank chief twisted – Presidency

    The Presidency on Friday dismissed reports that President Muhammadu Buhari asked the World Bank to concentrate its Nigeria intervention efforts in the north.

    Reacting to the reports, the President’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, said the World Bank President, Jim Yong Kim’s statement, was deliberately twisted by “those who specialize in such acts.”

    Media reports had quoted Mr. Kim as saying in Washington DC, on Thursday that Buhari requested a concentration of the bank’s intervention efforts in the north.

    Adesina labeled such people “ignorant and mischievous” who are out to make it seem that Buhari’s position was a calculated attempt to give the north an unfair advantage over other parts of Nigeria.

    He said the President, since his inauguration, had been seeking international support for the rebuilding of the North East which was ravaged by years of insurgency.

    He said what Buhari did in calling attention to the plight of the people of the region was what a leader should do.

    He said: “Those who specialize in a deliberate twisting of information have wailed and raged endlessly on the news item credited to the World Bank Group President, Jim Yong Kim, who disclosed in Washington DC, United States of America, that President Muhammadu Buhari had requested a concentration of the bank’s intervention efforts in the northern part of Nigeria, particularly in the North East.

    “The ignorant and mischievous people, who twist everything for their vile purposes, are making it seem that it was a calculated attempt to give the North an unfair advantage over other parts of Nigeria.

    “The truth of the matter is that President Buhari, right from his first week in office in June, 2015, had reached out to the G-7 in Germany that Nigeria needed help to rebuild the North East, which had been terribly devastated by insurgency. He said the country would prefer help in terms of rebuilding of infrastructure, rather than cash donation, which may end up being misappropriated. In concert with governors of the region, a comprehensive list of needed repairs was sent to the G-7 leaders.

    “Also, during a trip to Washington in 2015, and many other engagements that followed, President Buhari sought the help of the World Bank in rebuilding the beleaguered North East, which was then being wrested from the stranglehold of a pernicious insurgency. It was something always done in the open, and which reflected the President’s concern for the region.

    “Those ululating over the disclosure by the President of the World Bank should be a bit reflective, and consider the ravages that the North East has suffered since 2009, when the Boko Haram insurgency started. Schools, hospitals, homes, entire villages, towns, cities, bridges, and other public utilities have been blown up, laid waste, and lives terminated in excess of 20,000, while widows and orphans littered the landscape. The humanitarian crisis was in monumental proportions.

    “President Buhari simply did what a caring leader should do. He took the battle to the insurgents, broke their backs, and then sought for help to rebuild, so that the people could have their lives back. Should that then elicit the negative commentary that has trailed the disclosure from the World Bank? Not at all, except from insidious minds.

    “President Buhari has a pan-Nigerian mandate, and he will discharge his duties and responsibilities in like manner. Any part of the country that requires special attention would receive it, irrespective of primordial affinities, which narrow-minded people have not been able to live above. This President will always work in the best interest of all parts of the country at all times. Let ethnic warriors sheathe their swords.”

     

  • Finance ministers hold talks on growth sustenance – IMF

    Finance ministers hold talks on growth sustenance – IMF

    More than 150 finance ministers across the world are discussing ways to ensure that ongoing economic recovery and growth in their respective countries are sustained, International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director, Christine Lagarde, said on Thursday.

    Nigeria’s Finance Minister, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, is among the ministers in talks with their counterparts across the world on sustained economic growth.

    The IMF projected that Nigeria’s economic growth would rise by 0.8 per cent this year.

    Lagarde, who spoke at the opening news conference of the IMF and World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington, said there was no single country in the world with negative forecast for this year even as the world economy is projected to grow at 3.5 per cent this year.

    “We are finally seeing the global economy picking up the momentum, which will be sustained. We need to ensure that the momentum is sustained and growth shared more equitably. We are discussing how to sustain the momentum with finance ministers. We need to reinvigorate productivity through innovation and trade,” she said.

    World Bank President, Jim Yong Kim, said the global body was encouraged to see stronger economic prospects after years of disappointing global growth.

    He said there are still many downside risks, however, and countries that have the fiscal space need to continue with structural reforms. “This is vital to accelerating the sustainable and inclusive economic growth needed to end extreme poverty by 2030. We are meeting at a time when we face several overlapping crises, both natural and man-made, all of which add urgency to our mission,” he said.

    Kim said there was need to find new and innovative ways to reach the poor, and make the world more secure and stable.

    “Last week at the London School of Economics, I outlined how we are working to change our approach. We have to start by asking whether the private sector can finance a project. If the conditions aren’t right, we will work with our partners to de-risk that project or, if needed, de-risk entire countries or sectors,” the World Bank chief said.

  • Arunma Oteh gets world bank appointment

    Arunma Oteh gets world bank appointment


    Arunma Oteh, former Director-General, Security Exchange Commission (SEC) has been appointed Vice President and Treasurer of the World Bank. The appointment was on Friday confirmed in a press statement issued by Jim Yong Kim, World Bank President of the World Bank. The statement reads: "I am pleased to announce the appointment of Arunma Oteh as VP and Treasurer of the World Bank. Arunma, a Nigerian national, was most recently the Director-General of the Securities and Exchange Commission of Nigeria. Appointed to a five-year term by the President of Nigeria in 2010, she led the transformation of the country’s capital markets industry into a major global presence. She was a member of the Board of the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) and the Chairperson of the Africa Middle East Regional Committee of IOSCO. “Prior to joining the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) of Nigeria, Arunma was Group Vice President, Corporate Services, at the African Development Bank Group (AfDB). In this role, she oversaw a number of departments, including human resources, information and communications technology, and institutional procurement. From 2001 to 2006 she held the role of AfDB Group Treasurer, where she led AfDB’s fundraising and capital market activities across the world. Earlier roles at the AfDB, which she joined in 1992, included trading room management, investment portfolio coverage, and public sector lending. She also held other positions in capital markets and lending during the course of her career at the AfDB. Arunma began her career in 1985 at Centre Point, where she executed debt and equity offerings in the Nigerian capital markets. She earned her Bachelor of Science in Computer Science from the University of Nigeria and her Masters of Business Administration from Harvard University. As VP and Treasurer, Arunma will manage and lead a large and diverse team responsible for managing more than $150 billion in assets. Her top priorities will be to:

    • maintain the World Bank’s global reputation as a prudent and innovative borrower, investor and risk manager;
    • ) manage an extensive client advisory, transaction and asset management business for the Bank;
    • ) engage, in her capacity as one of the World Bank’s key representatives, with outside stakeholders including global private sector financial institutions, the financial media and the sovereign debt and reserve managers in client countries, as well as ratings agencies; and,
    • ) collaborate extensively with the Finance Partners throughout the WBG, including with IFC and MIGA, expanding shared approaches, in particular around innovative financing for development and for key new projects.
    Ms. Oteh was selected to this position through an international competitive search. Her appointment is effective as from September 28, 2015.

  • World Bank calls for pandemic emergency fund

    World Bank calls for pandemic emergency fund

    The President of the World Bank Group, Dr. Jim Yong Kim, has called for the establishment of a new Pandemic Emergency Facility that would rapidly respond to future outbreaks epidemics by delivering money to countries in crisis.
    Kim who spoke in Washington on Friday in Washington DC, in a speech titled, ‘Tackling the Most Difficult Problems: Infrastructure, Ebola and Climate Change’ at the ongoing International Monetary Fund (IMF) World Bank Group meetings, said the move became necessary in the wake of alate, inadequate and slow” global response to the Ebola outbreak.
    He said he would like to develop the proposals for a financial instrument with the United Nations, the IMF and regional development banks.
    He said even as the focus should now be intensely on doing everything possible to stop Ebola, planning must also begin for the next pandemic, which “could spread much more quickly, kill even more people and potentially devastate the global economy”.
    Kim observed that the Bank  has an IMF to coordinate and work with central banks and ministries to respond to financial crises,” but noted that “when it comes to health emergencies, however, our institutional toolbox is empty: There’s no such center of knowledge and skill for response and coordination.”
    He said the Bank Group’s financial teams have proposed several solutions, including the pandemic emergency facility. “The device would pre-package a response, establishing contingent funding agreements with donors and receipt mechanisms for possible recipients. So when a global health emergency is declared, financial support would be readily available and flow quickly to support an immediate response”
    Kim said the Bank’s work on Ebola, including the innovative use of crisis funding to disburse $105 million over nine days in emergency funding, had been informed by its focus over the past two years on climate change.
    He told delegates that the World Bank Group is fully engaged in fighting the global threats posed by both Ebola and climate change, adding that the actions exemplify that the Bank Group wants to become defining that as “an indispensable partner for both low and middle income countries in their efforts to solve their most difficult challenges.”
    He warned that time was running out to find solutions to both the threats posed by climate change and Ebola.
    ” Until very recently, the plans to fight them were either non-existent or inadequate. And inaction is literally killing people – one because of the rapid spread of a deadly virus, the other from the poisoning of the atmosphere and the oceans. And finally, perhaps most critically from our point of view, resolving these problems is essential to development, whether from the perspective of human suffering, economic growth, or public health. “
    He said Bank Group staff from the climate group, plus experts working on urban issues and with the private sector, would meet later today with government officials and corporate CEOs to decide how to turn pledges by governments, companies and investors to put a price on carbon into action.
    Kim also drew attention to the World Bank Group’s work in creating the Global Infrastructure Facility, a global platform to bring together institutional investors, development banks, and public officials to tackle the infrastructure deficit now faced by the developing world, an estimated US$1 trillion to $1.5 trillion.
    Kim praised the work of staff across the institution saying in infrastructure, Ebola and climate change, teams had worked collaboratively and displayed an inspiring commitment to innovation.
    “Their efforts displayed creativity, knowledge, skill, intensity, passion and selflessness. Their sharing of ideas and best practices is precisely the culture we wanted the reorganization to create,” he said.

     

  • World Bank gives $200m Ebola assistance

    World Bank gives $200m Ebola assistance

    The World Bank yesterday announced up to $200 million in emergency assistance to help Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, to contain the spread of the deadly Ebola virus.

    The funding will also help those countries to improve their public health systems and cope with the epidemic’s economic impact, the Washington-based lender said in a statement.

    The countries’ resources and health systems have been strained by the worst outbreak of the virus since its discovery four decades ago.

    Guinea’s economic growth could fall by a full percentage point to 3.5 per cent due to the epidemic, according to the World Bank and International Monetary Fund’s initial assessment.

    “I have been monitoring (Ebola’s) deadly impact around the clock and I’m deeply saddened at how it has ravaged health workers, families and communities, disrupted normal life and has led to a breakdown of already weak health systems in the three countries,” World Bank President Jim Yong Kim said in a statement.

    The global bank said its money would go toward medical supplies, salaries for medical workers and to help communities dealing with the financial hardship caused by the virus.

    Rural workers in the three countries hit with Ebola have fled affected areas, hitting agricultural production, though the food supply has not been affected for now, the bank said.

    The epidemic has also slowed cross-border commerce and grounded flights across the region, leading to lower revenues and financial inflows.

    Mining production could also decline, if more skilled expatriate workers leave the affected regions, the bank said.

    The World Bank’s executive board must still approve the emergency lending. Kim said he would brief the board as soon as possible to seek their approval.

  • Nigeria’s poor

    Nigeria’s poor

    •Material suffering by many Nigerians trumps our GDP status

    In the heat of the euphoria over the rebasing of the Nigerian economy which puts the country at the top spot on the continent at South Africa’s expense, most Nigerians may have missed the import of the other sobering statistics released by the World Bank, which puts Nigeria among the top three countries harbouring the world’s poor. The figures, as released by World Bank President,  Jim Yong Kim, puts Nigeria, with seven percent of the world’s poor, in the third place, behind  India with 33 percent and China with 13 per cent.  Bangladesh, harbouring six per cent of the world’s poor, is fourth while the Democratic Republic of Congo with five per cent is fifth. In-between the five reside 760 million of the world’s poor, of which Nigeria accounts for a frightening 53.2 million – nearly a third of the country’s population.

    No doubt, the findings by the World Bank would merely confirm the reality of the wide chasm between official claims of superlative growth and the reality on the main street. After what was supposed to be a soar-away economic growth that has averaged seven percent in the course of the last decade –this latest testimonial – which suggests that nearly one out of three citizens still lives in extreme poverty goes beyond mere repudiation of government’s pretensions about achievement, what it does is to call for a completely new thinking on how to distribute the so-called gains of economic growth.

    This is where we couldn’t agree more with the World Bank when it posits that: “Countries need to complement efforts to enhance growth with policies that allocate more resources to the extreme poor. These resources can be distributed through the growth process itself, by promoting more inclusive growth, or through government programmes, such as conditional and direct cash transfers”.

    Today, what is no longer in doubt is that the poor are currently hemmed in by forces that only the government can ameliorate. Indeed, we do think that the problems are now of such magnitude that the current growth path, even with the best of results, would not be able to make appreciable dent either in the short or the long run.

    The World Bank chief actually puts the global challenge in perspective when he suggests that “To end extreme poverty, the vast numbers of the poorest – those earning less than $1.25 a day – will have to decrease by 50 million people each year until 2030. This means that one million people each week will have to lift themselves out of poverty for the next 16 years. This will be extraordinarily difficult…”

    For Nigeria’s poor, the challenge would appear even more daunting. At the heart of the challenge is how to lift the mass out of the vicious grip of poverty through the widening of economic opportunities, better access to qualitative education, quality health care, cheap and affordable housing and public transportation.

    We see the World Bank report as a call to arms. Needed at this time are practical and sustainable programmes to reduce the number of the poor. Good enough, states like Ekiti and Osun – with their provision of stipends to the elderly – have offered the nation a template of the possibilities. Other states should borrow a leaf.

    In the long run, the challenge is to get the economy revving at full throttle to create opportunities for employment and wealth creation. It is unflattering that an economy which claims to rank first on the continent and in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), has remained an investors’ nightmare – going by 2013 World Bank’s Doing Business Report ranking the economy 147 out of 189 nations; this is even when South Africa is ranked 41, Tunisia 51, Botswana 56, and Ghana 67.

  • Private sector creates jobs, says World Bank

    Private sector creates jobs, says World Bank

    World Bank report has said an active private sector is key to creating jobs for the population. The bank has also outlined how jobs that do the most for development can spur a virtuous cycle.

    The report, contained in the World Development Report 2013, explained that poverty falls as people work their way out of hardship and as jobs empower women to invest more in their children. “Efficiency increases as workers get better at what they do, as more productive jobs appear, and as less productive ones disappear. Societies flourish as jobs foster diversity and provide alternatives to conflict,” the bank said in an emailed report.

    World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim said a good job can change a person’s life, and the right jobs can transform entire societies, adding that governments need to move jobs to center stage to promote prosperity and fight poverty.

    “It’s critical that governments work well with private sector, which accounts for 90 per cent of all jobs. Therefore, we need to find the best ways to help small firms and farms grow,” he said.