Does it matter who runs the World Bank?

EDITOR’S NOTE: Yes, it does, says Nancy Birdsall of the Center for Global Development. Birdsall explains why in this article from her Global Development: Views from the Center blog.

With Robert Zoellick’s announcement that he will step down from the World Bank presidency at the end of June, now comes the question of who his successor will be, particularly whether it will be an American.  Just a few days ago I commented on the awkwardness of the situation for the White House. The White House has committed in international fora to an open, merit-based, transparent process, but domestic politics (including some would argue continued support for the World Bank from the Congress) dictates  that it make every possible effort to place an American once again in that office.

It does matter who runs the World Bank and how she or he arrives there.  Why?

First,  the president of the bank has immense power. The bank is big and complicated (more than 10,000 staff in Washington and 130 countries around the world, and an annual administrative budget of about $2 billion).  It houses impressive technical and financial resources. Last  year it disbursed more than $20 billion in loans and grants; in 2009 when a global recession loomed the bank disbursed about $45 billion in response to G-20 calls for a global liquidity push.  On one hand the bank’s size and decentralized structure make it hard to manage; it is famously, unlike the orderly IMF, full of upstarts and entrepreneurs at the staff level.  On the other hand, the bank is a highly merit-based, performance-based bureaucracy.  The staff respond to a fault to the priorities a president sets. Moreover the bank’s governance structure gives most of the “do” power to management; the large resident Board can at best slow things down – and because the president chairs it, the Board has minimal formal ability to hold management accountable.

Second, it matters who runs the bank because the world has big problems the bank can help to address, and big opportunities the bank can advance.  In a 2006 in CGD report, we outlined five tasks for the then-incoming president (who turned out to be Paul Wolfowitz).  To a large extent, despite Zoellick’s impressive performance in calming the waters and putting the bank back on course in the last five years, he did not manage to steer the bank in the new direction those five tasks represent.  Let me mention three of them.

Bottom line: The World Bank president has a near-monopoly on “do” power.  A person with vision and a commitment to the institution’s missions can use that monopoly to corral the member governments and inspire the management and staff to do what should be done.  Without that leadership, the bank may stay pretty much stuck in the 20th century – when what the world needs is for it to move on. It matters a lot who runs the bank and it will matter for her or his legitimacy that the selection process be as open, merit-based and competitive as politics will allow.

Republished with permission from the Center for Global Development. View original article.