How the World Bank will fight corruption

World Bank President Jim Yong Kim at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C. Photo by: CSIS / CC BY-SA

Jim Yong Kim is eager to crack down on corruption — and in a speech on Thursday, the World Bank president outlined some of his ideas on how to do it.

Rooting out corruption has been a priority since Jim Wolfensohn, the bank’s president at the time, decried the “cancer of corruption” in a 1996 speech. In his remarks on Jan. 30 before the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, Kim said his predecessor’s words “resonate every bit as strongly today as when they were first uttered 16 years ago.”

Based on his speech, Kim spelled out how the bank will help address corruption during his tenure, which are all in line with the governance and anti-corruption strategy unanimously endorsed by the board in March 2012:

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