What happened in Rome: New rules on IFAD president’s pay

Kanayo Nwanze, president of the International Fund for Agricultural Development. Photo by: ILRI / Sewunet / CC BY-NC-SA

The International Fund for Agricultural Development passed its 2013 budget on Thursday — and laid down the law on how much its president can earn.

The IFAD governing council approved a resolution on the president’s emoluments on Feb. 14, the last day of its annual meeting in Rome. It came on the heels of Kanayo Nwanze’s re-election as head of the fund.

Nwanze found himself in the middle of a controversy in 2010 over his salary and benefits package. Italian news reports indicated at the time that the government had planned to cut financing to IFAD’s annual meeting due to his allegedly bloated expenses. IFAD later came out with a statement justifying Nwanze’s compensation.

IFAD’s new rules suggest that:

Other highlights of the IFAD annual meeting’s last day:

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