Emerging Nations Plan Their Own World Bank, IMF
Fed up with U.S. dominance of the global financial system, five emerging
market powers this week will launch their own versions of the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa —the so-called BRICS
countries — are seeking "alternatives to the existing world order," said
Harold Trinkunas, director of the Latin America Initiative at the
Brookings Institution.
At a summit Tuesday through Thursday in Brazil, the five countries will
unveil a $100 billion fund to fight financial crises, their version of
the IMF. They will also launch a World Bank alternative, a new bank that
will make loans for infrastructure projects across the developing
world.
The five countries will invest equally in the lender, tentatively called
the New Development Bank. Other countries may join later.
The BRICS powers are still jousting over the location of the bank's
headquarters — Shanghai, Moscow, New Delhi or Johannesburg. The
headquarters skirmish is part of a larger struggle to keep China, the
world's second-biggest economy, from dominating the new bank the way the
United States has dominated the World Bank.
The bloc comprises countries with vastly different economies, foreign
policy aims and political systems — from India's raucous democracy to
China's one-party state.
Whatever their differences, the BRICS countries have a shared desire for
a bigger voice in global economic policy. Each has had painful
experiences with Western financial dominance: They've contended with
economic sanctions imposed by Western powers. Or they've been forced to
make painful budget cuts and meet other strict conditions to qualify for
emergency IMF loans.
Now, says Thomas Wright, a fellow at Brookings' Project on International
Order and Strategy, "they want a safety net if they fall out with the
West."
Developing countries have also been frustrated because the U.S. Congress
has refused to approve legislation providing extra money to help the
IMF make more loans to countries in trouble. The money is part of a
broader reform program that would give China and other developing
countries more voting power at the IMF.
Uri Dadush, an economist with the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, sees no problem with the BRICS countries' development bank and
financial crisis fund. But he worries that the five countries' decision
to go outside of existing institutions provides more evidence of the
"fracturing of the postwar (economic) system that gave us so much peace
and prosperity. The system has not been able to adapt to the new
reality, the rise of the new powers."
The IMF and the World Bank seem to be taking the new challengers in stride.
"All initiatives that seek to strengthen the network of multilateral
lending institutions and increase the available financing for
development and infrastructure are welcome," said IMF spokeswoman Conny
Lotze. "What is important is that any new institutions complement the
existing ones."
Answering a question about the BRICS development bank earlier this
month, World Bank President Jim Kim said: "We welcome any new
organizations ... We think that the need for new investments in
infrastructure is massive, and we think that we can work very well and
cooperatively with any of these new banks once they become a reality."
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