When World Bank President Robert Zoellick announced that he would step down at the end of his five-year term in June, calls were made for his successor to be selected based on merit this time, rather than on nationality, as has been the custom for the past 68 years.
Whereas the International Monetary Fund’s Managing Director has always been a European, the World Bank’s President has always been an American. Though the U.S. is indeed the institution’s biggest funder and largest shareholder, its finances are paid by taxpayers around the world.
The moment Zoellick made his announcement last January, the Obama Administration indicated it had every intention of inserting an American as the new President. At a briefing on Feb. 21 , State Dept. Spokesperson Victoria Nuland stated, “Our expectation is that we will nominate a strong American candidate and we will put our full backing behind that person.”
After Nuland ruled out Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as a possible successor, several other top contenders’ names have been floated around.
These include Former Obama Economic Adviser and former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Susan Rice (who has also been rumored to be Clinton’s likely replacement as Secretary of State), PepsiCo Inc CEO Indra Nooyi, and Sen. John Kerry (note: his spokesperson said he was not interested, and had never even been contacted about it).
If Rice does in fact have her eyes on State, this would leave Summers and Nooyi as two ‘short-listed’ contenders. The Chicago Tribune listed the pros and cons of Summers and Nooyi:
Lawrence Summers:
Sources within the World Bank and the Obama administration said that while Summers has excellent credentials, he also has political baggage.
While president of Harvard University, he created a firestorm by suggesting women may have a lower aptitude for science and engineering. He is also remembered for a memo he wrote in 1991 when he was the World Bank’s top economist that laid out the economic logic of dumping toxic waste in developing countries.
By selecting Summers, Obama “would have to use political capital” with his liberal base and women’s groups, the source with knowledge of the administration’s thinking said.
Indra Nooyi:
Nooyi, the Indian-born chief executive of PepsiCo, has been under pressure from investors for a stagnating stock price. She recently laid out a plan to turn around the company’s North American soft drink business and took responsibility for management missteps. PepsiCo spokesman Peter Land declined to comment on whether she would be interested in the World Bank job.
If Obama chose a woman, he would be breaking the mold for a job that has always been held by a white male, a move that could garner support from developing nations.
But as the White House vets its candidates, it is facing international pressure to democratize the selection process. The fastest emerging economies, including China, Russia, India, Brazil, and S. Africa have coalesced to end this 70 year old passport-as-determining-factor tradition.
They were so appalled at how Europe arrogantly moved to replace the IMF head last year with one of its own, despite pleas to open the process, that they have responded more forcefully this time with Zoellick’s announcement. They have every intention of nominating some stellar candidates of their own to fill the impending vacancy.
Well, one American Economist, Jeffrey Sachs, who is director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University and serves as Adviser to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, has helped to make this a true contest. He has thrown his hat into the ring, albeit his nomination didn’t come from the U.S. He has been nominated by Kenya, Malaysia, Jordan, Namibia, Bhutan and East Timor.
And in stark contrast to outgoing President (Bush-appointee) Zoellick, who had been a former Managing Dir. of Goldman Sachs, Jeffrey Sachs considers ’Neoliberal’ a dirty word (as demonstrated by his Tweeted response to one critic’s accusation):
Lamat Rising @lamat_rising: Jeffrey Sachs shouldn’t become World Bank prez. His neoliberal record in Latin America + Eastern Europe is a disgrace even 4 WB #EP #US
Jeffrey D. Sachs @JeffDSachs: @lamat_rising Neoliberal??? What a joke. I led the debt cancellation campaign. I fought the IMF and Treasury in Russia, and lost.
Here is how he distinguishes himself from traditional World Bank Presidents:
Unlike previous World Bank presidents, I don’t come from Wall Street or U.S. politics. I am a practitioner of economic development, a scholar and a writer. My track record is to side with the poor and hungry, not with a corporate balance sheet or a government. Yet the solutions work for all — the poor, companies, governments and the rest of us — by creating a more prosperous, healthy and secure world.
Sachs has the full support of Congressman John Conyers (D-MI), who is circulating a letter on his behalf to President Obama. Current signatories include John Conyers, Hansen Clarke, Jesse Jackson, Jr., Barbara Lee, Zoe Lofgren, Jim McGovern, Lynn Woolsey, Raul Grijalva, Eleanor Holmes Norton, Keith Ellison, Robert Brady, Rubén Hinojosa, Peter DeFazio, Steve Cohen, Maxine Waters, and Bob Filner.
Mark Weisbrot, in his piece yesterday in The Guardian (which I highly recommend reading), highlighted some of the World Bank’s disgraceful policies over the last 15 years. He then explains why Sachs is the right guy to help turn the institution around:
The bank could … play a positive role by increased financing of urgent development needs such as health, education, and sustainable agriculture. In these areas, Jeffrey Sachs has a proven track record over the past decade. He has played an important role in supporting the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria, which has saved millions of lives in poor countries. His Millennium Villages project has also provided a significant positive example of how development aid can be used to boost agricultural productivity and health outcomes. This is an important refutation of the widespread cynicism that helps limit the financing of real, positive development aid.
Sachs has also been a strong advocate for debt cancellation in poor countries. His 2008 book Common Wealth provides one of the best overviews of the interrelated problems of climate change, development, poverty, population and health – as well as a set of concrete proposals for addressing them. This is clearly someone who has the knowledge, ideas, and experience to lead the bank in a different direction. … As Sachs noted last week:
“US officials have traditionally viewed the World Bank as an extension of United States foreign policy and commercial interests. … Many projects have catered to US corporate interests rather than to sustainable development.”
But Weisbrot believes ‘Sachs is facing an uphill battle,’ being an election year. Many of Obama’s biggest contributors happen to be the Wall Street banks and corporations that have millions at stake in the World Bank. They will obviously want another one of their Neoliberal bank cronies to man the top spot.
World Bank officials will be accepting nominations for Zoellick’s successor until March 23rd.
WATCH: CNN’s recent interview with Jeffrey Sachs
TAKE ACTION: Ask your Congressperson to Sign John Conyers Letter Pressing Obama to Name Sachs to World Bank (The deadline to sign Conyers letter to Obama is COB Monday, March 12.)
UPDATE:
Thought it only fair to post a quote from Naomi Klein, who in her book, The Shock Doctrine, critiqued Neoliberal policies that Sachs had overseen in places like Poland and Russia. She was asked in 2007, if she believed Sachs was merely re-branding his image, or had truly changed:
A lot of people are under the impression that Jeffrey Sachs has renounced his past as a shock therapist and is doing penance now. But if you read The End of Poverty more closely he continues to defend these policies, but simply says there should be a greater cushion for the people at the bottom.
The real legacy of neoliberalism is the story of the income gap. It destroyed the tools that narrowed the gap between rich and poor. The very people who opened up this violent divide might now be saying that we have to do something for the people at the very bottom, but they still have nothing to say for the people in the middle who’ve lost everything.
This is really just a charity model. Jeffrey Sachs says he defines poverty as those whose lives are at risk, the people living on a dollar a day, the same people discussed in the Millennium Development Goals. Of course that needs to be addressed, but let us be clear that we’re talking here about noblesse oblige, that’s all.
Just thought I should put it out there, since I have a world of respect for Naomi Klein and her opinions on the matter.
Originally published at AlterPolitics



26 Comments

You should watch out for this guy. Sachs has a lot of skeletons in his closet regarding neoliberalism. You should bone up on “Shock Therapy”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shock_therapy_(economics)
His recent vaguely progressive bromides have been a pleasant surprise, but he’s going to end up being another Obama/Holder/Warren type who sells out the left in the name of “compromise.”
I’d prefer Krugman or Stiglitz.
Jeffrey Sachs????!!!! The original neolibrul? Surely you jest. If any economist is single handedly responsible for the looting of the post-Soviet Union, it is he. If I ever got close to him, I would spit on him.
Now Sachs is big into White Man’s Burden crap. Of if only we bought them mosquito nets, they would live long & be prosperous. Another Harvard gadfly. Bad as or worse than Summers.
He was once on wnyc’s Leonard Lopate show. I sent an email asking Lopate to ask Sachs if he was ashamed of what he’d done when he was adviser to Russia. Lopate put it into somewhat more polite language, Sachs heh heh’d, had some lame words (shows you how arrogant he is, doesn’t even bother developing talking points to explain his prior egregious behavior bc he pretty sure no one will ever bring it up), and Lopate left him off the hook.
And jest, I won’t owe you a drink even though you beat me to the point. I had to type it in my own words.
Stiglitz might be OK (his conversion so far seems more genuine, but he isn’t in the public eye that much, making me wonder how much he would really stand up to power. Krugman is a recruit by the PTB to draw the lefty line that no one is allowed to go over. My diary him seems to have disappeared. If I can find it, I’ll post the link.
I read & loved Shock Doctrine, and know Klein slammed him on Russia, Poland, etc. It would appear, from what he has been doing in the last 10-15 years, that he now despises, and works against the very policies he once pushed.
He is also getting a lot of support from people I admire like Foreign Policy’s Robert Naiman and Mark Weisbrot. And they stress his recent record as the reasons he should be supported.
Perhaps the destruction he witnessed first hand under neoliberal policies, and then having his name associated with it, has ‘shocked’ him into a path of atonement.
As a general principle, I don’t trust leopards who change their spots.
I don’t keep up with him anymore bc of that, and the rare time I run into him on the media, he is, as jest types, mouthing some bromides, or in my words, doing the White Man’s Burden schtick.
When I get as negative a feeling about someone as I have about him, I’m rarely wrong. (My positive reactions to people are quite fallible, however.)
He is now a big advocate for debt forgiveness in poor countries. Milton Friedman would be turning over in his grave on that.
Or perhaps I’m just being naive that people are capable of changing ideologically.
It would appear Naomi agrees with your sentiments. Look what I found now on her site:
Q: You mention the shift from shock therapy to shock-and-awe, but there are also attempts to soften the image of neoliberalism. Jeffrey Sachs, the economist who pioneered shock therapy, wrote his latest book on The End of Poverty. Is there any more to this than a rebranding exercise?
Naomi Klein:
BTW, I don’t know much about economic development but Easterly did write a book I read about why White Man’s Burden doesn’t work.
Short version: Big orgs like IMF, with country specialists who spend little time in the country and most of that talking to local poobahs, get grand ideas and impose them on the locals. There is no asking what the locals want or need (I mean the real people), no feedback from them as to whether the project met their needs, often no ability to sustain project financially or otherwise when IMF moves on to some grand new project. No IMF accountability bc of lack of feedback.
As State dept person in Forward Base in Iraq (or was it Afghanistan) said when I asked him how he got judged by the DoS bureaucracy: By the amount of money we spent. IMF sorts prolly get judged the same way. Doesn’t matter whether project succeeds or fails, as long as it makes good PP slides and costs a lot. By then the IMF analyst has been promoted or area of responsibility has shifted and no one looks back.
Debt forgiveness is not bad per se.
It’s stage 2, 3, 4… that are the problems. One of those wash, rinse, repeat exercises.
Debt is forgiven. New autocrat takes over country. It goes into debt (i.e. into the secret bank account of autocrat), autocrat is deposed to life of luxury.
Debt is forgiven…
Yes, but Friedman was of the mind that all the national assets of a country should be looted, if he hadn’t looted them already :) , to recompense creditors.
By the way, I updated the post w/ Naomi’s quote. Don’t want to encourage people to get their Congressmen to sign Conyers’ letter if there is some question as to whether he has actually changed his spots.
I’d love to see Robert Naiman and Naomi Klein do a Bloggingheads debate on this subject.
Your last two diaries were spot-on, TheCallUp, and much appreciated.
However, in my opinion, you are closer to a form of some irrational exuberance in your apparent support of Jeffrey Sachs as the next president of the World Bank. Those whom you list as being supportive of Sachs simply confirm my suspicions that he is being put forth as something which he is, most decidedly not, that is, as a friend to reason and justice, of a mind concerned with, and for, ordinary human beings.
Frankly, Jeffery Sachs is no more to be trusted, in such a position than is Hillary Clinton … and despite such claims as appear are being made, Sachs, like Clinton, IS and shall, very likely always remain, a neoliberal … in the very worst tradition … think Reagan and Thatcher.
Nor, in my opinion, is Paul Krugman a rational or meaningful “improvement” … as I agree with eCAHN on Krugman’s happily embraced “role”.
Among those whose name has been bandied about, Joseph Stigliz might be the closest to honorable, yet I also share eCAHN’s concern that he might be much too acquiescent to power and more pleased with the trappings of any authority he might be given, than committed to making bold and effective use of it.
Perhaps, it is merely that while I have come to have respect for the intelligence and courage of the few World Bank underlings whom I have met and whose “work” I have been able to actually see, I have found NO reason to respect the “work”, or the conscience, of the World Bank’s upperlings which the rest of us have been saddled with … as they, these upperlings, have always pursued agendas and “policies” which, oddly enough, take from the poor and the many and give to the wealthy and few … however much it might be spun as being “necessary”, “reasonable”, and “just”.
Your Mileage May Vary, TheCallUp, and I am recommending this diary, for its subject “matter”, matters, and it is most likely that the World Bank will continue to be a powerful, punitive arm of the American Monetary Establishment, and therefore, everyone at FDL should pay attention to both the “process” of how the next president of the World Bank is chosen and, as well, who, specifically and in some detailed analysis, those “candidates” are … and what they stand “for”.
Please understand, TheCallUp, my comment is not meant to belittle or to attack your position, but simply to encourage as broad a discussion and consideration of what is going on, and its implications, as may be possible. Therefore I thank you, once again for putting before us another thought-provoking diary.
You may be certain that I look forward to every diary which you write, as I shall read and appreciate each of them, whether I comment or not.
DW
Thanks so much for your comment. I really appreciate your candid and thoughtful and kind remarks.
I am not one to dig my heals in on an issues unless I am 100% confident (without a shred of doubt) that I am right.
And honestly, though it pains me to admit on my own post, I am starting to have doubts about my advocacy for Sachs. Not so much for what he did 20+ years ago, but because Naomi Klein, who has actually read his books (I haven’t), doesn’t believe his 180 degree turn is legit.
Humbled, yet awakened. Which isn’t a bad thing, I guess.
OTOH, we could leave the head post with a temp, and let the org fade away like the OLC.
Thanks.
Anyone know the politics of this. Is it possible for them to get enough countries’ support to prevail at this?
This information that might address that point only obscures it:
The item that I highlighted is very interesting indeed.
I got an idea: how about Nouriel Roubini?!
Never happen but if it did, it would sure cause a lot of 1%ers to soil their underbritches.
The trouble is, if O appoints someone, whoever, you know he will be bad.
Roger that.
Oh, yeah, Sachs is the right guy *:
What better kind of guy to have leading the no-account bourgeoisie?
What are the sources for your quotes. Not doubting them, on the contrary they seem to characterize my evaluation of the guy perfectly so I’d like to have the sources for my records.
I worked as a RA for a prof at Harvard in the 1960s, when I was in my mid-20s. The one I worked for was a solid citizen, for the most part. But already, young though I was, I ran into, and recognized flakes of the nth degree. Martin Feldstein was paramount among the flakes.
I wonder is this new lipstick on an old pig is a reaction to the rejection of the WB and neoliberal policies by some South American countries?
A review by Doug Henwood: The long, strange career of Jeffrey Sachs. The link’s also under the asterisk above. 8}
Sachs is one of those deadly eager ego’s: “I did my best fucking it up; must be somebody else’s fault.”
Thank you for that link, Ludwig, it adds much to the discussion engendered by this diary.
DW
What isn’t being taken into account as regards to Russia, is that the criminal Berezovsky was funding and advising Yeltsin who was pretty much drunk all the time. I think those IMF funds were being laundered through Menatep bank, which had been seized earlier by Khodorovsky.
He may be a neoliberal but he resigned, Soros saw the outright theft and packed up and left, if I’m not mistaken.
I’d like to hear more from Sachs about his part in this massive theft. He’s got a lot of atoning to do. You can’t just go into a territory and rip it up the ancient tribal ways or organization and install market based consumeristic society. let alone an economy.
Paul Klebnikov (June 3, 1963 – July 9, 2004) – he wrote a book about Berezovsky and was just finishing up one on Akhmed Nukhayev, (a chechen non salafist muslim) when both of them got whacked, within two weeks of each other.
Before that though, he wrote this article in forbes which pioneered Libel tourism in the UK- making it unaffordable to speak ill of the rich.
Godfather of the Kremlin?
Theft of the Century: Privatization and the Looting of Russia
An Interview with Paul Klebnikov
Ones view depends on the point in time and personal experience I guess – meaning YMMV as to the folks you mention, as you note.
Not that it matters all that much as my view was from distances ranging from close for a few folks to far away for most, with no real amount of dealings to make a judgment that I would defend all that hard, but below I agree, and disagree, on your view on a few folks.
From close up – lobbyists working for the industry reports – Hillary is no “neo-liberal” – she is the real thing – a liberal from the 70′s for life – a liberal progressive who pushed single payer in 93 when no one else was trying to push it – albeit she thinks of herself as not anti-business or anti-corporations, and has a bias toward budget balancing – but she does not bend over for the rich and corporate.
From close up. the world bank upperlings are as you describe – just there because daddy had political connections in the home country, no talent and no ethics. The underlings I saw/met were not impressive but it is big organization and I do not doubt there were some very good folks.
Jeffrey Sachs seemed a know it all that did not convince – at least not me back then – but I was 3 or more degrees of separation removed so the opinion is based on gossip. Based on the Russian results I see him as evil.
Paul Krugman is rational and a hero – his feet of clay may be not being up on the liberal point of the day, or giving that point the value others think it deserves, but I like him and agree on almost all of his analysis – which be a reflection of my lack of knowledge, but that is my opinion.
Joseph Stigliz has been a hero for decades – but as with Krugman I have only a seat far from the stage and you and eCAHN know more about the personalities than I ever will.
As to the phrase “irrational exuberance” – another dropping from the fellow with the most responsibility for this mess – Greenspan. But as applied to Sachs may actually fit the situation this time.
Your Mileage May Vary, as we both agree :-)