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The World Bank Group In the Greater Mekong Sub-region. By Ian Porter World Bank Country Director, SEA November 13, 2007. What is the World Bank Group?. Operates like a cooperative, with 185 developing and developed country members Mission : fight poverty
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The World Bank GroupIn the Greater Mekong Sub-region By Ian Porter World Bank Country Director, SEA November 13, 2007
What is the World Bank Group? • Operates like a cooperative, with 185 developing and developed country members • Mission: fight poverty • Promote economic opportunities through growth • Help poor people reach opportunities 5 organizations • IBRD: International Bank for Reconstruction and Development - provide loans to Middle-Income Countries • IDA: International Development Association - provide interest-free loans and grants to the poorest countries • IFC: International Finance Corporation - provide private investment financing • MIGA: Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency - provide political risk insurance • ICSID: International Centre for Investment Dispute Settlement
How Do We Fight Poverty? • In FY07, we provided $34.3 billion in loans, grants, equity investments and guarantees to Middle- and Low-Income Countries - up $2.7 billion, or 7.8%, from FY06 • In FY07, Bank funding supported 531 analytical studies/research, 430 technical assistance activities, and 700 learning activities by World Bank Institute (WBI) as well as broader policy advice and knowledge sharing • We also use our “convening power” for leveraging support from and coordinating with other donors, and encouraging debate or dialogue on key development issues with a wide range of other stakeholders, including from private sector and civil society
The World Bank Annual Report 2007 IBRD/IDA Lending by Sector FY07 Law & Justice Transportation Water, Sanitation, & &Public 20% Flood Protection Administration 12% 22% Information & Agriculture, Fishing, & Forestry 7% Communication 1% Industry & Trade Education 5% Finance Energy & mining 8% Health & Social 7% 7% Services 11% Total Lending: $24.7 billion
… But Our Financial Support is Declining as a Proportion of Total Financial Flows In FY06, Bank lending of $31.6 billion was small compared to net private and official flows of $571 billion that year
Agenda of New WB President • Fight poverty • How to continue reducing poverty and spurring sustainable growth? • Help states coming out of conflict • Sudan, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Timor Leste, Pacific Islands, etc • Different business models for MICs • Countries getting richer, looking for more “competitive menu” of development solutions
Agenda of New WB President (Cont.) • More active role in fostering regional & global “public goods” • HIV/AIDS, malaria, avian flu, climate change, etc • Support development in Arab world • Several countries made progress in business reform (Egypt, for example), but more development work still needed • Strengthen WB role as “Brain Trust” of the world • Apply vast experience & knowledge to help countries address five preceding themes
World Bank Support in East Asia and Pacific • Overall WB support increased from less than $2 billion in FY02 to $4 billion in FY07 • China was largest WB borrower at $1.6 billion (41% of total lending in region) • IFC invested $944 million in 38 projects in 8 countries • WBG shared knowledge through analytical work, training, institutional capacity building, technical assistance, and other advisory activities • In general, governments are relying less on WB financing and more on private financing and other donors
Strong growth & overall poverty reduction Strong export performance Uneven development Enhanced cooperation could maximize development benefit The Greater Mekong Sub-Region (GMS)Regional Context
Cooperation in the GMS • GMS regional cooperation program launched with support of ADB in 1992 • Promote high priority projects (transport, telecom, HR development, tourism, etc) • Mekong River Commission - created in 1995 • Secretariat of inter-governmental cooperation; supports integrated water resource management (IWRM) • Members: CLTV; China, Myanmar dialogue partners • ACMECS - initiated by Thailand in 2003 • Provide technical assistance to CLMV; increase country competitiveness • Promote investment & cooperation among private sectors (ACMECS Business Council) • Fora / Organizations with broader mandates • ASEAN, UN Organizations (UNDP, UNESCAP), MDBs (ADB, WB) • Bilaterals - Japan, China, Thailand, and many others
Opportunities • Rich natural resources • Minerals, forests, hydro • Mekong is one of least developed major rivers in the world • Economic structures in transition • More diversified & open to trade • Fast integrating into regional & global economies • Increased intra-sub-regional trade, investment, migration flows • Large economies in EAP drive sub-regional growth • Thailand & China • Governments favor increased sub-regional cooperation • Expanding regional trade • Benefiting from ASEAN Free Trade Agreement
Challenges • Integrated system for power production and trade – high growth in demand, but variation in ability to supply, e.g.: • Thailand: would need to increase generating capacity by almost 20,000 MW to meet demand; would require $3 billion investment annually • Lao PDR: could produce up to 25,000 MW (mostly hydro), but low national demand growth • Cambodia: could produce up to 10,000 MW, but absence of national grid and low access/demand makes it difficult to exploit economies of scale • South China: need to increase capacity by 164 GW (currently 64 GW). Rapid demand growth led to peak power shortfall of 9.4 MW in ’05. • Vietnam: need to increase capacity by 15,000 MW to meet 15% annual demand; would require annual $2 billion investment over next decade
Challenges in GMS (cont.) • Better management of national and shared natural resources needed • Forests in Cambodia • Hydropower in Lao PDR • Mekong river basin development not well coordinated, etc • Better physical linkages to underpin strong growth, cooperation, and connectivity • Landlocked Lao • More efficient flows of goods & services b/w countries, main ports of region
Challenges in GMS (cont.) • Better framework for flow of human resources • Cross-border migration supports growth, but need stronger framework, policies to reduce harmful illegal migration, human trafficking, etc • Environmental, social, economic and political risks …if each country pursues development without cooperation
World Bank Support for GMS • Regional work program to complement country assistance strategies • Support for GMS economic cooperation program • Support existing donor coordination mechanism led by ADB • Build on WB experience in other regions
Our GMS Work Program • Regional Power Trade • Build on 2002 Intergovernmental Agreement supported by ADB; support power sector in individual countries & regional integrated planning • Mekong Water Resource Management • Enhance regional cooperation by strengthening MRC’s capacity • Trade and Transport Facilitation • Complement ADB’s cross-border trade program; build on completion of sub-regional transport corridors • Labor Migration • Analytical work to improve knowledge of & info on socio-economic impact of migration in sending & receiving countries
Our resources for GMS are small compared to ongoing development assistance in region: 3 proposed regional projects over next 3 years totaling about $100 million compared with proposed $1.5 billion for ADB’s 29 projects Complement our overall longer country-level commitments We will use: Regional and country grants, credits (e.g. $33.5 million grants for transmission lines in Lao PDR, Cambodia) Analytical work and policy advice Previous experience of successful regional work, including in Africa and Europe Instruments and Resources
Nam Theun 2 Hydropower Project: Example of Country-Level Project with Major Regional Impacts • 1,070 megawatt project costs $1.45 billion • 6,200 people in Nakai Plateau relocated • WB supports project through $20 million IDA grants, $42 million IDA partial risk guarantee, and $92 million MIGA risk guarantee • Complements support by ADB, EIB, NIB, and AfD • Project to provide Lao PDR $2 billion in revenues over 25 years • All 10 WB social & environmental safeguards are triggered for this project • WB requires revenues to be used for poverty reduction & environmental protection • Project implementation heavily monitored by independent experts
Other Areas for Potential WB Support in GMS • Environment & Forestry Sector • Management of forest resources • Establish linkages b/w cross-border national protected areas through trans-boundary corridors • Improve enforcement & monitoring against poaching & illegal logging • Harmonize cross-border custom practices to control timber & wildlife trade • Health issues with cross-border implications • HIV/AIDS, avian flu, SARS • Capacity Building
WB in Thailand and Malaysia: Focus on Knowledge Sharing Partnerships • Bringing international experience and expertise to countries through: • Monitoring and diagnostic work e.g. investment climate assessments, and knowledge economy, higher education and urban development studies • In depth implementation support e.g. health financing, banking supervision, school based management, river basin development • Sharing MIC experience with lower income countries and working with MICs on regional issues and as increasingly important donors to LICs
WB in Cambodia, Lao PDR and Myanmar • Cambodia – major focus on governance issues at macro and project levels; also on investments needed to achieve MDGs; and on strengthened partnerships • Lao PDR – focus on drivers of continued growth, improving social outcomes, strengthening capacity and partnerships, and implementing NT2 project as best practice • Using a variety of instruments including budget support, sector and technical assistance operations; knowledge activities and policy dialogue; and convening/facilitating role with other stakeholders • In Myanmar – in watching brief mode; but with substantial engagement with other donors
Thank you! For more information on the World Bank, please visit www.worldbank.org