The head of
the World Bank has welcomed the Chinese-led bank for investments in
infrastructure as a way of fighting poverty. Germany formally joined the AIIB
at the start of the month.
Deutsche Welle,
8 April 2015
The World
Bank plans to work with the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) to
fight poverty and to fund infrastructure projects. World Bank president, Jim
Yong Kim, said the World Bank and AIIB could co-finance individual
infrastructure projects, or work on regional integration.
Speaking at
the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies on Tuesday,
Kim said, "With the right environment, labor and procurement standards,
the AIIB and the New Development Bank, established by the BRICS countries, have
the potential to become great new forces in the economic development of poor
countries and emerging markets."
I’ll do all in my power to find innovative ways to work with #AIIB & #NDB –Pres Kim http://t.co/ZvPrEHXviN #WBLive pic.twitter.com/ybZPvTQqoB
— World Bank (@WorldBank) 7 april 2015
More than 50 countries including Germany, France and Britain have joined China's
initiative. Germany's membership was formally approved at the start of the
month. The $50 billion (46 billion euro) multilateral infrastructure bank is to
provide project loans to countries across Asia. It plans to begin operations at
the end of the year.
The BRICS
developing nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) are also
working on a development institution, but there have been disagreements over
funding and management.
"I
will do everything in my power to find innovative ways to work with these
banks," Kim said. "The decisions we make this year, and the alliances
we form in the years ahead, will help determine whether we have a chance to
reach our goal of ending extreme poverty in just 15 years."
Kim said he plans to meet with Chinese officials next week during the spring meetings of
the IMF and World Bank to discuss collaboration.
The United
States, Canada and Japan have not joined the AIIB. North Korea's application
was rejected.
The US
government has said it supports co-financing projects with the AIIB and
existing institutions such as the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank, in
order to ensure appropriate safeguards are put in place to protect the
environment and people affected by the projects.
jm/gsw (Reuters, AFP)

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