ft.com Monday November 29 1999
http://www.ft.com/nbearchive/email-ftibwcq2ea9c6.htm
World Bank aid strategy flawed says Stiglitz
By Alan Beattie
The World Bank's policies of imposing conditions on countries seeking economic aid have failed, says its departing chief economist.
Joseph Stiglitz, who resigned last week, writes today in The Economic Journal, published by the UK's Royal Economic Society, that the policy of "conditionality" is flawed and may have undermined democracy in countries receiving loans.
"Was imposing conditionality an effective way of changing policies?" Mr Stiglitz says. "There is increasing evidence that it was not. Good policies cannot be bought."
Instead, he says, countries should be encouraged to arrive at a national consensus to create their own strategies for development.
Mr Stiglitz's term was due to end in February. His 2½-year stint was marked by regular criticisms of the "Washington consensus", a set of economic prescriptions - including rapid trade and capital account liberalisation and the privatisation of state-owned enterprises - that, he said, dominated thinking in the International Monetary Fund.
His strong views placed him in conflict with the IMF, the World Bank's sister institution. During the World Bank's annual meeting in September, James Wolfensohn, the Bank's president, rebuked Mr Stiglitz for criticising, with the benefit of hindsight, the reform process in Russia.
But in today's publication, Mr Stiglitz continues to question whether the market-based reform strategies followed by the World Bank over the past 20 years have been either sufficient or even necessary for economic development.
"China, which is by all accounts the most successful of the low-income countries, did not follow many of the key precepts of the Washington consensus," he says.
Mr Stiglitz's views about the ineffectiveness of attaching strict conditions to loans from international financial institutions are supported by a study by leading development economists, Paul Collier and Jan Willem Gunning, also published in today's Economic Journal.
Mr Collier and Mr Gunning studied the IMF as part of an external review last year of its effectiveness. They conclude that imposing conditionality outside times of macro-economic crisis may actually reduce borrowing governments' incentive to comply with IMF programmes by inducing resentment and make international investors doubt their genuine commitment to reform.
Governments of poor countries should in future be given more freedom to choose their own economic policies outside crises, they say.
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