Order Code RS22704
Updated January 28, 2008
The World Bank and Iran
Martin A. Weiss and Jonathan E. Sanford
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Summary
Several laws restrict U.S. support for World Bank lending to Iran. Despite U.S.
opposition, the World Bank has provided loans to Iran on several occasions over the past
five years, and disbursements on these loans appears to be increasing. Several pieces of
legislation: H.R. 1400, Iran Counter-Proliferation Act and S. 970, Iran Counter-
Proliferation Act of 2007
would cut future U.S. funding to the World Bank if the Bank
makes new loans to Iran. This report will be updated as events warrant.
World Bank and Iran. Before the 1979 Iranian revolution, Iran was an active
borrower from the World Bank. After the revolution, lending stopped and did not resume
until 1991. Between 1991 and 1993, seven World Bank projects were approved despite
the United States voting against these projects. The United States has a 16.5% share of
the World Bank’s vote, a majority vote is needed to approve loans. Unless it is joined by
other like-minded countries, the United States is unable to block the approval of World
Bank loans to Iran. The current portfolio of approved loans for Iran, which total
approximately $847.4 million, are for projects such as primary health, earthquake
recovery assistance, drainage and irrigation projects, and power sector improvements.
Between 1993 and 2000, the United States was able to sustain a coalition of G-7
countries that voted against World Bank lending to Iran. In May 2000, however, the
United States proved unsuccessful in keeping the coalition together and lending resumed
as the other G-7 countries voted to approve $232 million in loans for health and sewerage
projects. Twenty-one of the Bank’s twenty-four executive directors voted in favor of the
loan. France and Canada abstained. Reportedly, the other G-7 countries decided, in
changing their position in 2000, that more progress might be possible in dissuading Iran
from continuing its nuclear program through partial normalization of economic relations
than through economic pressure.1
Iran borrows solely from the World Bank’s market-rate lending facility, the Inter-
national Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD). Iran’s per-capita GDP
($2,300 in 2006) makes Iran ineligible to borrow from the World Bank’s concessional
1 Interview between Jonathan Sanford and a Treasury Department official in 2003.

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lending and grant-making facility, the International Development Agency (IDA). There
are currently nine active World Bank projects in Iran, worth a total of $1.36 billion (Table
1
). In accordance with U.S. law, the U.S. Executive Director voted against each of these
loans, including emergency assistance to Iran following the 2003 earthquake in Bam, Iran.
The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), however, provided $3.7
million in emergency assistance to help earthquake victims.2
Table. 1 World Bank (IBRD) Projects in Iran
($ in millions, as of June 30, 2007)
Approval
Loan
Undisbursed
Closing
Project
Date
Amount
Amount
Date
Second Primary Health Care and Nutrition
May-00
87.0
11.0
Dec-07
Tehran Sewerage
May-00
145.0
20.7
Jun-08
Environmental Management Support Program
Apr-03
20.0
14.2
Dec-08
Project
Earthquake Emergency Recovery
Jun-03
180.0
83.7
Jun-07
Ahwaz and Shiraz Water and Sanitation Project
May-04
279.0
218.6
Sep-09
Urban Upgrading and Housing Reform
May-04
80.0
72.0
Dec-09
Bam Earthquake Emergency Reconstruction
Oct-04
220.0
122.8
May-09
Northern Cities Water and Sanitation
May-05
224.0
192.6
Dec-10
Alborz Integrated Land and Water Management
May-05
120.0
112.8
Oct-12
Total
1355.0
848.4
Source: World Bank
Between 2000 and 2003, disbursements on IBRD Iran loans dropped sharply. At
2003 hearings on World Bank lending to Iran, then-Deputy Assistant Secretary William
Schuerch testified that, while the United States had been unable to prevent the passage of
new loans, it has been successful in delaying disbursements to Iran. He said:
If I were going to be aggressive, I could try to assert that the United States has been
successful behind the scenes in order to stop the disbursement or slow it down
substantially. There are $390 million or so of undisbursed resources out of the (then)
$432 million that has been approved. ... I think if you were to ask that question of
bank management, they would tell you that Iran is a particularly difficult place to do
business in, and they are having trouble getting started and starting up programs.3
2 See Assistance for Iranian Earthquake Victims. Available from [http://www.usaid.gov/iran].
3 Testimony by William E. Schuerch, Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, October 29,
2003, in U.S. Congress. House. Committee on Financial Services. World Bank Assistance to Iran
(hearings), 108th Cong., 1st sess., pp. 6-16.


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It appears, however, that disbursements have increased since 2003 (Figure 1). In
2007, the World Bank has already disbursed close to $200 million to Iran, the largest
disbursement over the past ten years. The World Bank disbursed $49 million to Iran in
2005 and $166 million in 2006.
Figure 1. World Bank Disbursements to Iran
(as of June 30, 2007)
Source: World Bank
U.S. Policy on World Bank Lending to Iran. Several laws restrict U.S. support
for World Bank lending to Iran. The most relevant legislation is the Anti-Terrorism and
Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996
(P.L. 104-132, Title III B, sec. 327). This act instructs
the Treasury Department to oppose any loan to or other use of international financial
institution (IFI) funds for a country that the Secretary of State has identified as supporting
international terrorism (under the provisions of Section 6(j) of the Export Administration
Act of 1979 (50 U.S.C. App. 2405(j)) or section 620A of the Foreign Assistance Act of
1961 (22 U.S.C. 2371)). The terrorism determination does not apply to voting at the
International Finance Corporation (IFC), the private sector arm of the World Bank, since
it lends to private sector firms, not foreign governments. Nonetheless, the Treasury
Department opposed recent IFC investments in Iran.
In addition to the terrorism determination, the International Financial Institutions
Act of 1977 (P.L. 95-118, sec. 701) requires the Treasury Department to oppose loans to
countries whose governments engage in a pattern of gross violations of internationally
recognized human rights. There is no official State Department list of countries that
violate or do not violate human rights; rather, this information is derived from the
Department’s annual human rights country reports.

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Current Legislation
Two current pieces of legislation may impact World Bank lending to Iran: H.R.
1400, Iran Counter-Proliferation Act and S. 970, Iran Counter-Proliferation Act of 2007,
which includes similar language.
As originally introduced, the language of H.R. 1400 (Sec. 404) reads as follows.
Sec. 404. Reducing Contributions to the World Bank.
The President of the United States shall reduce the total amount otherwise payable on
behalf of the United States to the International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development for each fiscal year by the percentage represented by —
(1) the total of the amounts provided by the Bank to entities in Iran, or for projects and
activities in Iran, in the then preceding fiscal year; divided by
(2) the total of the amounts provided by the Bank to all entities, or for all projects and
activities, in the then preceding fiscal year.
Under Sec. 404, if the IBRD were to lend $150 million to Iran in one fiscal year and
if the IBRD lent $15 billion to all borrowers that year, the U.S. payment to the IBRD
would be reduced by 1% from the level it would have been otherwise.
S. 970, the Iran Counter Proliferation Act of 2007, is more comprehensive. It applies
to all World Bank entities, not only the IBRD. The relevant sections of S. 970 is as
follows.
SEC. 10. World Bank Loans to Iran.
(a) Report - Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, and
every 180 days thereafter, the Secretary of the Treasury shall submit to the appropriate
congressional committees a report on —
(1) the number of loans provided by the World Bank to Iran;
(2) the dollar amount of such loans; and
(3) the voting record of each member of the World Bank on such loans.
(b) Reduction of Contribution of the United States- The President shall reduce the
total amount otherwise payable on behalf of the United States to the World Bank for
fiscal year 2008 and each fiscal year thereafter by an amount that bears the same ratio
to the total amount otherwise payable as —
(1) the total of the amounts provided by the Bank to entities in Iran, and for projects
and activities in Iran, in the preceding fiscal year, bears to
(2) the total of the amounts provided by the Bank to all entities, and for all projects
and activities, in the preceding fiscal year.
(c) Allocation of Amounts Not Contributed to the World Bank- There is authorized
to be appropriated to the United States Agency for International Development for
fiscal year 2008 and each fiscal year thereafter an amount equal to the revenues made
available as a result of the application of subsection (b). Funds appropriated pursuant
to this subsection shall be made available for the Child Survival and Health Programs
Fund to carry out programs relating to maternal and child health, vulnerable children,
and infectious diseases other than HIV/AIDS.
Under the provisions of Sec. 10, if the IBRD lent Iran $150 million in one year and
if the World Bank provided $30 billion in aid from the IBRD, IDA, and the International

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Finance Corporation (IFC) to all countries, U.S. payments to the World Bank Group
would be cut by 0.5% (one-half percent) from the level they be otherwise.
Analysis
Effects on World Bank Lending to Iran. Sec. 404 of H.R. 1400 and Sec. 10 of
S. 970 resemble legislation proposed by Representative Brad Sherman in 2003 (H.R.
2466), which sought to reduce U.S. payments to the World Bank’s concessional aid
facility, IDA, in proportion to the amount the World Bank’s market loan window, the
IBRD, lent to Iran. Others have made similar proposals from time to time.
Fungibility (or the interchangeability of various financial assets) appears to be the
underlying concept behind these proposals to cut off World Bank assistance to Iran.4 In
this context, if the IBRD lends money to help finance a primary health program or an
irrigation project, according to the concept of fungibility, the Government of Iran can use
the money it would have otherwise spent on these activities to fund other activities, such
as nuclear development or terrorist groups that Iran is known to sponsor. The concept
assumes that Iran attaches more priority to the former activities than it does to the latter
and consequently, if it did not get a loan from the World Bank to finance humanitarian
or economic development programs it would reduce its expenditures on nuclear
development in order to undertake the needed development projects. On the other hand,
if nuclear development is more important to Iran than are particular development projects,
Iran may go ahead with its nuclear program regardless, leaving the other projects undone.
A termination in World Bank lending to Iran might be a form of retribution,
however, to punish the Iranians for their choice in priorities. Given Iran’s expressed
priorities, however, it might not impact the development of Iran’s nuclear program. Were
lending continued, in any case, it would be hard to siphon money from World Bank
projects to illicitly fund nuclear activities or terrorism. The World Bank maintains tight
oversight of its projects as they are implemented, which would likely be redoubled in this
case. The Bank does not release money as a lump sum. Rather, it is disbursed to pay
suppliers or contractors only after specific work has been completed and the bills are
checked against plans.
Effects of Sec. 404 on U.S. Contributions to the World Bank. In the case
of Sec. 404 of H.R. 1400, the proposal to reduce U.S. contributions to the IBRD may be
more symbolic than substantive. The United States has made no payments to the IBRD
since 1996 and none are anticipated in the future.
The IBRD’s capital base determines how much it can borrow in capital markets to
fund its lending operations. According to the Articles of Agreements, total outstanding
loans cannot exceed the IBRD’s total subscribed capital base. It is unlikely that the IBRD
will need to increase its capital base for the foreseeable future. In 1988, the IBRD
4 For example, Representative Sherman said (p. 5) in support of his legislation, during the
hearings cited above, that “Money is fungible. The government in Teheran must make some
domestic expenditures, and then they can spend our money instead of theirs. They can use their
money for terrorism.” He also mentioned Iran’s nuclear development program.

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approved a General Capital Increase (GCI) which substantially increased the Bank’s
capital base. Together with other countries, the United States agreed to expand its
financial support for the Bank by contributing new callable and paid-in capital; the last
U.S. payments were made in FY1996. In 1988, the IBRD made loan commitments
totaling $14.9 billion and it was assumed that, after the capital increase took effect, the
volume of IBRD lending would increase substantially. In the past 20 years, however, the
environment for IBRD lending has changed and there appears to be little demand for the
anticipated high volume of lending. The IBRD’s total lending in 2007 was slightly smaller
($14.1 billion) than it was in 1988. The IBRD could continue lending at its present
annual rate — or even a much larger annual rate — without risk that it would need to
curtail its loan program because its capital base could no longer support its volume of
lending.
Effects of Sec. 10 on U.S. Contributions to the World Bank. The likely
impact of Sec. 10 of S. 970 would be greater than that of H.R. 1400. Since S. 970 would
rescind funds for all World Bank assistance, U.S. contributions to IDA (or the IFC, in
years when the United States is making contributions) could be impacted. The Bush
Administration pledged $2.85 billion to the most recent round of IDA funding, IDA-14,
to be split into three payments of $950 million for each of fiscal years 2006, 2007, and
2008. Table 2 includes U.S. budget requests and appropriations for IDA-14 and total
arrears. If U.S. contributions to IDA were rescinded due to World Bank IBRD loans to
Iran, they would add to U.S. arrears to IDA. Currently, U.S. arrears to IDA are $377.9
million. These arrears have had a bandwagon effect — unpaid U.S. contributions have
triggered a pro-rata withholding of contributions during IDA-12 and IDA-13 by three
other IDA donors, totaling about $72 million. Continued U.S. arrears would also likely
constrain the U.S. negotiating as it pursues its negotiating objectives at the next round
of IDA funding, IDA 15, which provides funding for 2009-2011.5 Finally, it is unclear
whether restrictions would be applied to disbursements on earlier loans or only to new
loans.
Table 2. IDA-14 Appropriations
($ in millions)
FY2006
FY2007
FY2008
Total Arrears
(Includes
arrears from
Request
Approp.
Request
Approp.
Request
Approp.
IDA-13)
950.0 909.15*
950.0
940.5
1,060.0
$950.0
377.9
* In FY2006, $940.5 million was appropriated, however, the enacted Continuing Resolution (P.L. 110-5)
rescinded $31.35 million of this amount since Treasury was unable to certify that the World Bank complied
with certain congressionally mandated transparency initiatives.
5 For more information, see CRS Report RL33969, The World Bank’s International Development
Association (IDA)
, by Martin A. Weiss.