Selecting the World Bank President
Updated January 23, 2019
Congressional Research Service
https://crsreports.congress.gov
R42463
Selecting the World Bank President
Summary
On January 7, 2018, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim announced that he would resign by
February 1, three years before the expiration of his second five-year term in 2022. Following his
resignation, Dr. Kim will join Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP), a private equity fund that
invests in projects in advanced and developing countries. Prior to his nomination to the World
Bank by President Barack Obama in 2012, Dr. Kim served as the President of Dartmouth College.
The nomination period for the next President ends on March 14, after which the Executive Board
will select three candidates for interviews. Following the interviews, the Executive Board will
select the next President, something which it aims to do before the spring meetings in April 2019.
Since its founding after World War II, the presidency of the World Bank has been held by a
citizen of the United States, the Bank’s largest shareholder. According to an informal agreement
among their member countries, a U.S. candidate is chosen as the President of the World Bank and
a European candidate (typically French or German) is appointed as the Managing Director of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The formal requirements for the selection of the World Bank President is that the Executive
Directors appoint, by at least a 50% majority, an individual who is neither a member of the Board
of Governors or Board of Executive Directors. There are no requirements on how individuals are
selected, on what criteria, or by what process they are vetted. Moreover, although the Executive
Directors may select its Managing Director by a simple majority vote, they historically aim to
reach agreement by consensus. With these factors combined, the custom guaranteeing European
leadership at the IMF and American leadership at the World Bank has remained in place.
This custom has been subject to increasing criticism during the past two decades. The first line of
criticism is directed at the current distribution of voting power, which critics contend does not
account for the increasing integration of developing countries into the global economy. A second
line of criticism is directed directly at the method of selecting World Bank and IMF leadership,
which critics argue, elevates nationality above merit and undermines the legitimacy and
effectiveness of the institutions. Calls for a more open, transparent, and merit-based leadership
selection process have been made consistently in the past, and at times have been incorporated
into communiqués of various summits, but have yet to change the leadership selection process at
either institution.
Congressional Research Service
link to page 4 link to page 4 link to page 4 link to page 7 link to page 8 link to page 10 link to page 11 link to page 5 Selecting the World Bank President
Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1
Background ..................................................................................................................................... 1
What is the World Bank?........................................................................................................... 1
Leadership Selection at the World Bank ......................................................................................... 4
Formal Process for Selecting the World Bank President ........................................................... 5
Reform Efforts and the 2019 Selection Process ........................................................................ 7
Figures
Figure 1. Share of World GDP (Real and Projected) ....................................................................... 8
Tables
Table 1. World Bank Group Commitments ..................................................................................... 2
Contacts
Author Information ....................................................................................................................... 10
Congressional Research Service
Selecting the World Bank President
Introduction
World Bank President Kim Yong Kim recently announced that he was stepping down in February
2019 to join Global Infrastructure Partners, a private equity fund that invests in projects in
advanced and developing countries. Kim’s unexpected resignation, combined with his joining of
a private firm that will directly compete with the World Bank for investments, raises questions for
policymakers as they nominate and select a new president for the World Bank, a central
component of the U.S.-led international economic order for the past eight decades.
According to an informal agreement among their member countries, the U.S. nominee is chosen
as the World Bank President and a European candidate (typically French or German) is appointed
as Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). This custom has been subject to
increasing criticism during the past two decades. The first line of criticism is directed at the
current distribution of voting power, which critics contend does not account for the increasing
integration of developing countries into the global economy. A second line of criticism is directed
directly at the method of selecting World Bank and IMF leadership, which critics argue, elevates
nationality above merit and undermines the legitimacy and effectiveness of the institutions.
This report provides information on the 2019 World Bank selection process and discusses efforts
to reform the selection process.
Background
What is the World Bank?
The World Bank is a multilateral development bank (MDB) that offers loans and grants to low-
and middle-income countries to promote poverty alleviation and economic development.1 The
World Bank has near-universal membership, with 189 member nations. U.S. membership in the
World Bank is authorized by a federal statute known as the Bretton Woods Agreements Act (22
U.S.C. 286 et seq.).2 Only Cuba and North Korea, and a few micro-states such as the Vatican,
Monaco, and Andorra, are non-members.
Two of the Bank’s five facilities, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(IBRD) and the International Development Association (IDA), lend directly to governments to
finance development projects and policy programs in member countries. The IBRD provides
middle-income developing countries with loans at near-market rates using funds raised by the
World Bank on international capital markets. IDA was established in 1960 due to concerns that
low-income countries could not afford to borrow at the near-market rate terms offered by the
IBRD. IDA provides grants and concessional loans funded by contributions from donors and
transfers from the IBRD to low-income countries. A country’s eligibility for IBRD or IDA
financial assistance depends on its relative poverty, defined as gross national income (GNI). For
1 In addition to the World Bank, the United States is a member of four regional development banks: the African
Development Bank (AfDB); the Asian Development Bank (AsDB); the European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (EBRD); and the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB).
2 For additional background, see CRS Report R41170, Multilateral Development Banks: Overview and Issues for
Congress, by Rebecca M. Nelson, CRS Report RS20792, Multilateral Development Banks: U.S. Contributions
FY2000-FY2019, by Rebecca M. Nelson, and CRS Report R41537, Multilateral Development Banks: How the United
States Makes and Implements Policy, by Rebecca M. Nelson and Martin A. Weiss.
Congressional Research Service
R42463 · VERSION 4 · UPDATED
1
Selecting the World Bank President
2019, countries with a per capita GNI below $1,145 are eligible for IDA funding.3 IBRD
commitments totaled $23.6 billion in 2018. Commitments from IDA to low-income countries
were $24 billion in 2018 (Table 1).4 Three other World Bank-affiliated organizations are
dedicated on promoting private sector finance and investment in low-income countries. The
International Finance Corporation (IFC) promotes private sector development in developing
countries by making loans and investments in small- and medium-sized companies in those
countries. The Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) provides private investors with
insurance coverage against non-commercial risk (expropriation, war and civil disturbance, and/or
breach of contract) in developing countries. The International Center for the Settlement of
Investment Disputes (ICSID) provides dispute resolution for investment disputes between
governments and foreign investors.
Table 1. World Bank Group Commitments
Fiscal Years 2018 and 2017 (in U.S. billions)
World Bank Group
FY 2018
FY 2017
International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development
22.6
22.6
(IBRD)
International Development
19.5
19.5
Association (IDA)
International Finance Corporation
11.9
11.9
(IFC)
Multilateral Investment Guarantee
4.8
4.8
Association (MIGA)
Total
58.8
58.8
Source: World Bank
Note: ICSID does not make investments and is not included in the table.
The United States is the largest contributor to the World Bank, having the largest share of the
IBRD’s subscribed capital, $46.4 billion (16.88%) of a total of $275 billion.5 As the largest
contributor, the United States holds a single seat on the 25-member Board of Executive Directors
and carries 16.32% of the total votes in Bank decision-making, which provides veto power on
decisions requiring an 85% majority vote. The largest shareholders after the United States are
Japan (6.89% of voting power), China (4.45%), Germany (4.03%), France (3.78%), and the
United Kingdom (3.78%).6 The large voting power of the United States ensures the U.S. ability to
veto major policy decisions at the Bank.
A citizen of the United States has always held the presidency of the World Bank. The World
Bank’s President is Chairman of the Board and elected by Board of Directors. The President is
the chief of the operating staff of the Bank and conducts, under direction of the Executive
3 Further background information is available at: [http://ida.worldbank.org/about/borrowing-countries].
4 The World Bank’s fiscal year 2018 covers the period July 1, 2017 to June 30, 2018.
5 World Bank 2018 Annual Report and Financial Statements. Of the U.S. contribution, only a small amount, $2.9
billion is paid in. This amount has been fully authorized and appropriated by Congress in several appropriations
measures over the years. The balance of the U.S. subscription, $43.5 billion in callable capital has been authorized by
the U.S. Congress but not appropriated.
6 World Bank 2018 Annual Report and Financial Statements.
Congressional Research Service
R42463 · VERSION 4 · UPDATED
2
Selecting the World Bank President
Directors, the ordinary business of the Bank. The Bank’s twelfth president, Jim Yong Kim has
served since 2012. On September 27, 2016, Dr. Kim was re-elected as the World Bank president,
for a second five-year term beginning July 1, 2017.7
Governance Structure of the World Bank
The Board of Governors is the highest policy making authority of the Bank. All 189 countries
are represented on the Board of Governors, usually at the Finance Minister or Central Bank
governor level. Bank governors usually meet annually at the fall annual IMF/World Bank
meetings.
The 25-member Board of Executive Directors is responsible for the conduct of the general
operations of the Bank. The Board considers and decides on loan and credit proposals and
policy issues that guide the general operations of the Bank and its overall direction. The Board
functions in continuous session at the Bank and meets as often as required by Bank business;
standing Board meetings are held twice weekly, with Board Committee meetings several times
a month. The majority of Bank decisions require a 50% majority vote. Some special matters
(changes in the Articles of Agreement or approval of funding increases, for example) require
an 85% affirmative vote. Since the U.S. vote in the IBRD exceeds 15%, no funding increases,
amendments, or other major actions can go into effect without U.S. consent.
The Development Committee is a forum of the World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund with 25 members, usually Ministers of Finance or Development, and who represent the
full membership of the Bank and Fund. Its mandate is to advise the IMF and World Bank
Boards of Governors on major economic development issues.
The Trump Administration has continued to support U.S. participation in the IFIs and has funded
recent U.S. MDB commitments.8 The Trump Administration is supporting a $60.1 billion capital
increase for the World Bank's main lending facility, the IBRD, which would raise its capital from
$268.9 billion to $329 billion.9 World Bank members also endorsed a $5.5 billion capital increase
for the IFC, which would more than triple the IFC's capital base from $2.57 billion to $8.2 billion.
The Trump Administration supports the capital increase, which will be accompanied by reforms
designed, in part, to address a longstanding concern for many U.S. policymakers: high levels of
World Bank lending to upper-middle income countries, especially China. In a statement at the
2017 IMF and World Bank spring meetings, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin stated that,
“the relationship between the World Bank and more creditworthy countries [such as China]
should mature over time, with the absolute level of borrowing declining as countries become
better able to finance their own development objectives.”10
7 Picker, Leslie, “World Bank Picks Jim Yong Kim for Second Term as President,” New York Times, September 27,
2016.
8 CRS Report RS20792, Multilateral Development Banks: U.S. Contributions FY2000-FY2019, by Rebecca M. Nelson.
9 CRS In Focus IF10895, 2018 World Bank Capital Increase Proposal, by Martin A. Weiss.
10 Department of the Treasury, “Development Committee Statement of Secretary Mnuchin - April 2018,” Washington,
DC, April 21, 2018.
Congressional Research Service
R42463 · VERSION 4 · UPDATED
3
Selecting the World Bank President
Leadership Selection at the World Bank
Selecting the leadership at the two major international financial institutions (IFIs)—the IMF and
the World Bank—is guided by a 60-year old tradition that the World Bank president is an
American and that the IMF Managing Director is a European. The informal agreement reflects the
political and economic balance of power at the end of World War II. At the time, the United States
believed that the World Bank should be headed by an American since the United States was the
only capital surplus nation, and World Bank lending would be dependent on American financial
markets. The U.S. Secretary of the Treasury at the time, Fred Vinson, believed that if an American
representative headed the World Bank, the IMF must be headed by a non-American.11 Moreover,
he noted, “it would be impracticable to appoint U.S. citizens to head both the Bank and the
Fund.”12
World Bank Presidents (1946-Present)
Jim Yong Kim, 2012-Present. Physician and anthropologist, co-founder of a global health non-profit
organization and former president of Dartmouth Col ege.
Robert Zoellick, 2007-2012. Former U.S. trade representative and deputy secretary of state under President
George W. Bush.
Paul Wolfowitz, 2005-2007. Former deputy defense secretary under President George W. Bush.
James Wolfensohn, 1995-2005. An investment banker and lawyer, born in Australia who later became an
American citizen.
Lewis Preston, 1991-1995. A commercial banker who was chief executive of J.P. Morgan.
Barber Conable, 1986-1991. Former GOP member of Congress from New York for 20 years.
Alden Winship Clausen, 1981-1986. A commercial banker who was chief executive of BankAmerica.
Robert S. McNamara, 1968-1981. Former defense secretary under Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon
Johnson. President of Ford Motor Company.
George David Wood, 1963-1968. An investment banker and chairman of First Boston Corp.
Eugene Robert Black, 1949-1962. Former top executive at Chase National Bank.
John Jay McCloy, 1947-1949. A lawyer and former assistant secretary of war during World War II.
Eugene Meyer, 1946. An investor and owner of The Washington Post.
Source: http://www.worldbank.org/en/about/archives/history/past-presidents.
Despite the growth of world capital markets, and the fact that the World Bank is no longer reliant
on U.S. capital markets, the convention on the IMF and World Bank selection has remained
intact. Moreover, the U.S.-EU agreement is not unique. A 2009 study finds that:
Informal agreements allocating positions of authority and decision making pervade
international organizations. Whether in secretariats or political, judicial, and administrative
bodies, tacit understandings that assign representation to certain states or groups of states
are the norm, not the exception...13
The Articles of Agreement of the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the Asian Development
Bank (AsDB) each specify that only citizens of regional countries may serve as presidents of
those banks. By tradition, the Japanese Finance Ministry nominates a Japanese citizen to be
11 Miles Kahler, Leadership Selection in the Major Multilateral (Washington, DC: Institute for International
Economics, 2001).
12 Ibid.
13 Jacob Katz Cogan, “Representation and Power in International Organization: The Operational Constitution and its
Critics,” The American Journal of International Law, 2009, vol. 103.
Congressional Research Service
R42463 · VERSION 4 · UPDATED
4
Selecting the World Bank President
president of the AsDB. The Articles of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and the
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) specify only that their president
must come from a member country. By tradition, the IDB president is selected by a competitive
process from among citizens of the Latin American countries. The EBRD president is also elected
by a presumably competitive process, though only French and German citizens have served to
date in that capacity and there is normally only one nominee.
Second-tier offices in these institutions have also traditionally been reserved for U.S. citizens.
First Deputy Managing Director at the IMF and Executive Vice President at the IDB are
traditionally U.S. citizens. These individuals are appointed by the chief executive of the
institution, but in the case of the IMF and IDB an individual is typically designated by the U.S.
Government. At the Asian Development Bank and EBRD, one of the vice presidents for an
operational region has typically been a U.S. citizen.
However, despite these restrictions, there have been successful efforts to open up the selection
process across the MDBs. In 2015, the AfDB members elected Akinwumi Adesina of Nigeria,
after a transparent election involving seven other candidates. Adesina garnered 58% of the total
vote of AfDB shareholders. 14 The 2012 World Bank election was the first to include several
candidates and Kim’s nomination was, unlike past nomination, not unanimous. The
announcement of Kim’s selection noted that a new selection process (introduced in 2011) yielded
multiple nominees (former Nigerian finance minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and former
Colombian finance minister and United Nations Undersecretary-General for Economic and Social
Affairs, Jose Antonio Ocampo) and that the nominees received support from different member
countries.15
Formal Process for Selecting the World Bank President
The formal guidelines for choosing the World Bank president are laid out in the Bank’s Articles
of Agreements and Bylaws.16 Article V, Section 5, states that “[t]he Executive Board shall select a
President who shall not be a Governor or an Executive Director.” This decision may be reached
by a simple majority of the Executive Board. Section 13(c) of the Bank’s bylaws stipulate the
terms of service. World Bank presidents are elected for renewable five-year terms. Neither the
Articles nor the bylaws articulate any specific qualifications for the position of President of the
World Bank.
The Bank’s Articles of Agreement, however, are silent on any requirements on how individuals
are selected, on what criteria, or by what process they are vetted. There is no formal search
process for candidates. Nominations can only be made by the 25 World Bank Executive Directors
and there is no concerted search process of the Executive Board to identify and vet possible
candidates.
In July 2000, two internal working groups (the World Bank Working Group to Review the
Process for Selection of the President and the International Monetary Fund Working Group to
14 Morris, Scott and Ben Leo, African Development Bank Elects New President, Raises Bar for Transparency, Center
for Global Development, May 29, 2015, https://www.cgdev.org/blog/african-development-bank-elects-new-president-
raises-bar-transparency.
15 The World Bank, World Bank’s Executive Directors Select Dr. Jim Yong Kim 12th President of the World Bank
Group, April 16, 2012. http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2012/04/16/world-bank-executive-directors-
select-dr-jim-yong-kim-12th-president-of-the-world-bank-group
16 The World Bank Group’s Articles of Agreement and Bylaws are available at the Bank’s website:
http://www.worldbank.org/en/about/articles-of-agreement.
Congressional Research Service
R42463 · VERSION 4 · UPDATED
5
Selecting the World Bank President
Review the Process for Selection of the Managing Director) were created to discuss the selection
procedure. A joint draft report of the Working Group was endorsed by the Executive Directors on
April 26, 2001, but never formally implemented. The report declared, among other things, that
transparency and accountability are critical to the selection process.17
Instead of implementing the 2001 report’s recommendations, the Executive Board adopted in
2011 a procedure that specified qualification criteria, established a nomination period, and
provided for an interview process. Critics point out that the agreed procedures remain vague and
largely non-transparent. Most notably, development expertise is not included as a qualification
and the decision will be taken not by public vote, but rather by consensus according to prior
practice. Declaring the importance of an “open, transparent, and merit-based” process, yet
continuing to perpetuate the status-quo, according to three former World Bank chief economists,
is hypocritical, and “destroys the trust and spirit of collaboration needed to manage the profound
problems facing the world.”18
2001 Recommendations of IMF and World Bank Leadership Reform
1) Executive Directors should establish clear criteria for identifying, nominating, and selecting qualified candidates
for the post;
2) Executive Directors should be informed in a timely manner regarding candidates, including their credentials and
knowledge of the institution;
3) There should be a channel for facilitating smooth communication;
4) Transparency and accountability are critical; and
5) Any decision concerning the selection process should take into account any impact on the selection process at
other international financial institutions.
2012 and 2018 World Bank President Selection Criteria
1) A proven track record of leadership;
2) Experience managing large organizations with international exposure, and a familiarity with the public sector;
3) Ability to articulate a clear vision of the Bank’s development mission
4) A firm commitment to and appreciation for multilateral cooperation; and
5) Effective and diplomatic communication skil s, impartiality, and objectivity.
Sources: International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, The Bank Working Group to Review the Process
for Selection of the President and the Fund Working Group to Review the Process for Selection of the Managing
Director—Draft Joint Report, April 25, 2001; International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, Strengthening
Governance and Accountability: Shareholder Stewardship and Oversight, April 4, 2011.
The decision to select a new World Bank president will be made by a majority vote of the World
Bank’s Executive Board. Unlike the United Nations General Assembly, which relies on a one-
person, one-vote governance system, the World Bank uses a weighted voted system. Voting is
loosely based on contributions to the Bank. The five largest shareholders (United States, Japan,
Germany, France, and the United Kingdom) have their own seat on the Executive Board. In
addition to the five largest shareholders, China, Russia, and Saudi Arabia have enough votes to
elect their own Executive Directors. All other countries have gravitated into mixed-state
groupings or constituencies. These constituencies range in size from three countries (South
17 International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, “The Bank Working Group to Review the Process for Selection of
the President and the Fund Working Group to Review the Process for Selection of the Managing Director—Draft Joint
Report,” April 25, 2001.
18 Francois Bourguignon, Nicholas Stern, and Joseph Stiglitz, “End the Monopoly: let’s make it a real World Bank at
last,” Financial Times, March 21, 2012.
Congressional Research Service
R42463 · VERSION 4 · UPDATED
6
Selecting the World Bank President
Africa, Angola, and Nigeria) to 21.19 The mixed-state constituencies are flexible in their
membership. Countries have periodically switched constituencies, often to a new group that will
allow them to have a bigger vote or leadership role.
Unlike the eight countries that have their own ED, the influence of countries in mixed-state
constituencies is not equivalent to their quota-determined voting weight. Since they vote in
constituencies, very small countries can easily be sidestepped by the larger countries in the
constituency. For many countries at the World Bank they “can at best express a divergent opinion
orally but cannot bring it to bear in the form of a vote.”20 Executive Directors must cast their
votes as single unit even though some of the countries they represent may disagree with their
position. There is no provision for splitting a constituency’s vote.
There is no formal congressional involvement in the selection of Bank management. U.S.
participation in the World Bank is authorized by the Bretton Woods Agreement Act of 1945.21 The
Act delegates to the President ultimate authority under U.S. law to direct U.S. policy and instruct
the U.S. representatives at the Bank. The President, in turn, has generally delegated authority to
the Secretary of the Treasury. With the advice and consent of the Senate, the President names
individuals to represent the United States on the Executive Board of the World Bank. The position
of U.S. Executive Director is currently vacant. The Alternate Executive Director is Erik Bethel.22
The Executive Board has authority over operations and policy and must approve any loan or
policy decision. The U.S. Executive Director is supported primarily by Treasury Department
staff.
Unique among the founding members, the Bretton Woods Agreement Act requires specific
congressional authorization for certain decisions, such as changing the U.S. share at the Bank or
to amend the Articles of Agreement. However, neither the approval of individual loans nor the
selection of the Managing Director requires congressional approval.
Reform Efforts and the 2019 Selection Process
The European-U.S. arrangement to split the leadership at the IMF and World Bank has generated
controversy, which may undermine the effectiveness of the eventual nominee.23 Critics of the
current selection process make two general arguments. First, the gentlemen’s agreement on IMF
and World Bank leadership is a relic of a global economy that no longer exists. Whereas the
United States and Europe dominated the post-war economy, the current international economy is
more diverse. Developing and emerging market countries contribute half of global output, up
from 25% thirty years ago.24 Over the past several decades, the balance of global economic power
has been shifting from the United States and Europe to China and a number of other fast-
developing countries (Figure 1). These economies account for rising shares of global GDP,
manufacturing, and trade, also are driven by a significant expansion of trade among the
19 A full list of the World Bank’s voting constituencies and the voting power of individual member states is available
at: [http://pubdocs.worldbank.org/en/329671541106474760/IBRDEDsVotingTable.pdf].
20 Richard Gerster, Proposals for Voting Reform Within the International Monetary Fund, Journal of World Trade,
June 1993.
21 22 U.S.C. §286 et seq.
22 For more information on Mr. Bethel, see: http://www.worldbank.org/en/about/people/e/erik-bethel.
23 Gertz, Geoffrey, “Will Donald Trump Get to Pick the Next President of the World Bank? Maybe Not.” Washington
Post, January 10.
24 International Monetary Fund, Strengthening the International Monetary System: Taking Stock and Looking Ahead,
Washington, DC, March 23, 2011.
Congressional Research Service
R42463 · VERSION 4 · UPDATED
7
Selecting the World Bank President
developing countries (South-South trade). These shifts are driven by growing economic
integration and interdependence among economies, particularly through new global production
and supply chains that incorporate inputs from many different countries.25
Figure 1. Share of World GDP (Real and Projected)
Based on Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)
Source: The World Bank.
Note: Figures for 2018-2022 are projected.
In recent years, China has also invested in, created, and led a range of institutions and initiatives,
including the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) and other funding mechanisms, such
as the Silk Road Fund and the New Development Bank (also known as the BRICS Bank), a
collective arrangement with Brazil, Russia, India, and South Africa.26 At the same time, China is
pursuing its own bilateral and regional trade agreements, such as the proposed Regional
Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) with 15 other countries in the Asia Pacific. China
has also positioned itself to act as a lender of last resort through monetary arrangements such as
the BRICs Contingent Reserve Arrangement (CRA) and the Chiang Mai Initiative
Multilateralization (CMIM). 27
In such a diverse global economy, any agreement that grants the leadership position based on
nationality, critics argue, unnecessarily limits the pool of potential candidates that may be
25 There are many recent books and reports documenting the shifts in global economic power. A notable example is:
The World Bank, Global Development Horizons 2011, Multipolarity: The New Global Economy, Washington, DC,
2011, http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTGDH/Resources/GDH_CompleteReport2011.pdf. See also, Rachman,
Gideon, Asia's Rise and America's Decline From Obama to Trump and Beyond (New York, NY: Other Press, 2017);
Economy, Elizabeth and Levi, Michael, By All Means Necessary: How China's Resource Quest is Changing the World
(Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2014; and Wright, Thomas, All Measures Short of War: The Contest for the
Twenty-First Century and the Future of American Power (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2017).
26CRS In Focus IF10154, Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, by Martin A. Weiss; CRS Report R44754, Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), by Martin A. Weiss.
27 IRC Taskforce on IMF Issues, Strengthening the Global Financial Safety Net: Moving Relations between the IMF
and Regional Financing Arrangements Forward, European Central Bank, ECB Occasional Paper Series No, 207,
March 2018.
Congressional Research Service
R42463 · VERSION 4 · UPDATED
8
Selecting the World Bank President
exceptionally competent in addressing the issues before the Bank. “Since the creation of the
International Monetary Fund and World Bank at the end of the second world war, an American
has led the Bank and a European the IMF,” noted Mark Sobel, U.S. chairman of The Official
Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF), an independent think tank and former U.S.
representative at the IMF. 28 “It is time for a change.”29 According to Nancy Birdsall, senior
fellow and founding president of the Center for Global Development, “the logic of an American
president to ensure sustained U.S. support for the World Bank is no longer as clear as it has
been.”30 According to Birdsall, and others, the Trump Administration’s “America First” rhetoric
may make it harder for the United States to coalesce support for the U.S. candidate.31 Others
argue that these concerns are overblown and that any serious effort to block the U.S. nominee
would backfire. David Dollar, a former U.S. Treasury and senior World Bank official, says that,
“it’s a very complicated game. My instinct is that there is a very strong likelihood that the U.S.
nominee will be approved. The world has an interest in the United States staying engaged with
the World Bank.”32 Devesh Kapur, a professor at Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International
Studies at Johns Hopkins University, puts it more bluntly, “powerful nations' relationships with
the United States matter much more than who heads the World Bank.”33
Following Kim’s announcement of his resignation, the Bank’s Executive Board met on January 9,
2019, and issued a formal statement on the selection process.34 The nomination period for the
next President ends on March 14, after which the Executive Board will decide on a shortlist of
three candidates. Following interviews, the Executive Board aims to select the next President
before the spring meetings in April 2019.
Reportedly, Ivanka Trump, the president’s oldest daughter and senior advisor is playing a role in
selecting the U.S. nominee.35 In 2017, Ms. Trump helped start a World Bank-administered fund,
the Women Entrepreneurs Finance Initiative, which aims to generate $1.6 billion in capital for
female entrepreneurs. The White House is considering, according to reports, Indra Nooyi, the
former chief executive officer of PepsiCo.36 Other individuals re reportedly being considered are:
David Malpass, Treasury Undersecretary for international affairs; Ray Washburne, President and
Chief Executive of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation; Mark Green, U.S. Agency for
International Development Administrator; and Robert Kimmitt, Deputy Treasury Secretary under
George W. Bush.37
28 Sobel, Mark, Non-American should lead World Bank: Time for a Change at Bretton Woods bodies, Offiical
Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum, January 9, 2019,
https://www.omfif.org/analysis/commentary/2019/january/non-american-should-lead-world-bank/.
29 Ibid.
30 Birdsall, Nancy, “The World Bank Needs to Join the 21st Century,” Foreign Policy, January 16, 2019, pp.
https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/01/16/the-world-bank-needs-to-join-the-21st-century/.
31 See also, Gallagher, Kevin P., “Kim’s Resignation from World Bank Leaves Multilateralism at Stake,” Financial
Times, January 8, 2019.
32 Quoted in, Politi, James and Sam Fleming, “Why Jim Yong Kim's move has shaken up the World Bank,” Financial
Times, January 11, 2019.
33 Kapur, Devesh, “The World Bank is in a Leadership Crisis. But That’s Nothing New,” The Globe and Mail, January
18, 2019.
34 The World Bank, “Selection of the President of the World Bank Group,” press release, January 10, 2019,
https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2019/01/10/selection-of-the-president-of-the-world-bank-group.
35 Karni, Annie, “Ivanka Trump to Help Choose New World Bank President,” The New York Times, January 4, 2019.
36 Karni, Annie, “White House Considering Indra Nooyi to Head World Bank,” The New York Times, January 15, 2019.
37 Politi, James, “Who’s in the Running for the World Bank Presidency?” Financial Times, January 17, 2019.
Congressional Research Service
R42463 · VERSION 4 · UPDATED
9
Selecting the World Bank President
Author Information
Martin A. Weiss
Specialist in International Trade and Finance
Disclaimer
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan
shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and
under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in
connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not
subject to copyright protection in the United States. Any CRS Report may be reproduced and distributed in
its entirety without permission from CRS. However, as a CRS Report may include copyrighted images or
material from a third party, you may need to obtain the permission of the copyright holder if you wish to
copy or otherwise use copyrighted material.
Congressional Research Service
R42463 · VERSION 4 · UPDATED
10