World Bank has a $13bn capital increase

Published Apr 23, 2018

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JOHANNESBURG - The World Bank’s shareholders on Saturday endorsed a $13billion (R157bn) paid-in capital increase that will boost China’s shareholding, but bring lending reforms that will raise borrowing costs for higher-middle-income countries, including China.

The multilateral lender said the plan would allow it to lift the group’s overall lending to nearly $80bn in fiscal 2019 from about $59bn last year and to an average of about $100bn annually to 2030.

“We have more than doubled the capacity of the World Bank Group,” the institution’s president, Jim Yong Kim, said during the International Monetary Fund and World Bank spring meetings in Washington.

“It’s a huge vote of confidence, but the expectations are enormous.”

The hard-fought capital hike, initially resisted by the Trump administration, will add $7.5bn paid-in capital for the World Bank’s main concessional lending arm, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD).

Its commercial-terms lender, the International Finance Corporation, will get $5.5bn paid-in capital, and IBRD also will get a $52.6bn increase in callable capital.

The bank agreed to change the IBRD’s lending rules to charge higher rates for developing countries with higher incomes, to discourage them from excessive borrowing.

The IBRD previously had charged similar rates for all borrowers, and US Treasury officials had complained that it was lending too much to China and other bigger emerging markets.

US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said earlier on Saturday that he supported the capital hike due to the reforms that it included. The last World Bank capital increase came in 2010.

The current hike comes with cost controls and salary restrictions that will hold World Bank compensation to “a little below average” for the financial sector, Kim said. He added that there was nothing specific in the agreement that targeted a China lending reduction, but he said lending to China was expected to gradually decline.

In 2015, China founded the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, and lends heavily to developing countries through its government export banks.

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