Democracy Arsenal

« When Corn Kills | Main | Dear Europe; »

May 02, 2007

Don't Let Anti-Corruption Go Down With Wolfowitz
Posted by Suzanne Nossel

Paul Wolfowitz's long, bitter swan song at the World Bank is now accompanied by supportive sounds from unexpected quarters.  In Tuesday's NYT, Nuhu Ribadu, Chairman of Nigeria's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission wrote an impassioned defense of the embattled Bank President.  He praised the very crusade against corruption in developing countries that seems to have turned much of the Bank's staff against Mr. Wolfowitz.  While Wolfowitz may need to leave the Bank, the body's Board of Directors ought to ensure that the organization's commitment to fight corruption not disappear along with him.

By taking on the issue of corruption, Wolfowitz broke from longstanding Bank practice to avoid wading into "politics" in the countries it helped.  But in pressing countries to restructure their budgets and economies, the Bank inevitably bumped up against negligent and fraudulent practices that prevented resources from being maximized for public benefit.  By remaining silent, the lender was tacitly allowing such unsavory practices to continue.  Wolfowitz's predecessor, James Wolfensohn, saw the problem and railed against the "cancer of corruption" in 1996 and set up a unit to battle graft.  But he stopped short of withholding Bank aid on the basis of corruption.

Wolfowitz took matters a step further.  He held up aid to India for a health program that was reportedly being siphoned off for politicians benefit, and froze lending to Chad in retaliation for that country's failure to meet commitments to channel oil proceeds to the poor. Similar measures were taken to punish corruption in Kenya, Bangladesh, Argentina and elsewhere.

Bank employees and others have complained that in withholding aid, Wolfowitz has punished innocent people who are themselves victims of the very corruption he decries.  This is true:  as long as some aid was making it past the pilferers, end recipients would be worse off if Bank funds are turned off entirely.  But, as Ribadu points out, $300 billion in foreign aid to Africa over the last two decades has failed to stanch rampant malaria and AIDS, nor help the 40 million African children who are not in school.  While corruption is not solely to blame, Ribadu argues that corruption "kills far more effectively than AIDS, malaria or war."

Furthermore, while some focus on the near-term impact of anti-corruption efforts on the poorest, others have objected to Wolfowitz's approach on separate grounds.  These have included affected governments not accustomed to having their domestic practices scrutinized, as well as Bank staff who had trouble getting used to the new rules.

The UN has cited corruption as a human rights issue, pointing out in a recent report that it harms the poor disproportionately due to their inability to pay bribes and access development resources.  In Nigeria, for example, the misuse of oil funds has pulled money away from desperately needed health and education services.

Assuming Wolfowitz goes, there may be a strong temptation for his successor to wipe the slate clean and define a new agenda that places less emphasis on the hot-button issue of corruption.  That leader will need to win the support of Bank staff and governments, some of whom may have been more irked by Wolfowitz's crackdown on corruption that by his treatment of his girlfriend.

But Wolfowitz's failure to embody personally the unimpeachable standards demanded of a high-profile corruption fighter ought not discredit the cause.  Some of Wolfowitz's tactics may warrant scrutiny and overhaul.  But his commitment to ensuring that the Bank not prop up and propagate corrupt bureaucracies is a legacy that deserves to outlive its champion.   

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c04d69e200d834fdb4a853ef

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Don't Let Anti-Corruption Go Down With Wolfowitz:

Comments

Personally, I'd be happy to see PNAC-U.S. Empire-co-architect of 700,000+ Iraqi deaths Wolfie go in any manner it can be accomplished.

Nuhu Ribadu is a corrupt man being used by Nigerias corrupt President Olusegun Obasanjo to hound political opponents he has no place giving any comment on Wolfowitz or indeed anyone

Though I agree with this, I rather think the cause of fighting corruption will be damaged more seriously the longer its current champion sticks around as head of the World Bank. Right now fighting corruption is a cause with some advocates and some enemies; the more it is identified with Paul Wolfowitz the less attractive it will be to many people who might otherwise support it.

There have to be plenty of Americans who would be willing to attack corruption were they named President of the World Bank. The longer we stick out necks out to protect Wolfowitz from the consequences of his self-dealing the less likely it is that other governments will accept the idea that the Bank's president should be an American, and under the circumstances it would be hard to blame them.

Given what is happening at Justice, where it seems that non-political appointees and interns were vetted for party ties, given the numerous violations of the Hatch act we already know of, the number of nepotistic hires at the upper echelons of this admin (the fiasco of Rehnquist's daughter, the disaster of Cheney's daughter at State, the mediocrity of Powell at FCC, the odious incompetence of Cheney's son in law in his sinecure, and so on and so forth...having ANYONE from this administration open their mouths about third world corruption and nepotism should only produce gales of laughter even from Nigerians, Zimbabweans, and Burmese. Wolfowitz should be let go, so he can, through long reflection, come to understand the terrible things he has done to this nation and the world through the policies he endorsed.

Because of fiesta money, I meet a lot of friends. Besides, my friends usually give me some fiesta online gold. I usually buy fiesta Gold through Internet and advice from my friends. I gain a lot of fiesta online money and harvest in life.

you just need to spend 100-200 dollars to buy a replica rolex watches.
U-Boat replica watches are made by the rating 1:1 according to the original watches, and you can't distinguish the original and the fake watches when you look at the surface of the watches.

I always heard something from my neighbor that he sometimes goes to the internet bar to play the game which will use him some rf gold

I hope i can get kamas in low price.
Ibuy dofus kamas for you.

Once I played Rom Gold, I did not know how to get strong, someone told me that you must have Rom Gold. He gave me some Runes of Magic Gold.

Do you know the FFXI Gil, in here you can get the FFXI gold.

The comments to this entry are closed.

Subscribe
Sign-up to receive a weekly digest of the latest posts from Democracy Arsenal.
Email: 
Powered by TypePad

Disclaimer

The opinions voiced on Democracy Arsenal are those of the individual authors and do not represent the views of any other organization or institution with which any author may be affiliated.
Read Terms of Use