WASHINGTON, May 3, 2023 – The Executive Directors of the World Bank today selected Ajay Banga as President of the World Bank for a five-year term beginning June 2, 2023.
Category Archives: WBG News & Reports
Thriving: Making Cities Green, Resilient, and Inclusive in a Changing Climate
Cities, as engines of prosperity, are major contributors to climate change, generating about 70% of global greenhouse gas emissions. At the same time, as home to more than half of humanity, cities are on the front lines of climate change.
New analysis from the World Bank examines the two-way relationship between cities and climate change, concluding that cities also hold one of the keys to solving the climate crisis. With data from more than 10,000 cities, the report offers insight into how to help cities become greener, more resilient, and more inclusive – in other words, on how to help their cities thrive – in a changing climate.
Shaping tomorrow’s debt restructuring system
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Food insecurity is among the most pressing challenges in Yemen and over half of the population is food insecure.
- Yemen has suffered from a series of food crises and climate change increases the risk of further crises.
- A food security crisis preparedness plan has been developed to mitigate the impact of future food crises.
Confronting Geo-economic Challenges: A Conversation with World Bank Group President David Malpass
As the U.S. continues to experience historically high inflation rates and increasing risks to its economy, it also faces a number of global geoeconomic challenges. These include the end of the era of globalization, rising financial instability and pressures to increase the production of certain strategically important goods for domestic use or export to friendly neighbors. Meanwhile, the U.S. and other countries are also contending with the economic implications of social, political and technological developments, such as population aging, greater competition from abroad, growing inequality, innovation and its impact on the labor market, and the global transition to cleaner energy sources.
On May 22 at Baker Hall, World Bank Group President David Malpass joined John W. Diamond, Director of the Center for Public Finance at the Baker Institute, to discuss the geoeconomic challenges — and opportunities — facing the United States and the world, and how to navigate them.
This event was sponsored by the Baker Institute Center for Public Finance.
Private Investment in Infrastructure: Where are we now?
A quick scan of the headlines tells you everything that those of us working in international
development already know: today’s world is not business as usual. In just a few short years, the global landscape has transformed in a way that very few of us could ever have anticipated.
Publication: Brazil Country Climate and Development Report
Abstract
Shaping tomorrow’s debt restructuring system
As the debt crisis has unfolded in many of the world’s poorest countries, much attention has
focused on seeking individual debt restructurings through the G20 Common Framework. This remains a priority, but the implementation remains slow and lacks the predictability needed to provide debtors and creditors with confidence. The Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable and the April 26 World Bank debt conference, Breaking the Impasse in Global Debt Restructuring, discussed effective debt restructurings and debt sustainability. The conference also addressed how to avoid excessive debt build-up; and pressing questions regarding the debt sustainability implications of a decline of net international reserves into negative territory as countries draw on debt-like instruments such as swap lines. Following this week’s G7 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meeting in Japan, we will publish the initial findings from a recent debt reconciliation initiative, which points to many technical challenges in agreeing on the amounts of debt to be treated in a restructuring.
Impactful climate mitigation requires standards, verification and standardization
They need to make major advances on education, energy production, electricity access, health, infrastructure and nutrition just to make up for losses in recent years. Climate costs require significant additional resources, as does the increase in the cost of debt service and repayment.
Investing in Innovation: David Malpass in Conversation With George French
How to make India pandemic proof
The speed with which the virus spread exposed the many weaknesses in the world’s health systems. No country was immune. Even those that ranked high in the Global Health Security Index struggled to mount a timely and effective response.
the needs are particularly large to provide for growing populations and decades of underinvestment.
next pandemic?
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