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. Contacts:
In Washington: Amy Stilwell(202) 458 4906; astilwell@worldbank.org;
Geetanjali S. Chopra (202) 473 0243; gchopra@worldbank.org
Broadcast contact:
Camille Funnell (202) 458 9369; cfunnell@worldbank.org
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Sovereign
wealth funds should invest in Africa,
Zoellick says Outlines plan to advance development in face of market
turmoil, high food and energy prices
WASHINGTON,
April 2, 2005 – World Bank Group President Robert B. Zoellick outlined
a plan today for sovereign wealth funds to invest one percent of their
holdings in equity in sub-Saharan Africa as a way of tapping long-term
global liquidity to boost investment opportunities and development.
Zoellick
said there was an urgent need to counter immediate threats in response
to the current global crisis while laying the foundations to maximize
opportunity and hope for all over the longer term. He urged developed
countries to provide immediate support to help the world’s poor
facing skyrocketing food prices, called for a global trade deal to be
agreed as soon as possible, and detailed an initiative to help countries
manage their wealth earned from high energy and mineral prices in a more
inclusive way.
In
a speech delivered ahead of next week’s Spring meetings of the World
Bank Group and the IMF, he said the Bank Group will work with sovereign
wealth funds to create a “One Percent Solution” for equity
investment in Africa – a continent with opportunities and the potential
to become an alternative pole of growth as China, India and other countries
are today.
“Today,
sovereign wealth funds hold an estimated $3 trillion in assets. If the
World Bank Group can help create the platforms and benchmarks, the investment
of even one percent of their assets would draw $30 billion to African
growth, development, and opportunity,” he said.
Zoellick
said sovereign wealth funds offered opportunity, “not something
to fear”, adding that “the sovereign funds need transparency
and should be guided by best practice to avoid politicization. But I believe
we should celebrate a possibility that government-sponsored funds will
invest equity in development. “
And
with food prices soaring, Zoellick also advocated a New Deal for Global
Food Policy.
“The
World Bank Group estimates that 33 countries around the world face potential
social unrest because of the acute hike in food and energy prices. For
these countries, where food comprises from half to three quarters of consumption,
there is no margin for survival.”
Zoellick
said the immediate priority was for the United States, the European Union,
Japan and other developed countries to provide the United Nations’
World Food Program with the $500 million it needs for emergency food supplies.
For its part, the Bank is assisting by backing feeding and cash programs
for vulnerable people and public work for food programs.
But
he said a New Deal for Global Food Policy also required a shift from traditional
food aid to funding to help build local food markets and boost farm production
and so help create a “Green Revolution” for sub-Saharan Africa.
“We
will almost double our own lending for agriculture in Africa from US$450
million to $800 million and can help countries and farmers manage systematic
risks, including through financial innovations, to counter weather variability,
such as drought.”
Zoellick
also warned the time was “now or never” for breaking the Doha
Round impasse and reaching a global trade deal.
”This
moment of decision is not only for the Doha Round. It is for trade itself.
Powerful voices across the political spectrum, including in my own country,
are calling for, and rationalizing, protectionism. This economic isolationism
signals a defeatism that will reap the losses, not the gains, of globalization.”
Zoellick
said the Bank Group was also working to help developing countries seize
the opportunities of high prices for energy and minerals, while at the
same time ensuring the benefits for resource rich countries were inclusively
spread among their people.
He
said the Bank was building on the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative
(EITI), which encourages resource rich countries to publish and verify
company payments and revenues from oil, gas and mining so their citizens
can hold them more accountable. An EITI++ would expand this approach to
include such areas as the awarding of contracts, improving economic management,
and investing revenues effectively in sustainable development.
“By
broadening the beneficiaries of resource development, we can advance inclusive
and sustainable globalization. Anti-corruption and transparency will strengthen
citizens’ confidence in their governments; respect for the environment
will add to sustainable growth and effective access to mineral and energy
resources will strengthen the sustainability of globalization’s
benefits for other economies,” said Zoellick.
He
said a planned EITI++ would be launched in Guinea, adding that the successful
development of Guinea’s rich resources could strengthen sustainable
development for the entire region.
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