Twitter
Advertisement

Current World Bank President Jim Yong Kim only candidate for new term

The World Bank has said that its current president, Jim Yong Kim, is the only person who has been nominated for the presidency of the 189-nation lending institution.

Latest News
article-main
This file photo taken on June 1, 2016 shows World Bank president Jim Yong Kim as he speaks during a conversation entitled Preventing The Next Pandemic at the Center for International and Strategic Studies (CSIS) in Washington.World Bank President Jim Yong Kim effectively won a second five-year term after nominations to lead the global development bank closed Wednesday with no other candidates proposed. The World Bank executive board said in a statement that, following official procedures, it would formally meet with Kim as a candidate "with the expectation of completing the selection process by the 2016 Annual Meetings," which take place on October 7-9.
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin

The World Bank has said that its current president, Jim Yong Kim, is the only person who has been nominated for the presidency of the 189-nation lending institution.

The bank's executive board said that nominations have now closed. It said Kim will be interviewed by the board, with the expectation that a decision will be made before the Washington-based bank's annual meeting on October 7-9.

The Obama administration put Kim's name into nomination last month. He is widely expected to win a new term given the absence of rival candidates.

Kim was the president of Dartmouth College when he was first picked for the World Bank job in 2012. Since the creation of the World Bank after World War II, the top job has always gone to an American.

The International Monetary Fund has always been headed by a European. IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde, a former French finance minister, was reappointed in February.

Kim has won praise for his efforts to use World Bank resources to address the Ebola crisis in Africa and the on-going refugee crisis in Europe and the Middle East. But he has also been criticised for what some current and former employees at the World Bank have viewed as an unnecessarily disruptive overhaul of the bank's operations.

In announcing last month that the United States, the bank's largest shareholder, would put Kim's name in nomination for a second term, US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew praised Kim's efforts to deal with "today's most pressing global challenges in innovative ways, from ending extreme poverty and tackling inequality to combating climate change." Kim became the 12th president of the World Bank in July 2012. His current five-year term does not end until June 30.

By nominating Kim for a second term this far in advance, the administration will be able to get a decision from the board before a new US president takes office next January.

The last World Bank president to serve two terms was James Wolfensohn, who was nominated for a second term by then-President Bill Clinton.

In addition to serving as president of Dartmouth, Kim was the co-founder of Partners in Health and the former director of HIV/AIDS programs at the World Health Organisation.

A medical doctor and anthropologist, Kim has been involved in dealing with health issues in poor countries for more than two decades. 

Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement