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A wellcapitalised World Bank leverages all its shareholders' investments by pooling them and then raising five times the capital by borrowing in financial markets. Image Credit: Photo Illustration: Nino Jose Heredia/Gulf News

In 2006, when Russia's government hosted a G-8 meeting on cooperation with emerging development donors, it planted a seed that had great growth potential. Today, new development partners are increasingly prominent in the global architecture, providing steadily rising aid contributions of different types.

That is why this week's Moscow meeting of these new development partners points toward the future. In Moscow, development organisations and recipient countries, both long-standing and newer partners including Russia, China, Korea, Turkey, and Poland will meet to share best practices, consider innovations in development, and find ways of using aid more effectively to respond to shared global challenges.

The rise of new development partners emerging markets that are channelling billions of dollars to developing countries opens possibilities for fresh ideas and resources to help overcome poverty, sustain inclusive economic growth (including through a dynamic private sector), and address global issues such as food security and climate change.

But there is a risk that developing countries, already burdened by dealing with numerous donors, will face an even greater fragmentation of aid efforts. New donors can lessen the load on the world's poorest and increase effectiveness by working together through multilateral channels. In Moscow this week, both newer and traditional aid donors, as well as multilateral organisations such as the World Bank Group and the OECD will discuss improving transparency of aid, coordination of assistance and enhancing effectiveness by targeting results.

The conference will advance the "Moscow Process," an expression of Russia's desire to play an active role in forging new partnerships to shape the evolving global aid architecture. Russia recognises that newer donors have experiences, ideas, and resources that can help all countries climb up the ladder of opportunity. The World Bank wants to learn from these donors, catalyse deeper cooperation, and build a stronger and deeper multilateral system.

The Russia Education Aid for Development (Read) programme offers a good example of this fresh approach. Its goal to improve the measurement of education quality and learning outcomes is pertinent to developed and developing countries alike. Improved learning leads to better jobs, greater productivity, and higher incomes in every society.

In partnership with the World Bank, the OECD, and several recipient countries, the Russian-inspired effort will support the development of educational institutions and the ability to measure progress in learning. Stories of cooperation such as Read illustrate how old notions of assistance need to be re-examined and challenged.

Effective development assistance is not a one-way street from donor to recipient or from North to South. It requires local ownership. We need to apply global experience, yet with customisation for local circumstances.

For the World Bank, the Moscow conference marks a welcome step in building a more globalised aid architecture that recognises a variety of contributions from aid donors and organisations, including through private-sector development. Since the full fury of the economic crisis hit in mid-2008, the World Bank has delivered a record $88 billion (Dh323 billion) of assistance for infrastructure, targeted safety nets, and private-sector investment to cushion the most vulnerable and to spur job creation.

The Bank created special facilities to assist with food security, rapid crisis response, trade finance, micro-finance, public-private infrastructure, bank capitalisation, and restructuring business loans. This year, the Bank will set another record for investment in developing countries. To sustain its vital role, it is working with its shareholders to strengthen its capital base. A well-capitalised World Bank leverages all its shareholders' investments by pooling them and then raising five times the capital by borrowing in financial markets. It then uses these funds in cooperation with aid partners, old and new, public and private.

Critical times

We feel an especially strong sense of urgency as we approach the deadline of 2015 for achieving the Millennium Development Goals, which aim to reduce extreme poverty, hunger, and child mortality. The next few years will be critical. The G-20's call for ambitious replenishment of the International Development Association, the World Bank's fund for the poorest countries, is vital if we are to make headway.

At the dawn of today's multilateral system in 1944, 44 countries gathered in the United States at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, to design the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and a system for international trade. At that time, power was concentrated in a small number of states. The great waves of decolonisation were just stirring; the few developing countries were seen as marginal players in the global system not as central actors or agents of history. Before long, allies in the war against fascism split apart in a Cold War.

That world is long gone. The new realities of the global political economy demand a different system. Developing countries and newer market economies are part of the solution so they must also be part of the conversation and decision-making process. We hope that this week's discussion in Moscow prompts a broader international dialogue with new development partners. We urge other donors and international organisations to join us in contributing to the "Moscow Process" as we modernise multilateralism.

 

Alexei Kudrin is Russia's Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance. Robert Zoellick is President of the World Bank.

— Project Syndicate