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US President Donald Trump on Wednesday introduced David Malpass, a Treasury official he has nominated to lead the World Bank, as the "right person to take on this incredibly important job."
Malpass, who is now Trump's undersecretary for international affairs at the Treasury Department, has been a sharp critic of the 189-nation World Bank.
Malpass would succeed Jim Yong Kim, who left in January three years before his term was to end.
Malpass, 62, made clear on Wednesday that his focus at the World Bank would include furthering the Trump administration's agendas for developing countries.
One major initiative, he said, would be to implement changes to the World bank that he and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin helped negotiate. And in a nod to the president's daughter and adviser, Ivanka Trump, Malpass said he would focus on improving the status of women.
"A key goal will be to ensure that women achieve full participation in developing economies," Malpass said.
In a meeting with reporters after Trump announced his nomination, Malpass sought to put his longtime criticism of the World Bank and its sister lending organization, the International Monetary Fund, into context.
He said his efforts going back to his service in the Reagan administration have been aimed at reforming both institutions.
He said his challenge will be to implement the reforms included with the capital increase, including restrictions on World Bank lending to major developing nations such as China and India.
He said loans to those countries took away resources that should be going to poorer nations.
"I look forward to working with China and others on what the appropriate pace of that wind-down (of their loans) should be," Malpass told reporters.
The US nomination of Malpass for the top job will go before the bank's board of directors on Thursday. He said he did not know whether other countries would put forward their own candidates but he said he would be traveling over the next several weeks to various countries to promote his candidacy, stopping first in China and Japan.
Senior administration officials, insisting on anonymity to discuss plans for the World Bank, said Malpass would evaluate bank programs based on such criteria as whether they helped raise median incomes and improved financial transparency.
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