Log In  | Sign Up  | Search
Submit
VEEM
HomeNewsThe EyeClassifiedsEventsArchive
Base FM Live Broadcast - You can stop the music at the bottom of the page
Headlines
Headlines
Namibia Enters Miss USA AFrica Pageant
Namibian Events that defined the first decade of the 21st century
Namibia Offers Free Education?!
World Cup: Bane or Blessings to Southern Africa
Who Manipulates Namibia’s
Is Women Truly Under-Represented in SWAPO
Trophy Hunting – a shot in the arm for Namibia`s tourism and economy
Blacksheep, Namibia`s Newest Singing Sensation
Cautious driving on Namibian Roads
Zambia wins Face of Africa 2010
Entertainment
Entertainment
Wedding Celebrations in Namibia
DJ Mo (Moses Kairimuti) fired from NAMIU
Apartheid documentary viewing in New York
Bullet to represent Namibia at World Cup opening
“Children of Our Villages” film exploits Namibian children
Namibia`s Music Legend Jackson Kaujeua Sr. has passed on. May his soul rest in eternal peace
Exit & Mushe
Levite
EES a.k.a. Eric Sell
Business and Careers
Business and Careers
Trophy Hunting – a shot in the arm for Namibia`s tourism and economy
De-linking Namibian Dollar from South African Rand
Lifting the ban on the Namibian Newspaper
Highest paid CEOs in the world
Sub-Saharan Africa economic recovery strengthens
Africa’s banking laws shut out the poor
Denmark and USA take Namibian beef products
Renewed call to invest in Namibia
Wold Bank woes: Emerging countries want bigger say
Namibia think global
Southern Africa`s power crisis revisited
Namibia remains world`s uranium giant
20 Years of Namibia’s Business Environment
Rating Namibia after 20 years of independence
Valentina: The Exile Child book launched in Washington, DC
Book review: Namibian Writer launches book – The Exile Child
Politics
Politics
ANC and Julius Malema
Tribute to our Founding President Sam Nujoma
Namibia deports foreigners as the country grows in popularity
African states push for UN ban on female circumcision
Reasoning behind Namibian President`s new cabinet appointments
Namibian Opposition Parities Take Your Seats....... Please!
Namibia-Botswana relationship
Is Pan-Africanism still relevant?
Swapo turns 50
Zimbabwean Ambassador loses it and gets thrown out of a diplomatic function in Washington, DC
Faith
Faith
Africa`s religious make up
Prophecy: Namibia doomed? (Not!)
How the church in Namibia is dishonouring God
Fashion
Fashion
Vicky Dan
Valentina Haufiku
Tuvambala Homateni
2010 Miss Southern Africa Beauty Pageant
Leisure and Travel
Leisure and Travel
Namibia up for top tourism award
Southern Africa`s Trans Kalahari Corridor a popular route
Air Namibia praised
Sports
Sports
Trophy Hunting – a shot in the arm for Namibia`s tourism and economy
Ronaldinho, Adriano dropped from the Brazil World Cup squad
Will South Africa pull off the world cup?
The Namibian Newspaper Cup unbelievable: Khumalo
2010 Soccer World Cup security praised
Health and Wellness
Health and Wellness
Namibia among top 10 African health spenders
Simply Slim supplements still banned in Namibia
Namibia made progress in a fight against Malaria
Alcohol destroying Namibian youths
African states push for UN ban on female circumcision
Namibia as part of the International world: “Present position of Namibia in International public laws regarding local Occupational Health and safety laws”
Events Review
Events Review
It`s world Cup Fever in England: An event not to miss
Namibian Gathering in the USA 2010 a resounding Success
 
 

WASHINGTON – Raising money for global aid and giving emerging countries more say in how it is distributed are core World Bank issues to be mulled Sunday at a meeting in Washington.

Bank president Robert Zoellick has said its 186 shareholders will be asked to approve a “once-in-a-generation request” to raise the bank’s capital by five billion dollars, more than half of which would come from developing countries.
The bank also planned to “decide on whether to give developing countries a bigger say in the running of the institution,” he said ahead of the meeting, as the iconic world body reflected a shift in influence away from traditional global powers.


Emerging countries now have 44 per cent of voting rights in bank decisions following a first phase of reforms in 2008, Zoellick noted.
He said this month that with the bank’s first capital increase in more than 20 years, “shareholders face a decision to strengthen the Bank Group, or allow it to wane in influence, losing an effective multilateral institution and leaving it poorly resourced to cope with whatever comes next”.


The capital hike is aimed at covering some of the more than 100 billion dollars in bank commitments made since July 2008 for loans, subsidies, financial sector investments and guarantees for private projects.


A similar shift in influence is being seen at the International Monetary Fund, which held its own meeting Saturday, even though the IMF was criticized for lacking ambition by a key emerging country, Brazil.
Changes at the IMF would essentially benefit China at the expense of European Union member countries which now have a strong voice on the Fund’s executive board.


IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn told a press conference on Saturday he believed “the political will was strong” to address “a long list of questions,” including the board’s size and who would fill the post he currently holds.


A statement by US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said: “We need to consider measures to make the executive board more representative and effective,” and backed a plan to eliminate seats while preserving those held by emerging market and developing countries.
“The goal is to achieve legitimate representation based on countries’ economic weight in the world,” Geithner said.


His Brazilian counterpart Guido Mantega expressed dismay, however, at “the lack of ambition” in IMF plans to rebalance how much its 186 members paid in and their subsequent level of representation, and slammed “resistance to change”.
And the international aid group Oxfam agreed that “reform of the IMF’s governance is happening far too slowly”.
“If the Fund is really an institution for the 21st century, where are the changes that will finally give poor countries a voice in policies that affect their futures,” Oxfam spokeswoman Elizabeth Stuart asked.


At the World Bank, Zoellick forecast that Sunday’s meeting would represent “a turning point” after “2009 saw the end of what was known as the Third World.”
“Economic and political tectonic plates are shifting,” he noted, and added: “We can shift with them.”


At the IMF’s meeting Saturday, Europe faced mounting pressure to quickly bail out debt-stricken Greece on Saturday amid fears the crisis could spread and threaten the global economic recovery.


Focus quickly shifted to the speed of that rescue effort, as economic powers worried the crisis could spread to other eurozone nations, with Portugal, Italy, Spain and Ireland all in the firing line.


Geithner pressed Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou and EU officials to quickly implement fiscal reforms and roll out the bailout.
– Nampa-AFP

Credit: www.namibian.com.na

Comment
Date Posted
Posted By
EXPOSED!
Login to Vote
Nammusic
Advert
Advert
Advert
Advert
Advert
Advert
Advert
Advert
Advertise Here...
 |   Home  |   Contact Us  |   About Us  |   Advertise
Designed by SpecifiXperts