From Publishers Weekly
Though the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, or World Bank, professes that its chief objective is fighting global poverty, most of its projects help the rich get richer while shortchanging the poor, charges Caufield. World Bank-funded proposals, she observes, have displaced millions of people, pushing them into destitution; for example, the Narmada Valley dams in India, which submerged several hundred villages. Instead of focusing on human services in developing nations, the bank promotes high-tech energy and transportation projects and Western-style, capital-intensive agriculture-development schemes that often enrich heads of state, contractors, exporters, middlemen, landholding elites and multinational corporations. Moreover, she adds, the bank pressures borrowers to amend or repeal countless local laws to qualify for loans, thereby weakening labor protections, trade unions, communal land holdings and maternity benefits. Ordinary taxpayers in donor nations ultimately finance this reallocation of funds to the relatively well-off in underdeveloped nations, she asserts. Caufield, a former environment correspondent for Britain's New Scientist, has written a scathing, well-researched critique that is likely to generate controversy in financial circles and among policy-makers.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
Another bureaucracy in Washington, D.C., rivals the federal government in power, especially on the world stage. It belongs to the World Bank, born at the end of World War II with the noble intent of rebuilding war-torn Europe and aiding Third World development. Journalist Caufield (In the Rainforest, 1984) believes that the bank has strayed from this course, often with disastrous results. Having done exhaustive research, she skillfully dissects the workings of the organization and finds plenty of blame to go around. She brings the story up to the present with the recent appointment of James D. Wolfensohn as the new bank president. Caufield sheds light on a secretive, often mysterious organization that has affected millions of people?often misguidedly. Her compelling and sobering account is highly recommended.?Richard S. Drezen, Washington Post News Research Ctr., Washington, D.C.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.