Opening Press Conference at the IMF-World Bank Spring Meetings, April 10, 2014

Jim Yong Kim, President of the World Bank Group, notes that the developing countries will have to grow at a pace stronger than any time in the past 20 years to achieve the goal of ending the extreme poverty by 2030. He talks about the need for growth that is inclusive, creates jobs, and assists the poor directly. He calls for ensuring economic growth in the years ahead that is sustainable and takes us off the destructive path of climate change. He focuses on providing the best services possible in countries by keeping a strong presence in country offices and by providing global solutions to local problems. He is optimistic that countries and their partners will take it on, seize this opportunity and erase this stain of extreme poverty from our collective moral conscience once and for all. He fielded questions about China urbanization, Russo-Ukrainian tensions, Ghana’s dependence on the U.S. market, quality versus quantity of development aid, Middle East prospects, World Bank programs in Egypt, poverty in Paraguay, increased fees for advisory services, use of financial intermediaries, and climate change.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kim, Jim Yong
Format: Speech biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: 2014-04-10
Subjects:GROWTH RATES, CREATION OF JOBS, DEFICIT, FINANCIAL SERVICES, BORROWER, BASIS POINTS, POVERTY LINE, ECONOMIC GROWTH, DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE, LOCAL BANK, URBANIZATION, PEOPLE, FINANCING, INCOME, INTEREST, MEDIUM TERM, PUBLIC SECTOR, STRATEGIES, DEBT MANAGEMENT, SERVICES, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, HOUSING, PORTFOLIO, WELFARE, POOR PEOPLE, PUBLIC BUDGETS, PROJECTS, PRICE, CASH TRANSFER, RESERVE, DEVELOPING COUNTRY, EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES, BUDGET, MATURITY, ACCESS TO FINANCIAL SERVICES, REDUCING INEQUALITY, COMMUNICATIONS, ADVANCED COUNTRIES, LABOR MARKET, FISCAL POLICIES, SAVINGS, GLOBAL ECONOMY, CURRENCY, LOCAL BANKS, FINANCIAL STRENGTH, DISBURSEMENT, CURRENT ACCOUNT, DEVELOPING COUNTRY ECONOMIES, TRADING, WORLD ECONOMIES, PRODUCTIVITY, MIGRATION, MONETARY FUND, EMERGING MARKET, FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, DEBT, MARKETS, RETURN, LAND RIGHTS, POLLUTION, LABOR, LOANS, FARMERS, ENTERPRISES, SUBSIDIES, FINANCE, GRANTS, INFRASTRUCTURE, MARKET ECONOMIES, TAXES, BANKS, EMERGING MARKETS, DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH, INVESTORS, FEDERAL RESERVE, REDUCING POVERTY, GOOD, DEVELOPMENT REPORT, CAPITAL, LACK OF ACCESS, ACCESS TO CAPITAL, CARBON TRADING, WOMAN, FUTURE, ACCESS TO FINANCE, GROWTH PROSPECTS, BANK, RETURNS, BUDGETS, STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES, DEVELOPING WORLD, CONTRACT, DISBURSEMENTS, JOB CREATION, SHARES, REFUGEES, MARKET, INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS, POST- CRISIS PERIOD, DEBT RATIOS, SOCIAL WELFARE, CURRENCIES, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, LAND, INVESTMENT, EXTREME POVERTY, FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES, SHARE, DEVELOPING ECONOMY, HOUSEHOLDS, POVERTY, BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT, GREATER ACCESS, LENDING, CAPITAL FLOW, FEES, RENEWABLE ENERGY, FAMILIES, WOMEN, PUBLIC SPENDING, GOVERNMENTS, CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCES, INEQUALITY, COMPETITION, GROWTH,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/02/25871041/transcript-world-bank-group-president-jim-yong-kim’s-opening-press-conference-international-monetary-fundimf--world-bank-spring-meetings-2014
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/24334
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Summary:Jim Yong Kim, President of the World Bank Group, notes that the developing countries will have to grow at a pace stronger than any time in the past 20 years to achieve the goal of ending the extreme poverty by 2030. He talks about the need for growth that is inclusive, creates jobs, and assists the poor directly. He calls for ensuring economic growth in the years ahead that is sustainable and takes us off the destructive path of climate change. He focuses on providing the best services possible in countries by keeping a strong presence in country offices and by providing global solutions to local problems. He is optimistic that countries and their partners will take it on, seize this opportunity and erase this stain of extreme poverty from our collective moral conscience once and for all. He fielded questions about China urbanization, Russo-Ukrainian tensions, Ghana’s dependence on the U.S. market, quality versus quantity of development aid, Middle East prospects, World Bank programs in Egypt, poverty in Paraguay, increased fees for advisory services, use of financial intermediaries, and climate change.