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3/2/2023

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the Center for Strategic and International Studies | U.S. Depart…

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies
February 9, 2023

As prepared for delivery
Thank you for the introduction, Matt. Iʼm pleased to be here at CSIS with all of you.
Last fall, I issued an urgent call ahead of the World Bank and IMF Annual Meetings — for the
evolution of the multilateral development bank system. My reasoning was simple: the world
has changed, and we need these vital institutions to change along with it. In todayʼs world,
itʼs important that the MDBs make progress on their core mission of poverty reduction and
inclusive economic growth. But itʼs also important that they take decisive action on global
challenges like climate change, pandemics, and conflict and fragility. These goals are all
essential, and they are closely linked.
Since the a ermath of the Second World War, the development banks have played a critical
role in alleviating poverty and spurring economic development. Theyʼve done so successfully
for a broad range of countries, including those facing persistent poverty and those recovering
from disaster and conflict. Last month, I visited three countries in Africa. I saw first-hand the
impact of these banksʼ direct financing of national development projects. Projects like these
have connected millions to electricity and clean water. Theyʼve helped farmers get more crops
to market. And theyʼve funded the construction of modern roads and bridges.
But even before the onset of the COVID pandemic, our tremendous progress on poverty
reduction was beginning to lag. In todayʼs world, sustained progress on poverty alleviation
and economic development is simply not possible without addressing the global challenges
that face us all. The COVID pandemic, for example, led to a rise in extreme poverty for the first
time in over 20 years. In Zambia, smallholder farmers told me that extreme weather events
like droughts and floods have dampened agricultural yields – exacerbating hunger and food
insecurity. Many African leaders have noted to me the impacts of conflict on their economic
growth. These e ects are not just local to countries in conflict. They spill over to neighboring
countries.
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3/2/2023

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the Center for Strategic and International Studies | U.S. Depart…

The costs and benefits of addressing global challenges are di use. They donʼt all accrue to a
single country. The MDBsʼ core model involves countries borrowing to make specific
investments aimed at addressing development constraints in their own countries. That model
is insu icient to meet the moment. Such a model will always underinvest in addressing global
challenges – since the benefits of investments in global challenges stretch far beyond the
borders of the country where a given project takes place.
The costs of failing to address these global challenges may be spread across the world.
Nevertheless, these costs have a serious impact on national and local realities. They are very
real for the people who face them. Many times, these are the worldʼs poorest and most
vulnerable.

A. EVOLUT ION AGENDA
Thatʼs why I – along with other shareholders – called for an evolution of the development
banks last fall. Itʼs time for these banks to address global challenges head on – with the
urgency and scale that is required. We have begun the evolution of the World Bank. Next, we
expect to take this agenda to the regional development banks.
Let me speak specifically about our work on the World Bank. We are focused on evolving its
vision, incentives, operating model, and financial capacity.
First, the Bank needs to expand its vision to include addressing global challenges as an
integral part of achieving its Twin Goals: poverty reduction and shared prosperity. Let me be
clear: this does not mean shi ing the Bank away from its traditional work. It means expanding
the work of the Bank to better include addressing global challenges. These challenges are
intertwined with alleviating poverty and supporting inclusive and sustainable development.
Second, the Bank must create the right incentives for countries to tackle global challenges.
That includes lowering investment costs to make these types of projects more economically
viable. My view is that since the global community benefits from these investments, the global
community should help bear their cost.
For example, we are asking the Bank to identify concessional resources available to countries
to tackle global challenges. These resources could incentivize the decommissioning of coal
plants and protect displaced workers during a clean energy transition. They could enhance
health systems to mitigate the spread of disease. Or they could support basic services for
refugees and their host communities. The World Bank will also need to develop diagnostic
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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the Center for Strategic and International Studies | U.S. Depart…

tools to help countries understand how global challenges a ect their development. This will
help guide project and financing decisions.
Third, the Bank must be bolder and more imaginative in its operational approach. For example,
we know that sub-national entities can sometimes have greater expertise and willingness to
implement innovative projects. What if we made it easier for cities to gain access to funding
for climate-smart urban infrastructure? Operationally, we believe itʼs also important for the
Bank to develop new measures of success – such as clear targets that reflect its e orts to
address both traditional goals as well as global challenges.
Finally, the Bank must boost its financial capacity by responsibly stretching its existing
financial resources. Last yearʼs G20 report on the development banksʼ capital adequacy
frameworks provides a solid blueprint for this exercise. The United States is strongly
supportive of exploring and implementing a range of the reportʼs recommendations – and
doing so quickly. Promising ideas for exploration include increased securitization of private
sector portfolios or piloting the issuance of subordinated debt instruments to boost
headroom.
Just as important as additional financial capacity for the Bank is stronger mobilization of
private capital and domestic resources. International public finance alone will come nowhere
close to the level of financing needed to e ectively tackle global challenges and achieve the
Sustainable Development Goals. We expect the evolution agenda to reflect the importance of
private financing and domestic resource mobilization.

B . PROGRESS AND T HE ROAD AHEAD
We have made real progress over the past four months – as weʼve worked with the Bank and
other partners. We have built a robust and growing coalition of borrower and non-borrowing
countries that are pressing for the Bank to evolve. That includes my counterparts in Africa,
who I saw last month. They share our desire to build a system that is more responsive to the
challenges they face. We are coordinating closely with India as it makes MDB evolution a key
priority of its G20 presidency. And the World Bank has produced an initial evolution roadmap –
which it is now using as a guide for deeper discussions on specific reforms.
In the next few months, we expect to see ideas begin to be translated into action. We are
pursuing a staged implementation of this evolution. Not all decisions are equally di icult – so
letʼs make the more straightforward ones first. The first phase of implementation should
begin by the World Bank and IMF Spring Meetings in April. Shareholders are already working to
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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the Center for Strategic and International Studies | U.S. Depart…

coalesce around updates to the Bankʼs vision and mission. Management and the Board are in
robust discussions about measures to boost financial headroom.
But we cannot stop there. Much remains to be done to evolve incentives, reform operational
approaches, and increase financial capacity. We expect the World Bank to promptly implement
a second phase of work. We are asking for additional reforms to be decided and
implementation to begin by the World Bank and IMF Annual Meetings in October. Thatʼs the
one-year mark from when this project began.
We know we can succeed. The world has gone through tremendous change in the nearly 80
years since the founding of the World Bank. The multilateral development bank system has
responded to these changes by evolving. The system has broadened the scope of its work to
include programming on human capital and good governance; expanded its set of instruments
beyond project loans; increased its focus on policy and technical assistance; and delivered
financial innovations.
The MDBs are a powerful pillar of a broader financial architecture that should be deployed to
address 21st century development challenges. But this requires a 21st century strategy. The
need is great. The world is asking us to do all we can to combat these complex and growing
problems.
I am confident that we will be able to deliver.
Thank you. And I look forward to our conversation

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