IMF's Georgieva accuses former World Bank President Kim's office of
manipulation
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[September 25, 2021] By
Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - IMF chief Kristalina
Georgieva criticized as false and spurious the findings of an
independent probe into allegations that as World Bank head she pressured
staff to manipulate data to make China's business climate appear more
favorable.
In a statement she plans to present to the IMF's executive board,
Georgieva also accused the office of the bank's past president, Jim Kong
Kim, of manipulation.
She said she intervened to block a proposal from a member of his staff
to include Hong Kong data in China's ranking in the World Bank's Doing
Business 2018 report, which would have significantly improved its
standing. Kim has not responded to requests for comment.
The bank last week released a report on the investigation by law firm
WilmerHale. It found that senior bank leaders including Georgieva unduly
pressured staff to alter data to improve China's ranking in the Doing
Business report while the bank was seeking China's support for a capital
increase.
Georgieva, then World Bank chief executive, has excoriated the probe
publicly and to her staff, but she went into greater detail in the
statement to the IMF's executive board, a copy of which was viewed by
Reuters on Friday.
She said the probe's findings contained "the false and spurious
insinuation ... that my colleagues and I at the World Bank would inflate
a country’s Doing Business ranking in exchange for capital commitments."
"To be clear: no such thing happened and no such thing would ever happen
under my leadership," she said.
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International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Kristalina
Georgieva makes remarks during a closing news conference for the
International Monetary Finance Committee, during the IMF and World
Bank's 2019 Annual Meetings of finance ministers and bank governors,
in Washington, U.S., October 19, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Theiler/File
Photo
She said her effort to prevent Hong Kong data from being added to China's Doing
Business ranking demonstrated her concern for preserving the integrity of World
Bank data.
The Bulgarian economist, the first person from a developing country to head the
bank, has faced calls for her resignation over the matter, even as former
colleagues have spoken out in support of her.
The IMF board met on Tuesday to hear an initial report from its ethics committee
and agreed to meet again soon.
The bank's current president, David Malpass, has said findings of the WilmerHale
investigation speak for themselves but has not commented in greater detail.
Georgieva said the WilmerHale probe wrongly inferred that she asked bank
officials to manage China's expectations about its ranking in the Doing Business
report because she was worried that China could withhold support for the capital
increase.
Georgieva said she did regret that colleagues at the bank "did not believe that
they could speak out to raise with me issues about data integrity," and was
committed to fostering better communication.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Leslie Adler and Cynthia Osterman)
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