he World
Bank has a human rights problem: it doesn't respect them enough.
The bank also has a political problem: concern about global
poverty, according to its president, James D. Wolfensohn, is
"near a low point." Yet the bank, concerned about the
second problem, seems to lack awareness of the first — to the
detriment of its mission to help the world's poor.
The World Bank, which provided $18.5 billion in aid in 2003,
should withhold money from governments that are antidemocratic,
or that violate their people's human rights. To lend money to
tyrants is to strengthen them and to become complicit when they
stamp on their people's rights. To lend money to one-party
states is to lock in their hegemony, and to ridicule the dignity
of people outside the party. To lend money to well-kept
dictators is to enslave their citizenry, who even after the
dictator is gone must repay principal and interest — to the
bank.
It would undoubtedly shock most rights-loving Western
taxpayers to know that the bank does not consistently
differentiate between democracies and dictatorships when making
decisions about loans and aid. In the last decade, the bank has
offered loans to dozens of countries that violate civil rights,
according to organizations like Amnesty International, Human
Rights Watch and the United Nations.
The bank's justification for lending to despots is contained
in one word: pragmatism. The belief is that oppressed people are
better off if their governments borrow money to provide socially
useful services. By lending money to oppressive governments, the
bank says, it is helping to make society more equal — if only
a little.
Maybe, maybe not. Either way, there is no need to argue the
point, because however much money the bank lends to oppressive
governments (and that is plenty), there are enough
poverty-stricken democracies that would gladly have it instead.
Mr. Wolfensohn himself has said that if the world's total supply
of foreign aid were doubled — to about $100 billion annually
— poor countries could easily absorb the increase and use it
to pay for projects to help reduce poverty.
If he is right and the unfulfilled needs are that extensive,
then why doesn't the bank find other takers for the money it now
lends to oppressive governments? The bank could easily redirect
more than half its lending (say, $10 billion out of the $18.5
billion total) and still finance only a fraction of the poverty
programs Mr. Wolfensohn deems worthy. The bank can find more
than enough needy democracies willing to accept its aid.
Thus the bank's "pragmatic" justification to lend
money to oppressive governments is absurd. It amounts to giving
secretive, frequently kleptocratic dictatorships priority —
before the democracies have their fill. This handicaps both the
citizens and leaders who together shoulder the hard work of
sustaining democracies.
Instead, the bank should devise a kind of human rights
scorecard. At a minimum, it should include the civil freedoms
(of expression, of the press, of women) and the social and
economic freedoms (access to health, education and property).
The bank should monitor these freedoms and refuse to aid any
country that violates them.
By using a scorecard like this, the bank would show that
governments that exclude civic participation in politics are not
legitimate borrowers in their people's interest, because the
people have no say. Using the scorecard would also harness the
inspirational power of human rights to rekindle fading interest
in the bank's work. And, not incidentally, it would probably be
the most benign form of conditionality ever applied by the bank.
So why not do it? The bank's pragmatists point out that,
under its charter, "only economic considerations shall be
relevant" to lending decisions. But this argument proves
nothing. If the leadership and governance of a prospective
debtor are relevant considerations for a commercial bank, then
surely they are important to the World Bank. Even if democratic
economies do not always outperform oppressive ones, they are
safer risks. As a report of the United Nations Development
Program noted last year, "no democracy has ever performed
as badly as the worst dictatorships."
Cutting loans to dictators would therefore avoid the worst
economic outcomes like default and endless debt rescheduling.
Had the bank practiced rights-based lending in the past, it
never would have loaned money to corrupt despots like
Jean-Claude Duvalier of Haiti or Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire —
loans that citizens there are still paying back. Rights-based
lending would also save taxpayer money while achieving equal or
better results for the world's poor.
Mr. Wolfensohn appeared to admit as much last month, when
asked about the World Bank's practice of lending to
dictatorships. "The easiest thing for me, for the
bank," he said, "would be to say, just wait until
these countries are democratic" before lending to them.
Mr. Wolfensohn is right. The bank should either produce
honest reasons for giving aid to dictators and tyrants while
democracies go begging, or it should do "the easiest
thing" — and stop. To carry on, laden with excuses rather
than principles, is not only a waste of money. It is an insult
to the human rights of billions of people.
Shirin Ebadi, a law professor at the University of
Tehran, won the Nobel Peace Prize for 2003. Amir Attaran is a
professor of law and population health at the University of
Ottawa.