Select Committee on International Development Minutes of Evidence


Examination of Witnesses (Questions 1-19)

MR JOSEPH EICHENBERGER

19 MARCH 2008

  Q1 Chairman: Good morning, Mr Eichenberger, and thank you very much for coming to give formal evidence to us. We will be seeing you on your home patch in a couple of weeks' time, but we much appreciate the fact that you have come in today to help us to get this inquiry underway. You may be aware that we have recently produced a report on the Department for International Development's relationship with the World Bank, which we are told has been met with some interest within the Bank.[1] We also felt, particularly as DFID[2] has taken a prominent role in supporting the African Development Bank and is clearly making a significant increase in its contribution, that it was appropriate for us to look at that relationship, both in terms of how the Bank is performing, given it has had its problems in the past, and how the relationship between DFID and the Bank is likely to develop. Clearly, from our point of view (and I do not want to put it in any kind of mercenary sense), we are looking for effectiveness, value for money, but, more to the point, that the money that is going in is actually going to deliver real benefits and help the Bank achieve its objectives. Perhaps, just to kick the session off, it might be helpful if you can give us an indication of how you think the Bank's reforms have progressed up until now. What are the key areas that are being examined, what changes are you making and to what extent have you had an impact and do you hope to have an impact, if that is a reasonable context to start with?

  Mr Eichenberger: Thank you very much. Let me express, at the outset, my appreciation and my gratitude to you for the invitation. It is a privilege and an opportunity to be here and we greatly appreciate the degree of interest that the UK taxpayers have shown in our institution and the degree of support that they have provided. At the largest level maybe I can talk a little bit about some of these internal reforms that have been underway. There is, of course, a historical context. The bank went through some very difficult times in the early and mid-1990s. I assume that you are basically aware of that. We have had new management in place now for a couple of years in the context of which we have moved ahead with a number of, I think, very significant reforms. There has been a comprehensive restructuring of the Bank: we have created new regional departments that have been designed primarily to give us more focus on country operations rather than on simply delivering projects. We have created new offices, for example an office that is focusing on governance issues, an office that is focusing on regional integration and trade issues in Africa. We have significantly beefed up our private sector department, because we see that as an emerging area of critical priority for our engagement in Africa. We have completely revamped our internal business processes around the imperative of reducing internal transactions costs, ensuring greater quality at entry in what we are doing, greater and more systematic monitoring of the performance of our portfolio and, in particular, its performance in respect of actually delivering demonstrable results on the ground in the form of development impact. Our reform has also been focusing on reducing cross-departmental mis-communication. We have had a silo problem in the institution, with people focusing more on doing their own business rather than doing business in a strategic context, and delivering something of enduring value on the ground in Africa. We have completely restructured our procurement and financial management unit and added significant staffing to beef up our capacity to deliver services promptly and with a high level of fiduciary control and transparency. We have done a comprehensive revision of our human resources policies from top to bottom. Probably 35% to 40% of our managers are new in the organisation, recruited through an open and transparent merit-based recruitment process. We have a new whistle-blower policy that is regarded as state of the art among the multi-lateral development institutions. We have completely reformed our trust fund programme and are no longer accepting any tied trust funds. All trust funds will be untied. We have redesigned our key performance indicators in order to integrate systematic results into everything that we do. That is, I think, just a sense of the reforms. In terms of what they are delivering, I think it is still early days, but I will identify a couple of pieces of emerging evidence from which we take encouragement. I think the first is shareholder confidence in the institution has clearly increased. That is evidenced by, among other things, a very significant replenishment of our concessional fund, a deal on which we closed in December of last year right here in London. We had a 52% increase, unprecedented in the history of the institution, better than IDA,[3] certainly better than the Asian Bank is going to do, and that is a powerful vote of confidence. We are also seeing increasingly that others are actively seeking partnerships with us. The World Bank is reaching out to us in a way that it never did in the past, the European Investment Bank, the EC[4] organisations that for a long time, I think, frankly, had not paid much attention to the Bank are paying attention and we see that as confirmation that we are moving in the right direction. We are seeing an increasing leadership role for the Bank at the field level, in part because we have opened 23 new field offices, we have a presence on the ground now giving us voice, impact, and an intelligence gathering capacity that we did not have in the past. The balance sheet is stronger than it has ever been, Triple A is absolutely secure and, in my judgment, we have considerable room on the balance sheet to ramp up our activities in respect of our market-based operations rather than our concessional operations. Quality improvements are being recognised in the board in terms of the content and quality of the operations that we are doing and the work that we are producing and, finally, I would say, and I think it is important, the applications that we are receiving for vacancies in the institutions have just gone through the ceiling. We advertise four positions, we get 3,000 applications from advertisements in The Economist and The Financial Times, for example. That would not have happened three years ago. So, we see within the development community a sense that this institution is moving and we see reinforcement of that everywhere. I hope that addresses your question.

  Q2 Chairman: I have a couple of supplementaries which I do not think are pre-empting my colleagues before I bring them in. You mentioned opening the branches, but it has been suggested to us that the initiatives that the branches can take are somewhat limited and, conversely to that, that the board does an awful lot of micro-management which other people have said is inappropriate. I just wonder whether you can comment on whether that is an issue that the Bank is addressing. On the last point you made about recruitment, it has been suggested to us that the location of the Bank and the uncertainty of that location was actually damaging recruitment. What you have just said might imply otherwise, but presumably you have some view on that?

  Mr Eichenberger: On the first issue, on field offices, we got funding to open 25 field offices and to substantially increase our presence in the field. As of this moment we have opened 23; we are close to opening the remaining two. That gives us a presence that we did not have five years ago. We are not fully staffed at the field level yet. We have the offices, we have core people in the field, we have at this point about 113 of our 800 professional staff who are now in the field—that is about 14%. By the end of the year that figure will increase to about 21% or 22%. We are ramping up significantly in the field, but it is true that we are going from essentially zero presence to a very active presence and our footprint and our impact is not yet what we would like it to be, but we are increasingly getting there. On the issue of board micro-management, I have a mixed view about that. In my career I have had the privilege of working as senior management inside these multi-lateral institutions and senior management at the African Bank and at the Asian Development Bank, I have also served as an executive board member myself at the World Bank and in IFAD,[5] in Rome, and I have served as a representative of the single shareholder government, so I have seen three different perspectives. My own personal view is that these institutions need an active and engaged board presence. These institutions need to hear the views of shareholders, in part because we need to maintain the support of shareholders but in part because shareholders have different views and for us to reconcile and balance these different views I think we need to know what those views are on a regular basis. I personally believe that the active participation by shareholders on a regular on-going basis is a positive thing for the institution and for institutional governance. There is some micro-management. Frankly, in the case of the African Development Bank I think some of it reflects some of the difficulties of the past. I think our board is backing off increasingly and, with the confidence in the management team, has given us more scope, so I do not see that as a huge problem. The final issue on location—I am not really very well positioned to comment on what is likely to happen there. There was the movement from Abidjan to Tunis four and a half years ago, I guess, or five years ago; there was a discussion by the governors of the Bank at our annual meeting last year, at which time they resolved to resolve the issue at the coming annual meeting in May of this year. Clearly the default scenario is to return to Abidjan, but judgments need to be made by the governors collectively about whether the circumstances are appropriate to do that. With respect to your final question about whether the uncertainty is affecting our capacity to recruit staff, my own sense at this moment is that it is not. The uncertainty is a factor but, as I say, we are getting a tremendous amount of interest from some very high quality people who see an opportunity to come to the Bank and achieve something of value. Resolving the uncertainty would be better than not resolving it. Our hope is to have some clarity as we exit our annual meeting in May of this year.

  Q3 Sir Robert Smith: You mentioned the 52% unprecedented increase in the replenishment. What are the Bank's main priorities for actually spending the replenishment?

  Mr Eichenberger: I should say that these funds will be devoted to a subset of our countries; they will be devoted to the poorest countries. We have 53 African member countries who have a relationship with the Bank. Of that, 40 are concessional only borrowers. The remaining 13 are what we call middle-income countries, and they borrow out of our market finance division. I will go through a few things. First, out of the entire amount of the replenishment, which is about US $9 billion—it is a three-year replenishment, so we have roughly US $3 billion a year for the next three years—75% will be explicitly devoted to these 40 low-income countries and will be allocated to them on the basis of what we call our Performance-Based Allocation System where we reassess their performance in terms of governance, the quality of macro and fiscal policies, structural policies, the degree of commitment to pro-poor growth, et cetera. We feed in population, per capita GNP,[6] performance on governance and we get a result, and that will be the basis on which these resources are allocated. Seventy-five per cent of these resources are allocated to individual countries. Twenty-five per cent of the resources, as a result of this agreement we reached here in London, are specifically earmarked for two special purposes. The first is resources specifically earmarked to finance what we have called regional operations or regional integration. There is a powerful need in Africa for deeper regional integration. I think it can fairly be said that Africa is probably the least economically integrated continent on earth, and there is a compelling need for things like cross-border roads, for improving tariffs and customs systems, cross-border power, et cetera, and so part of this earmark will go for regional operations and the remainder of it funds a new facility that we created which we are referring to as our Fragile States Facility. The view within the Bank among the African countries and among all of our shareholders is that it is vitally important for this African institution to be more present and more effectively engaged in post-conflict countries that need assistance more than ever and that are on the road to reform, and so we have created this Fragile States Facility to support nine specific countries that are post-conflict, peace agreements have been signed and they are moving forward. That is roughly the allocation of these resources.

  Q4 Sir Robert Smith: Can you just clarify the 75%. You have the formula. Is it basically then that that money is available to that country for it to set its own priorities with the money once you have applied the formula to allocate between the countries?

  Mr Eichenberger: Similar to the World Bank and others, for each country, whether it is an upper income or lower income, we produce a country strategy valid for three years or five years. That is produced in close consultation with the country and is essentially a strategic programme, a business plan if you would like, about the areas in which we are going to be engaged. The priorities are developed as a result of this dialogue, and we are seeing increasingly that the priorities on the demand side are with respect to basic infrastructure, institution building and capacity building, regional operations in particular. The country strategies incorporate those priorities. A country may say, "We want you to focus on roads, water and sanitation and some institution building in our financial sector", and then the allocation process, this formula-driven process, which is entirely separate, produces a result which says, "Okay, in this country we will have a lending envelope of $100 million", let us say, over three years, and then, on that basis, we will allocate together with them the resources to particular projects.

  Q5  Sir Robert Smith: The replenishment round went up by about 52% but DFID actually doubled its contribution. In its negotiations with you how is it sought to work to ensure that common objectives are implemented? What sort of negotiating position did DFID take when it came to doubling its contribution?

  Mr Eichenberger: I think that there was a great deal of congruence between the priorities that DFID was articulating and (a) the priorities that were shared by other member countries and (b) the priorities that were shared by the senior management of the institution. DFID articulated very clearly a set of priorities around the need for the institution to become more selective and more focused. We have 800 professionals at the African Development Bank. There is no way that we can be a full service development institution across the whole of Africa, involved in every sector and every issue, and that is different from the past. So, recognition that we need to focus on areas where we genuinely can produce superior results, so infrastructure, roads, with a clear poverty reduction dimension, power issues, where, for example, access of the poor is explicitly built into the project design, water and sanitation, which brings a specific health dimension, helps us to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, et cetera, and so there was a great deal of congruence around that. Secondly, the messages from DFID were strong and consistent about results, results, results. All of the shareholders are facing increasing pressure to demonstrate to their parliaments and to their taxpayers that this money is producing results, and I think, frankly, the institutions and, I would say, the development community in general has not done a sufficiently good job of doing that. We agreed on things like building much more systematic monitorable indicators into project design, et cetera, so that, two years from now, three years from now, when we go into another replenishment cycle, we and DFID can demonstrate quite clearly to the UK taxpayer that this money went for this purpose and produced these results that we believe you support. On emphasis on governance, governance seen as absolutely crucial for sustainable development in Africa. DFID has played a strong advocacy and convening role on issues around, for example, the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), pushing to get the Bank, not just engaged in it, but enthusiastic about it going on. DFID was at the front-line in pushing for creation of this special Fragile States Facility, arguing that, for example, in a country like Liberia, where we have had no presence for 20 years, nobody has, if we go through our regular Performance-Based Allocation process, it might result in US$20 million for Liberia over a three-year period, not the kind of money that will enable us to be transformational. So, DFID gave strong support for creating a facility that would supplement these resources for committed, well-performing countries like Liberia. Those are a couple of examples.

  Q6  John Battle: To press you on DFID, I want to ask whether there is any conflict between DFID's approach and the other shareholders, because DFID has got very clear parameters about poverty alleviation and untying aid, and that means that sometimes in negotiations with, for example, the World Bank and other bodies there is a conflict between DFID's view of who gets the money and on what terms and other bodies. Is that happening in the African Development Bank or is everybody following DFID's lead?

  Mr Eichenberger: I would say a couple of things. There are differences amongst shareholders about what the priorities should be, but I think those differences have narrowed and nobody contests the set of priorities that I just articulated: infrastructure, governance, fragile states and regional integration. Where the differences arise, I would say, is, in part, around what instruments do you use to achieve these core objectives? DFID has advocated fairly strongly for increased use of what we call budget support. A government puts together a credible programme with a credible budget, says, "I am committed to this and I will deliver it in the following way, and what I would like would be support straight into my budget in order for me to make that set of choices that I am best positioned to make." Again, all the shareholders believe that there is a place for budget support; well performing governments are best placed to make those choices. There are differences of view about how aggressively we at the African Development Bank should push that agenda. We have an overall limit of 25% for this budget support, and, in fact, we have not even approached that limit, so there are some differences there. The point was raised about tied verses untied: there has been a positive movement within the institution moving towards untied. I would mention a couple of things. First, we have pushed through a trust fund reform that basically said: henceforth we will accept no trust funds, we will be the trustee for no funds that are tied, all tied funds will be grandfathered out. The UK has been in the forefront of offering only untied funds and is setting an example. That is very positive. Secondly, one of the things that we achieved in this recent replenishment negotiation, we put on the table a proposal to change our own Articles of Agreement to allow universal procurement. Built into the Bank's Articles of Agreement, that date back to the post colonial period in the mid-sixties, were specific limitations that procurement could only be accessed by member countries. Our view is that the world has moved on and that, at the end of the day, what we need to do is get the best quality goods at the best price for the borrowing countries, and if those goods happen to come from a non-member country, that is okay. DFID has strongly supported that. I think they have been playing a leadership role on issues around a move away from tied practices and a move toward practices that put more capacity to make decisions in the hands of governments that have a good programme, and that is an important point. There are governments that do not have good programmes, and that is a different set of issues.

  Q7  Richard Burden: You mentioned the Fragile States Facility with a budget of $665 million and you said it was targeting nine countries. I wonder if you could tell us a little bit more about how that process of targeting works and how you work through the nine, what you should be doing in those nine, and actually how you also exclude countries from targeting at the moment? I suppose the other thing is how you would harmonise what you are able to give through that facility, through that fund, with other donor efforts in those fragile states?

  Mr Eichenberger: I am glad you asked that question, because we struggled with this. I and the President and senior management were concerned and we were convinced that we needed to exit this replenishment negotiation with a Fragile States Facility of some kind. We felt it vitally important for our bank, an African bank, to be more present in these countries, but we also understood that there was little likelihood that the donor countries would support a vague sort of open-ended arrangement, in part because the donor countries have emphasised consistently the need for resources to be allocated on the basis of demonstrated performances, so we had a disconnect. Supplemental resources are needed in special cases, but we cannot undermine or do violence to a reasonably rigorous transparent performance basis. It was on that basis that we re-established four very simple, very clear and non-judgemental criteria for eligibility for fragile states. It had to be a post-conflict country that had signed a peace agreement; it had to be a country that had had a significant decline in real GNP since 1990, which is the benchmark date for the Millennium Development Goals; it had to be a country that was in the lowest quintile of the UN's Fragile States Facility and, on that basis, nine countries emerged. This allowed us (a) to have clear criteria so that no-one could say we were playing political favourites, and (b) it allowed us to assemble a group of countries so that we could then go to the donors and say, "These are the countries, this is the programme and here is how much it will cost", and it was on that basis that we were able to get that agreement. Those nine countries are now, in principle, eligible for this Fragile States Facility. In order to actually access this facility we and they need to come to an agreement that there is a credible programme of economic policy in place. This is the kind of thing, for example, we have seen in Liberia, where there is a very credible programme in place, the World Bank is comfortable with it, we are comfortable with it and, on that basis, we will engage, but this gets us out of the business of making potentially political judgments about who is in and who is out. The final point, let me just mention that entry into this Fragile States Facility gives the country access to a multiple of performance-based resources, an amount that is two times as high. So if your normal allocation for a three-year period is 50 million, let us say, this will give you a supplemental 100 million, the view being that in these post-conflict cases where frankly, destruction is everywhere, it is vitally important that we get something started: get the water system working in Monrovia, for example, get a port that is capable of moving some goods.

  Q8  Richard Burden: This was obviously something that was stressed quite a lot in the 2007 High Level Panel Report, and as well as saying that work in fragile and post-conflict states should be a priority for the Bank, it was also saying that there were certain constraints to that in terms of your operations.[7] The first was that your governance portfolio was weak and lacked clear direction and the other thing that it mentioned was, if you were going to work in fragile and post-conflict states effectively, dealing with the extractive industries was going to be a really big challenge for you, described as the resource curse of the 21st century, and recommended that the Bank should raise its profile on the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative. There are two questions really. Perhaps you could say what you are doing to improve your work in relation to governance and the team involved in that, and, secondly, how are you raising your profile in relation to the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative?

  Mr Eichenberger: I mentioned in passing, in response to the first question, that one element of our reorganisation was to create a free-standing governance department—it was one of the important initiatives from that reorganisation—explicitly recognising that we needed to improve our capacity to engage on these issues. We are, again along with the World Bank, DFID and others, doing what we call governance profiles in individual countries where we try more systematically to assess the governance situation: how fully functioning are the institutions in these countries? Where are the institutions where it would make sense for us to work more closely? What are the institutional changes that we believe are necessary in order to support a more aggressive approach in terms of our own lending? This is a work in progress. It is probably fair to say that governance and the issue of functioning institutions is possibly the toughest issue. It is one about which we need to know more, all of us need to know more, and it is something that we need systematically to include in our country strategies, et cetera, so this is a work in progress. The governance profiles are feeding into our country strategies, the governance department is working closely with our regional departments and our project departments to build governance components into our individual operations, even small things. For example, for a routine infrastructure project, create a web page in the website of the local field office that indicates simply what monies were disbursed, on what date, to which person, for what purpose. In some work I did in the Philippines with the Asian Development Bank, we found that simply publishing the disbursements from the institution got local people into the game and created accountability that was not there before. It is not rocket science, some of this stuff, but it will require extensive efforts over time. On EITI, we have formally become a supporter or a member of the initiative; the issues around the imperative of greater public transparency about resource flows are increasingly a part of our on-going dialogue with individual governments. I think that too is a work in progress; it is going to take considerable time. I would mention one point which I think is important, and that is, as part of our fragile states initiative and recognising that in many cases there is a dimension between fragility or conflict and resource extraction and non-transparency around resource extraction in Sierra Leone, Liberia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, you need not look far, one piece that we built into our Fragile States Facility was that at the close of this initial three-year period our expectation is that we will probably want to go back to our shareholders and ask them to refund this Facility. Our expectation is we are not going to achieve something magical in three years; we are looking for six. Therefore, we are going to do an evaluation at the end of the three years, and one of the criteria for determining future eligibility for supplementing fragile states resources is exactly the issue around: is there adequate transparency with respect to debt flows? Is there adequate transparency with respect to the flow of public resources? The non-transparency, for example, around some of the major investments that are being made in Africa now by new players is a matter of concern, and part of our evaluation of whether we move forward with the Fragile States Facility will be are we getting the kind of transparency we think we need, whether it is cocoa in Cote D'Ivoire or timber or diamonds or whatever? This is new territory for us, but we think it is important that we do it.

  Q9  Mr Singh: Mention has already been made that the UK has doubled its donation to the African Development Bank. In fact this year it will be the single largest donor.

  Mr Eichenberger: Yes.

  Q10  Mr Singh: But actually throwing a heap of money at somebody is not necessarily a sign of the quality of the relationship. I think Sir Paul McCartney will attest to that! Our interest as a committee is whether this extra money is just a sign of UK government policy or it is a sign of a growing and deepening relationship between the Bank and DFID and how effective it is on the ground. How effective is DFID's support to the Bank, not just in headquarters terms in Tunis but also on the ground in terms of other countries?

  Mr Eichenberger: Let me say a couple of things. I would like to pursue that Paul McCartney issue! First, this did not happen three years ago. It did not happen during the last replenishment cycle at a time when DFID was also as an entity significantly ramping up its profile, and so I think there is information content in that. Secondly, it is clear that the profile of the African development challenge is substantially higher today than it was even a couple of years ago. We have Gleneagles, we have the Commission for Africa's report and we have all the attention that is going into, for example, the African dimensions of the climate change challenge, et cetera, and there is recognition within the development community that Africa is the decisive test for development systems, and that is the business DFID is in and I think they feel the need to be more systematically engaged with our institution. In terms of the choices, you are closer to the DFID colleagues than I am, but DFID could have chosen to direct significantly higher resources to IDA. Fifty per cent of IDA goes into Africa, and there is no question that the World Bank and IDA have a depth of resources that we do not have as an institution, but I think we also bring dimensions that IDA does not bring. It is a fundamentally African institution; it does have that profile and that credibility on the continent, frankly. Eighty per cent of our staff are African and, in our view, DFID is making a choice to invest in that set of assets, to grow those assets as a tool to achieve the development objective. Finally, and this is a point that we touched on earlier, it feels to me like there is a lot of congruence between the priorities that the institution is increasingly articulating as strategic priorities and the strategic priorities that DFID and other shareholders, frankly, are articulating. That is not an accident; there is an on-going dialogue. I think the comfort level is higher that we have a programme that we can implement and we have made a set of commitments that have increased the level of confidence that we will be there when we need to be there.

  Q11  Mr Singh: It is always hard for an agency that receives the money to be critical in any way about the way it is rolled out, but to make it easier for you to be more positive, could you suggest ways in which DFID can be more effective in helping the Bank implement more successfully its reform agenda? For example, can the technical co-operation arrangement be beefed up, or are there other areas of technical expertise that you require?

  Mr Eichenberger: On that, as you know, we agreed with DFID, or DFID agreed with us, to a very generous technical co-operation agreement that has been in place now for only about six months, £13 million, and there are elements of that agreement that are, from our perspective, extremely welcome. First, it is 100% untied; second, the processes by which our people can access those funds have been substantially simplified. The UK Executive Director on the ground in Tunis has sign off authority for a reasonable amount of funds. From our perspective, that is a kind of a model of a trust fund arrangement with our institution that we feel is very responsive to the challenges we have had. There are unambiguous focal areas. There is not any question about where DFID expects this money to go—infrastructure, governance, climate change dimensions, the internal reform process—and those are the right areas, frankly, but within that there is considerable fungibility. I think it is now incumbent on us to make the best possible use of that so that ideally we could come back and say, "This was a great thing, we have used it wisely and we think that we make a case to do more." Of that £13 million agreed six months ago, £13 million for three years, I believe something like £4 million has already been committed. I myself have access to the funding in order to bring in some specialised expertise around effective budgeting in a decentralised context. DFID was out front on the decentralisation channel which it moved aggressively with field offices. There are challenges around that, but DFID knows things about how to run a decentralised operation that we do not know and that we can learn from, and this fund reinforces our ability to do that. Is that responsive?

  Q12  Mr Singh: Yes. Just one further point as an aside really, but it could be an important aside. Given the growing—and we do not know to what extent this will grow—financial banking and economic crisis that the financial world is facing, do you foresee any problems for your bank and any setbacks that may occur as this crisis develops?

  Mr Eichenberger: No, I do not. It seems to me the challenges are likely to be at a more general level. Africa has had a pretty good run recently in terms of the macro situation—5%, 5.5%, even 6% growth a year; on a per capita basis, that is three, three and a half. That is as good as it has done in 30 years. That is enormously positive, but it is also true that it has been driven, very importantly, by commodity prices. There is a plus and a minus, but unlike, for example, the two previous oil shocks in the global economy, the current high level of oil prices has not been an unambiguous burden for Africa because the countries hurt by the high oil prices have, more often than not, benefited from high prices of other commodities; so on a net basis it is actually okay. But that does nothing about the deeper underlying development challenge, it seems to me, around competitiveness, diversification, integration into global markets. That is the issue. In terms of the availability of finance—and I am not an expert on this—we are not seeing much right now that is worrisome. In fact, I just read an analysis recently by the Institute of International Finance that suggested that with investors reassessing the risk profile of some of their more traditional investments in the developed countries, what they are actually seeing is more flow of resources into emerging markets. It seems to me one of the things we need to do at the African Development Bank is increasingly to attract that risk capital that is willing to invest in new markets. This gets to a point which we have not talked about yet but which is important, which is the profile and the activities of the Bank in the private sector. We are seeing substantially increased interest on the part of serious private sector investors in investing in Africa, risks notwithstanding, and considerable interest from their side in partnering with our institution, in part for the halo effect, to reduce the risk. So at this moment we are actually facing a level of interest in transactions that is going up, not down.

  Q13  Sir Robert Smith: That positive development must be exposed to the current liquidity crisis in the private sector, the current liquidity crisis going round the world, in terms of the potential for that private sector side?

  Mr Eichenberger: The crisis is exposed in ... ?

  Q14  Sir Robert Smith: You are saying that there is an interesting, exciting development of the private sector now becoming interested in Africa, on the back of Marsha Singh's question. Surely that must be a risk now in the current liquidity crisis.

  Mr Eichenberger: I think it is. If you ask me, there is no doubt that with the hits that some of the financial market players are taking and with the shrinkage of the availability of credit, we can expect to see that. Unfortunately, Africa has always been almost a footnote around issues of global capital flows, but perhaps because of that, in fact, because it is starting from a relatively low base, the degree of the hit may not be that high, I am not sure, but what we are seeing, as I say, is on-going interest in a wider range of sectors in Africa.

  Q15  John Bercow: Mr Eichenberger, can you give us some examples of how the Enhanced Collaboration Initiative that you agreed with DFID in 2004 has helped to harmonise your work with DFID in partner countries?

  Mr Eichenberger: Yes, I can. Let me say just by way of introduction, I think that, as you say, it was agreed in 2004. Since that time our institution has gone through a substantial reorganisation. At the time of the agreement we had this very limited field presence, which we are now ramping up, so a fair assessment of that would be results have been mixed but, I think, unambiguously positive. I think a specific example would be Mozambique, which has been a good performer, it has been a priority for DFID and it has been a priority for this institution. We have a significant field presence in Mozambique and, through this Enhanced Collaboration Initiative, we and DFID and other donors, frankly, have probably one of the most cohesive donor co-ordination mechanisms that now exist in Africa. We are dividing up responsibilities across individual sectors; that allows us to be much more focused on core priorities. We are doing much more joint work—joint work with the World Bank, joint work with DFID at a critical level—so I think that is an example where focused partnerships on a pilot basis is yielding some real results. Elsewhere, Sierra Leone was another country that was part of this initial pilot. I think it is fair to say that a lot less has happened there, although it has been the basis for a good degree of collaboration moving forward, particularly with respect to how do we use this Fragile States Facility that we have all agreed is going on. I think more remains in that case.

  Q16  John Bercow: Focused partnerships on a pilot basis exhibiting exemplary joint working will, of course, be music to the ears of the good burghers of my Buckingham constituency, Mr Eichenberger, and I do not in any sense cavil at what you have told me, but if I were to walk into Market Hill in Buckingham at the weekend and I were, per chance, to be nabbed by a constituent who said to me, "What did you extract from Mr Eichenberger about the specifics in terms of water, roads or sanitation in Mozambique, which his organisation's work, under the Enhanced Collaboration Initiative, is yielding?" (and it is not an improbable question from one of the highly articulate and well-informed constituents that you find in Market Hill Buckingham), what should be my answer, Mr Eichenberger?

  Mr Eichenberger: No, I get that question all the time at the supermarket! I think that is the test, the town hall test, where you stand up in front of the average taxpayer and explain why it is a good thing to do. I think in the case of this rather well-informed constituent, we could point, for example, to a very clearly articulated set of specific results that are expected to come from these collaborative investments in roads, results that are articulated in the form not just of how many yards of concrete are we going to pour, which is development 1980, but results in terms of how many people in rural communities are going to be connected to markets where they can sell their goods, how many people in rural communities will have more regular access to basic healthcare as a result of this investment? It feels to me, frankly, there is nothing revolutionary about that, but it is an area where I believe the development community has paid far too little attention for far too long. If we start building these things into our agreements and measuring and monitoring them, then I think we will get those results. So the results would be, "Well, Mr Smith, I believe at the end of the day that you should expect that an additional 15,000 Mozambicans will have access to clean water, and we will be able to show you that and there will be fewer cases of water-borne diseases, and that is a good thing, do you not agree?"

  Q17  John Bercow: That is extremely helpful. Thank you very much indeed. I will make sure I am armed with the information, preferably with the transcript, in readiness for my visit on Saturday to the constituency! What is the status of the reviews ordered by President Kaberuka into whether the use of the Bank's capital to fund projects relating to the MDGs[8] could be expanded? Forgive me, but my understanding is that there is a total of three reviews. There appeared to be one review that came on the back of the High Level Panel report—I maybe mistaken about this—and there are two private investment banks that have been asked to undertake independent reviews. Anyway, perhaps you could clarify how many reviews there are, what their status is and how they are getting on?

  Mr Eichenberger: I am not deeply familiar with that, but I can tell you the following. I think the distinction between two versus three reviews is that one is an on-going effort that is internal to the organisation. This is the kind of thing the Treasury department needs to do. The other two, as you say, are basically reviews of the balance sheet being done by two investment banks, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs, on a pro bono basis, by the way.

  Q18  John Bercow: That is a relief.

  Mr Eichenberger: They are doing it pro bono, and the purpose of these reviews is to basically examine: is there latent power in the balance sheet consistent with a Triple-A rating that could be accessed in order to leverage more finance into Africa? Are there ways that the institution should or could think more creatively about insurance, guarantees, et cetera? I had a conversation with the President just on Friday, and he indicated that actually, just an hour before, he had had a conversation with the Citigroup guys. They are very close to coming to closure. He has promised the board to get the results of both analyses to them in time for a full discussion before our annual meeting; so this is imminent.

  Q19  John Bercow: When is that?

  Mr Eichenberger: Our annual meeting is the middle of May, so we are expecting these discussions in April. I think people in the Bank should be well placed to give you some preliminary views.



1   International Development Committee, Sixth Report of Session 2007-08, DFID and the World Bank, HC 67 Back

2   Department for International Development Back

3   International Development Association of the World Bank-the arm of the World Bank which provides loans and grants to low-income countries Back

4   European Commission Back

5   The UN International Fund for Agricultural Development Back

6   Gross National Product Back

7   High Level Panel for the African Development Bank, Investing in Africa's Future, January 2007 Back

8   Millennium Development Goals Back


 
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