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As
an agent of global social reproduction,
the World Bank itself is also subject
to forces pushing for privatization (in
this case, divestment of its development
lending role to private capital markets),
much in the way that welfarist states
are urged to selectively offload their
more profitable (or commercially viable)
social services to the private sector.
Jessica Einhorn’s call to wind down the
IBRD (Foreign Affairs, January/February
2006) follows upon the recommendations
of the Meltzer Commission (US Congress,
2000) for a triage of borrower countries:
debt cancellation, performance-based grants
for the most destitute of highly-indebted
countries, as opposed to the more "credit-worthy"
borrowers with access to capital markets,
who should be weaned from multilateral
lending agencies and henceforth be serviced
by private lending sources (i.e. the financial
analogue of "targeted" programs
in health services). Indeed, this targeted
approach is the persuasive face and generic
template for the privatization of social
services.
September
27, 2007. |