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Related: China vows to enhance co-op with WB in poverty reduction
BEIJING, Oct. 14 -- It seems to be a very popular,
convenient approach these days to compare China's rise to the emergence of
Germany and Japan after the 1860s.
Those who like to make analogy between now and the
dark days leading up to two world wars say that powers rarely emerge without
sparking war and reshaping the international system.
The conclusion: there is a big chance that China's
rise will lead to, at best, troubles, or, at worst, bloodshed.
However, Paul Wolfowitz, the World Bank's new
president, would not subscribe to this argument.
Paul Wolfowitz, 61, was known as a key
neo-conservative hawk in the US Government and a key architect of the
controversial war in Iraq.
US decision to nominate him as candidate for the
World Bank's presidency led to opposition from some parts of the world. The
nomination was approved by the bank's board after diplomatic efforts by the US
and Wolfowitz himself.
Since taking office, however, Wolfowitz has worked to
establish his image as a strong advocate of the World Bank's anti-poverty
mission, rather than a tool for US values.
He lobbied hard for increased aid and debt relief for
poor countries and reduction of trade barriers. He defied proposals by some to
slash the bank's support to what they called "middle-income countries" such as
China. He travelled extensively to donor nations, to secure smooth co-operation,
and to developing countries, to know local people's needs at first hand.
In Gansu, the soft-spoken man spent substantial time
talking with farmers about their lives and expectations for their children. He
also visited a village Mosque and recited by memory Arabic prayers from the
Koran.
Responding to the question whether he would reorient
the bank and turn it into an instrument to promote US-style democracy, he said
there are issues such as the accountability of government which support economic
development that some people might say are political. Development should be
given a meaning in a broader context, he said.
"The mission of the World Bank is to reduce poverty
and to promote economic development and that's really what I want to stress,"
Wolfowitz said.
"When it comes back to the test of whether we (the
World Bank) are doing our job or not, it's whether we're promoting development,
not whether we're promoting democracy."
(Source: China Daily) |