[from Doug's house]

[from the World Bank's daily clipping service]

LITTLE COMMON GROUND FOR GLOBALIZATION DEBATE.

The proposed debate next month, between four anti-globalization
non-governmental
organizations on one side and the International Monetary Fund and the
World Bank
on the other, may struggle even to find a common basis for discussion,
writes
Alan Beattie in the Financial Times (p.14). Mutual suspicion remains
over
sincerity of motives.

While the financial institutions have an established relationship and
a regular
meeting with well-known NGOs such as Oxfam and Friends of the Earth,
some
officials say the boundaries between respectable advocacy and
violence can often
be blurred, writes Beattie.

Assuming that the organizational problems can be overcome, could the
fund and
bank and their critics even find any common ground on which to base a
debate?
One of the problems is that they do not agree on the facts - and
development
economics is notorious for its patchy and unreliable data. They also
tend to
focus on different outcomes - as eloquently expounded by economist
Ravi Kanbur.
He says the opposing sides are often both right: liberalizing trade,
for
example, does in the long run increase growth and benefit all members
of
society, as the IMF and World Bank would tend to argue. But in the
short term,
the pain of transition can often hit the poor, as the anti-globalizers
say.
"There is a strong sense of people talking past each other," Kanbur
says.

There are signs that the World Bank, at least, has made its message
more nuanced
and sophisticated, notes Beattie. Its forthcoming paper on
globalization, growth
and poverty does admit that billions of people are failing to benefit
from
globalization, and accepts that it has some adverse effects. But it
got the
standard hostile response from development campaigns when a copy was
leaked.
They called it "business as usual." The two sides may meet in the same
building
but their premises remain far apart.

Meanwhile, Reuters reports that the World Bank and the IMF said on
Monday they
believed talks with protest groups ahead of their annual meetings in
Washington
next month can help make programs more effective and improve dialogue
with
nongovernmental organizations.

The World Bank and IMF late last week sent a letter accepting requests
from
protesters to meet but the IMF said the agreement does not reflect a
new
initiative, notes the story. During IMF and World Bank meetings in
Washington
and in Prague last year, economists from both institutions held
discussions with
some 400 protesters and members of NGOs who had registered for the
gatherings.
"What comes out of these consultations is a process of dialogue
through which
policies can be amended and project effectiveness enhanced," World
Bank
spokeswoman Caroline Anstey told Reuters.

The two lenders, which have been criticized for a lack of openness,
will host
two days of online debates in the run-up to the meetings in addition
to
exchanges with protesters, adds the story. Anstey said the online
debates will
take place on Sept. 27-28, and will focus on globalization and its
impact on the
environment, decision-making, corruption and culture.

The online forum, open to questions and comments from anybody with
access to the
Internet, will bring together officials from the bank and the IMF as
well as
NGOs, ministers from around the world, representatives of the private
sector and
academics, Anstey said.

In a separate report, Reuters writes that lawyers for
anti-globalization
activists filed a lawsuit against the Washington police department on
Monday,
arguing that planned measures to contain demonstrations during the
International
Monetary Fund and World Bank meetings were unconstitutional.

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