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World Bank president
commends
The World
Bank president, Mr. Paul Wolfowitz, has commended
Mr. Wolfowitz added that developing countries must improve business conditions and run their
public and private sectors in a transparent way if they want to attract
investors and fight poverty. “It’s true that vast amounts of international capital are potentially
available to help developing countries grow and create jobs and provide
opportunities for their people to escape poverty, but to access that capital, to
attract investors, developing countries especially, the poorest ones, need to
improve their investment climates and ensure that these resources, private and
public, are managed in a transparent way,” he told the International Corporate
Governance Network in a speech in Washington (6 July 2006).
"This is absolutely vital for harnessing the entrepreneurial energy
of the private sector. Today, the private sector accounts for 90 percent of jobs
in the developing world and ultimately, it will be these jobs that offer the
most promising path out of poverty," he added.
Mr. Wolfowitz further outlined that a study carried out by the World Bank showed that
“Corporate governance is one essential component of building a
healthy investment climate and boosting investor confidence. We know that
companies with well-defined shareholder rights, solid control environment, high
levels of transparency, and disclosure, and an empowered board of directors,
have no trouble attracting investors and lenders,” Mr. Wolfowitz said.
Source: worldbank.org, Reuters.
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