Open Letter · Spring Meetings 2026 · Day 6 · April 19, 2026
An Open Letter to the Governors of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund
To the Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors of 190 Countries: On the Reform Agenda, the Institutional Equilibrium That Prevents It, and the Role of Shareholders in Breaking It
Dear Governors,
The Spring Meetings have concluded. Finance ministers and central bank governors from 190 countries convened in Washington this week to discuss the global growth outlook, debt sustainability, and private sector mobilisation. These are consequential matters. This letter concerns a parallel agenda that received less formal attention: the question of whether the accountability architecture of the World Bank and the IMF is adequate to the challenges both institutions face — and why thirty years of reform attempts have failed to change it.
You are the ultimate shareholders of these institutions. The Articles of Agreement vest in you the authority to shape the governance frameworks within which management and the Boards operate. That authority is rarely exercised directly on operational matters — nor should it be. But the structural questions this letter raises are precisely the kind that require shareholder direction, because they concern the incentive architecture within which management itself operates. And management, as this letter explains, cannot change that architecture from within.
What the Evidence Shows
The World Bank rates every completed project. Of $119.8 billion committed to Sub-Saharan Africa since 2015, 74 percent went to projects rated below Satisfactory by IEG. In fragile and conflict-affected states globally, of $58.2 billion committed to evaluated projects since 2015, 71 percent went to projects rated below Satisfactory. The Satisfactory rate fell from 88 percent in the 1970s to 26 percent by 2010–14. It has partially recovered to 41 percent. That is still six projects in ten failing. The Wappenhans Report named this approval culture in 1992. It has not been resolved.
The IMF has been lending for 81 years without a project-level rating system. The COVID emergency was the largest and fastest deployment in the institution’s history. The governance framework was a checklist — the institution’s own evaluators said so. The IMF’s Legal Department documented near-universal losses across 50 recipient countries. Nigeria — the largest single Sub-Saharan African recipient at $3.4 billion — had its Accountant General convicted. The repayment was collected in full. The Boards of both institutions approved these operations and are accountable for none of them. The Zedillo Commission recommended in 2009 that the World Bank move to a non-resident Board. Nothing changed.
Why Reform Has Not Worked: The Institutional Equilibrium
This week, alongside the open letter series, this platform published two analytical papers that explain why the evidence has been visible for thirty years and the pattern has not changed. The explanation is not institutional incompetence. It is institutional equilibrium.
The equilibrium is maintained by three structural parameters. First: the sovereign guarantee and preferred creditor status that decouple both institutions’ financial payoffs from development outcomes. A project that succeeds and a project that fails generate identical financial returns to the institution — the loan is repaid in both cases. Second: the Board co-approval architecture that prevents independent oversight — a Board that co-authors every operation cannot independently scrutinise its failure without implicating its own prior endorsement. Third: the career pipeline of the Macroeconomics, Trade and Investment Global Practice, which routes economists through every node of institutional authority and enforces the approval culture through reputation effects across 30-year careers.
There is a fourth structural parameter that this week’s analysis identified for the first time in formal game-theoretic terms. The IMF and the World Bank are not competing over the macro-fiscal mandate. They are in a cooperative equilibrium that serves the interests of the macroeconomist tribe that controls both. IMF and World Bank economists completed the same PhD programmes, publish in the same journals, and rotate between institutions. The Finance Ministries that should be the arbiters of this duplication are its most structurally captured victims — they need the financing from both institutions and cannot alienate either. The result: $750 million to $1.1 billion per year in administrative duplication, contradictory advice to the same Finance Ministers in the same week, and thirty-five years of coordination frameworks that have changed nothing at field level.
The game theory analysis — published today at mdbreform.com/game-theory-institutional-equilibrium/ — is precise about what this means for reform: interventions that operate within the existing payoff structure will be absorbed by the equilibrium. The pattern will continue. The only reforms that change the equilibrium are those that change one or more of the three structural parameters. Those reforms require external intervention by shareholders. They cannot emerge from within the institution.
Five Structural Parameter Changes
The following five measures are not policy recommendations. They are structural parameter changes — each one directly targeting one of the three equilibrium parameters identified above. None requires amending the Articles of Agreement. None requires a capital increase. Each requires a decision by shareholders that the current framework is insufficient and that change is overdue.
The communiqué from this week’s meetings will record progress on private sector mobilisation, debt sustainability, and climate finance. These are genuine priorities. The analysis published this week — six open letters, two analytical papers, and a dataset of 3,507 evaluated projects — documents that the delivery architecture requires equal attention, and that strengthening it is a precondition for the other priorities being achieved at the scale both institutions are committed to.
The populations these institutions serve — in fragile states across Africa, Asia, and Latin America — are the ultimate beneficiaries of stronger accountability. The case for reform is not an argument against these institutions. It is an argument that they can and should perform better, and that the structural changes required to achieve that improvement are within your authority to advance. The equilibrium will not change itself. It will change when you change the payoff structure that sustains it.
Respectfully,
Parminder Brar
Founder, mdbreform.com
Former World Bank Country Manager and Lead Governance Specialist
April 19, 2026
The game theory analysis: Why the System Does Not Learn →
The MTI power architecture analysis: Institutional Power Architecture and Portfolio Distortion →
The full Spring Meetings series: Spring Meetings 2026 →
All six open letters: Open Letters Index →
The full analysis: Analysis Index →
The underlying data: IEG Master Database →