Accountability in Development Finance
The accountability failures the World Bank Group has produced in Cambodia, Nigeria, and the Immunity Paradox are not the product of individual misjudgements, inadequate oversight, or poor project management. They are predictable consequences of an institutional architecture that places sovereign and commercial mandates under one governance structure without resolving the accountability contradictions that combination produces. These failures are not isolated accidents. They arise from features of the institutional design.
Eighteen complainants. Four years of investigation. One 142-page compliance finding of non-compliance. Eight months for the IFC Board to reverse it. The paper documents how this outcome was structurally possible: the CAO reports to the President, not the Board — which is why the Board could treat its finding as a management input rather than its own conclusion.
Across roughly three decades of compliance reviews, the number of CAO cases with documented harm mitigation for affected communities is zero. The CAO Director General resigned the day after the Board’s June 23 determination. She had institutional standing. She used it.
Read Paper →IFC claims sovereign immunity in US courts on the grounds that it performs governmental functions. The same Board applies commercial-distance reasoning in its own governance on the grounds that IFC is a commercial investor one step removed from harm. Both arguments are available simultaneously because IFC is part of an institution that is simultaneously sovereign and commercial. The Roberts caveat in Jam v. IFC — that immunity is not absolute if waived — has never been operationalised.
Read Paper →The flagship paper of the platform’s first six months. Three institutions — IBRD/IDA, IFC, MIGA — under one Board, one President, one immunity claim in US courts. Three case studies, one explanation: Cambodia demonstrates two incompatible accountability standards under one Board. Nigeria demonstrates adviser, equity investor, and guarantor in the same sector simultaneously. The Immunity Paradox demonstrates sovereign in court, commercial in governance, accountable in neither.
The paper also documents mandate inversion and proposes three reforms in ascending order of disruption — up to and including structural separation of IBRD and IFC.
Read Paper →90+ papers. 15 content streams. Four open-access datasets. One governing question unchanged since February: after six decades and trillions of dollars, is the delivery system working — and if not, who is accountable for that?
The answer the data gives is consistent across every institution, every sector, and every analytical frame applied: the system has optimised for disbursement, not delivery; for self-assessment, not independent verification; and for institutional continuity, not reform. That answer is now on the record.
Issue 4 covers the first half of July. The platform continues to publish through the month — the IMF Glass House series and further accountability analysis are in progress. This issue will be updated at the end of July to reflect the full month’s output.
About the Monitor
The MDB Reform Monitor is a monthly publication of MDB Reform Advisory. Each issue synthesises the platform’s analytical output for that month into a single governing finding, a set of key papers, and a cumulative argument about why the multilateral development banking system is not delivering at the scale its resources and mandate require.
Written for Executive Directors, donor government officials, parliamentary oversight bodies, investigative journalists, and researchers who follow MDB governance. All underlying papers at mdbreform.com/navigation. All datasets at mdbreform.com/data. Correspondence: pbrar@mdbreform.com.
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