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James
D. Wolfensohn
President
World Bank Group
James
D. Wolfensohn, the World Bank Group's ninth
president since 1946, established his career
as an international investment banker with a
parallel involvement in development issues and
the global environment. On September 27, 1999,
Mr. Wolfensohn was unanimously reappointed by
the Bank's Board of Executive Directors to a
second five-year term as president beginning
June 1, 2000. This will make him the third president
in World Bank history to serve a second term.
Since
becoming president on June 1, 1995, he has traveled
to more than 100 countries to gain first-hand
experience of the challenges facing the World
Bank, and its 184 member countries. During his
travels, Mr. Wolfensohn has not only visited
development projects supported by the World
Bank, but he has also met with the Bank's government
clients as well as with representatives from
business, labor, media, non-governmental organizations
(NGOs), religious and women's groups, students
and teachers. In the process he has taken the
initiative in forming new strategic partnerships
between the Bank and the governments it serves,
the private sector, civil society, regional
development banks and the UN.
In
1996, together with the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), Mr. Wolfensohn initiated the Heavily
Indebted Poor Countries Initiative (HIPC) as
the first comprehensive debt reduction program
to address the needs of the world's poorest,
most heavily indebted countries. Two years later,
he led a global review of the HIPC Initiative,
involving church groups, NGOs and representatives
from creditor and HIPC countries, to assess
its progress and identify ways to make the Initiative
deeper, broader and faster. This review, and
proposals by donor countries, culminated in
September 1999 with an official endorsement
at the World Bank/IMF Annual Meetings to double
the amount of relief, make more countries eligible
for assistance, and speed up the process.
In
January 1999, Mr. Wolfensohn introduced the
Comprehensive Development Framework (CDF), drawing
on the lessons of development experience and
putting into action the key concepts laid out
in his Annual Meetings speeches of 1997 and
1998. Together with the Bank's partners, the
CDF is now being piloted in 13 countries. A
central feature of Mr. Wolfensohn's Strategic
Compact is to incorporate key aspects of the
information revolution into the Bank's work
by transforming the institution into a Knowledge
Bank.
Prior
to joining the Bank, Mr. Wolfensohn was an international
investment banker. His last position was as
President and Chief Executive Officer of James
D. Wolfensohn Inc, his own investment firm set
up in 1981 to advise major US and international
corporations. He relinquished his interests
in the firm upon joining the World Bank.
Currently,
in addition to serving as President of the World
Bank Group, he is Chairman of the Board of the
Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton. Mr.
Wolfensohn is also an Honorary Trustee of the
Brookings Institution and a member of the Council
on Foreign Relations and the Century Association
in New York.
Born
in Australia in December 1933, Mr. Wolfensohn
is a naturalized US citizen. He holds a BA and
LLB from the University of Sydney and an MBA
from the Harvard Graduate School of Business.
He
and his wife, Elaine, an education specialist
and a graduate of Wellesley, BA, and Columbia
University, MA and MEd, have three childrenSara,
Naomi, and Adam.
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