Freshly Printed - allow 6 days lead
Couldn't load pickup availability
Beyond US Hegemony in International Development
The Contest for Influence at the World Bank
This book provides essential background on China's bid for increasing influence over the US hegemonic architecture of international financial institutions.
Jiajun Xu (Author)
9781107172845, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 24 November 2016
322 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm, 0.6 kg
'This is essential reading for international economists, aid professionals and others interested in how multilateral institutions function. Dr Xu's analysis of what happened in the World Bank can be applied to other institutions in an imperfect, insufficiently adaptable, global system. It explains why China found it necessary to create new institutions to complement its working within the framework of existing ones.' Percy Mistry, Chairman, Oxford International Associates Ltd
China's initiative to establish the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), attracting membership from G7 countries against the vocal opposition of the United States, has been recognised as a significant moment in an ongoing hegemonic transition. This book examines how power transitions have played out in the World Bank over the last five decades, offering the first authentic account of the international diplomacy behind donor financing of the World Bank's International Development Association (IDA). Jiajun Xu decodes how the United States amplified its influence at the World Bank despite its flagging financial contributions to IDA. She further demonstrates that the widening influence-to-contribution disparity provoked other donors into taking 'exit/voice' measures, contesting the hegemon's legitimacy. A rising China initially decided to become an IDA donor, seeking influence from within. However, the entrenched hegemonic position of the United States in World Bank governance drove China to initiate the AIIB and New Development Bank, putting competitive pressures on the US-centred multilateral institutions to adapt.
Introduction
1. IDA burden-sharing: the unresolved puzzle
2. Three power plays behind the politics of IDA burden-sharing
3. IDA in the 1960s: hegemonic leadership amid bipolar geopolitics
4. IDA in the 1970s: a turbulent era with accelerated burden-shifting
5. IDA in the 1980s: the rise and retreat of the 'Reagan revolution'
6. IDA in the 1990s: the struggle for power and fairness in a unipolar world
7. IDA in the new millennium: leadership in transition?
8. China's ascendancy: influence from within and impact from outside
Conclusion
Bibliography.
Subject Areas: Political economy [KCP], Development economics & emerging economies [KCM], Economics [KC], International relations [JPS], Politics & government [JP]
