The World Bank withholds loan disbursements in order to build a reputation for enforcing conditionality, and multinational firms lobby for these funds to be released. Using data drawn from World Bank reports, we find evidence that (1) participation by Fortune 500 multinational corporations as project contractors and (2) investments by these firms are associated with disbursements that are unjustified by project performance. In addition, these measures of corporate interest are associated with inflated project evaluations. These effects are limited to multinational corporations headquartered in the United States or Japan, suggesting that the influence of private actors depends on access to particular national policy networks. In contrast to ...
Abstract: This paper explores the influence of Japan and the United States over the geographic dist...
How should loan contracts to finance projects in countries with high political risk be designed? We ...
There is substantial evidence that International Monetary Fund policies are driven by the powerful s...
Analysts regarding the World Bank as either a tool of great powers or as an autonomous bureaucracy s...
This paper develops a model to test whether World Bank lending caters to U.S. interests. We use coun...
Lending corruption is an important agency problem for banks. Using data from the World Bank Business...
This paper develops a model to test whether World Bank lending caters to U.S. interests. We use coun...
How and why do the policy areas covered in World Bank loan conditions change over time and across bo...
This study investigates whether World Bank loans are selective in targeting the better governed and ...
Previous research has shown that higher levels of firm globalization lead to a lower cost of private...
This paper examines how bank lending decisions are affected either by executives\u27 connections wit...
What should the World Bank optimally do with the US$10 to $20 billion it can loan each year? Has it,...
This paper explores the influence of Japan and the United States over the geographic distribution of...
As the world becomes more globalized and the prosperity of new, rising powers begins to challenge th...
This paper draws on case studies of efforts by transnational civil society coalitions to influence p...
Abstract: This paper explores the influence of Japan and the United States over the geographic dist...
How should loan contracts to finance projects in countries with high political risk be designed? We ...
There is substantial evidence that International Monetary Fund policies are driven by the powerful s...
Analysts regarding the World Bank as either a tool of great powers or as an autonomous bureaucracy s...
This paper develops a model to test whether World Bank lending caters to U.S. interests. We use coun...
Lending corruption is an important agency problem for banks. Using data from the World Bank Business...
This paper develops a model to test whether World Bank lending caters to U.S. interests. We use coun...
How and why do the policy areas covered in World Bank loan conditions change over time and across bo...
This study investigates whether World Bank loans are selective in targeting the better governed and ...
Previous research has shown that higher levels of firm globalization lead to a lower cost of private...
This paper examines how bank lending decisions are affected either by executives\u27 connections wit...
What should the World Bank optimally do with the US$10 to $20 billion it can loan each year? Has it,...
This paper explores the influence of Japan and the United States over the geographic distribution of...
As the world becomes more globalized and the prosperity of new, rising powers begins to challenge th...
This paper draws on case studies of efforts by transnational civil society coalitions to influence p...
Abstract: This paper explores the influence of Japan and the United States over the geographic dist...
How should loan contracts to finance projects in countries with high political risk be designed? We ...
There is substantial evidence that International Monetary Fund policies are driven by the powerful s...