There has been a great deal of speculation on the topic of who
President Bush should appoint to replace Paul Wolfowitz as the head
of the World Bank. Tony Blair's name has come up frequently. One
wonders whether political skills are what is needed.
It has been suggested that, in addition to his romantic
entanglement, part of Paul Wolfowitz's problem was that he did not
have the professional respect of the financial community needed to
help him overcome the entrenched bureaucracy of the World Bank.
Tony Blair would avoid the first problem, but not the second.
One man comes to mind as a nearly perfect fit for the World
Bank: Lawrence Summers. Larry Summers has been a success as both an
academician and as Secretary of the Treasury at the end of the
Clinton administration.
Though he was ultimately forced out as president of Harvard
University, the trouble he stirred up there was consistent with
tough-minded independence and a near immunity to standard issue
political correctness.
The recurring theme in Summers' career has been a desire to
follow empirical evidence in pursuit of the answers to very
specific questions. He is in the top class of today's
economists.
To sum up, Summers has the credentials, undeniable bipartisan
appeal, and the guts to take on the reform of an international
organization ripe for it.
topics:
Law