Monday, 16 April 2012 09:36
By Johanna Treblin, Inter Press Service | Report
Water privatisation has been proven not to help the poor, yet a
quarter of all World Bank funding goes directly to corporations and the
private sector, bypassing both governments and its own standards and
transparency requirements in order to do so, says a new report released
Monday.
People in many developing countries often lack access to clean water,
but the approach to remedy this problem has shifted in recent years to
rely more on the private sector. Yet, as this new report and several
other watchdog groups have shown, the change has been more harmful than
helpful.
Corporate Accountability International,
the U.S.-based non-governmental organisation that published the report,
has called on the World Bank to stop funding the private water sector
and start redirecting its money to public and democratically accountable
institutions.
The release of the report, entitled "Shutting the Spigot on Private
Water: Case for the World Bank to Divest", coincides with the start of
the World Bank and International Monetary Fund's 2012 Spring Meetings.
The World Bank's private sector arm, the International Finance
Corporation (IFC), has spent 1.4 billion dollars on private water
corporations since 1993, according to the report. READ MORE
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