The Political Economy of International Finance Corporation Lending

41 Pages Posted: 11 Sep 2017

See all articles by Axel Dreher

Axel Dreher

Heidelberg University

Katharina Richert

University of Heidelberg - Alfred Weber Institute for Economics

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: September 2017

Abstract

The bulk of International Finance Corporation (IFC) lending benefits companies from rich countries, and projects in countries with middle income. Large conglomerates such as Lidl or Mövenpick have been among its direct beneficiaries. This contrasts to some extent with the IFC's official mandate, which is to finance poverty-reducing projects for which private capital is not available on reasonable terms. We investigate the drivers of this mismatch. According to our theory, the governments of industrialized countries where borrowing companies are based form coalitions with governments of middle-income countries where the projects are implemented. We therefore expect preferential treatment to be most pronounced when the representatives of both the recipient's and the company's countries are best able to collude in exerting their influence. We argue that this will be the case when both countries' governments are represented among the IFC's Board of Executive Directors, and when they have extraordinary clout with major IFC shareholders. Using data for more than 3000 IFC projects over the 1995-2015 period we show that the (joint) influence of these countries helps them to receive a disproportional share of IFC funding.

Keywords: international bureaucracies, international finance, political economy

JEL Classification: F33, F34, F35, F53

Suggested Citation

Dreher, Axel and Richert, Katharina, The Political Economy of International Finance Corporation Lending (September 2017). CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP12290, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3035286

Axel Dreher (Contact Author)

Heidelberg University ( email )

Grabengasse 1
Heidelberg, 69117
Germany

HOME PAGE: http://www.axel-dreher.de

Katharina Richert

University of Heidelberg - Alfred Weber Institute for Economics ( email )

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