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Articles

World Bank Lending and the Quality of Economic Policy

&
Pages 72-91
Received 22 Aug 2014
Accepted 21 Apr 2015
Published online: 09 Oct 2015
 

Abstract

This study investigates the impact of World Bank development policy lending on the quality of economic policy. It finds that the quality of policy increases, but at a diminishing rate, with the cumulative number of policy loans. Similar results hold for the cumulative number of conditions attached to policy loans, although quadratic specifications indicate that additional conditions may even reduce the quality of policy beyond some point. The paper measures the quality of economic policy using the World Bank’s Country Policy and Institutional Assessments of macro, debt, fiscal, and structural policies, and considers only policy loans targeted at improvements in those areas. Previous studies finding weaker effects of policy lending on macro stability have failed to distinguish loans primarily intended to improve economic policy from other loans targeted at improvements in sector policies or in public management. The paper also shows that investing in economic policy does not ‘crowd out’ policy improvements in other areas, such as public sector governance or human development. The results are robust to using alternative indicators of policy quality and correcting for endogeneity with system generalized methods of moments and cross-sectional two-stage least squares. The more positive results in the study relative to some previous studies are consistent with claims by the World Bank that it has learned from its mistakes with traditional adjustment lending.

Acknowledgement

We would like to thank Vincenzo Verardi, Adam Wagstaff, Peter Moll, Patricia Geli, the seminar participants at the 2013 LAGV conference, and one anonymous referee for useful comments and suggestions. Lodewijk is also indebted to the Institute of Development Policy and Management (IOB) and the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) for financial support. When requested, we are happy to provide all publicly available data and programming code for replication purposes.

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