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Working with Parliamentarians

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New!  Issue Brief on Parliaments

Engaging elected representatives and parliaments in the organization’s programs and policies are important objectives of the World Bank. Parliaments worldwide increasingly address global development challenges ranging from poverty reduction to international trade, HIV/AIDS and global warming. The Bank's hub for global parliamentary outreach is based in the European External Affairs Office, and run by the Bank's Development Policy Dialogue Team.  The Bank also works with parliamentarians through the World Bank Institute's (WBI) capacity building programs and our country offices and country teams. Through WBI capacity building courses, the Bank has trained over 6000 MPs. Our global network of Public Information Services assists in providing World Bank project documents and other key publications.  


In a recent internal survey of Bank country offices, representing over 60% of Bank offices, 13% said their staff interacted with parliamentarians “weekly", 29% "monthly" and 43% “several times a year”. Interaction ranges from informal meetings with individual parliamentarians to more structured consultations on individual projects and the World Bank’s three-year business plans, the Country Assistance Strategies (CAS).
 Our global network of over 60
Public Information Centers (PICs) assist in providing World Bank project documents and other key publications to parliamentarians. Owned and governed by 184 countries, the World Bank remains the world's single largest source of development assistance.


The Bank, through External Affairs Europe, supported the creation of the  Parliamentary Network on the World Bank (PNoWB), now an independent NGO, and has developed joint programs with the PNoWB such as field visits, an Annual Conference and working groups on HIV/AIDS and Trade. During the PNoWB Annual Conference the World Bank's President and Senior staff have the opportunity to meet with around two hundred parliamentarians.  In addition to the PNoWB, the Bank  engages other established parliamentary organizations as partners for development. Some have a regional focus, others a thematic concentration. One key objective is to connect these groups with the relevant parts of the Bank: the Parliamentary Assembly on Black Sea Economic Cooperation with ECA, the Inter-European Parliamentary Forum on Population and Development with the Social Development Department, the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association with the Africa Vice-Presidency and so on. The Bank's capacity building programs through WBI are often developed in partnership with parliamentary organizations such as the Commonwealth Parliamentary Organization (CPA) and the Global Organization for Parliamentarians Against Corruption (GOPAC). 

Parliamentarians can act as agents of change - championing social and economic reforms, speaking out on HIV/AIDS, and taking on corruption. They represent their constituents’ needs and views and can contribute to designing and overseeing implementation of World Bank financed projects. In many countries, Bank projects are subject to parliamentary approval directly through ratification or indirectly through budget approval. In some cases, parliamentarians create, debate and pass new legislation linked to World Bank-supported reform programs.  In Poland for example, the parliament had to amend the Public Finance law in order to enable municipalities to accept loans from the Municipal Development Project. 

In countries providing development assistance, parliamentarians can be advocates for development. They debate and approve foreign aid budgets, shape and review development policies, and promote coherence across policy areas. Sweden for example has now adopted an integrated global development policy that requires the country's trade, defense, agriculture, environment, migration and other policies to harmonize with the dual goals of fighting poverty and promoting sustainable development. 

 




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