• News
  • Politics
  • National
  • Business
  • World
  • Opinion
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Travel
Monday, July 14, 2025
Online WorldWide News Portal
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    Kainaat Arora reveals why Sanjay Dutt once advised her not to enter Bollywood

    Kainaat Arora reveals why Sanjay Dutt once advised her not to enter Bollywood

    ‘Imlie’ fame Sumbul Touqeer shares how she stays true to herself amid social media pressure

    ‘Imlie’ fame Sumbul Touqeer shares how she stays true to herself amid social media pressure

    ‘Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai’ actor Rahul Sharma reflects on how boldness is reshaping Indian television Television actor Rahul Sharma, who is currently seen playing the role of Anshuman in “Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai,” has shared his thoughts on the changing nature of TV content. He pointed out that boldness on television is on the rise, with shows becoming more experimental and less restrained than before. Sharma shared, “There’s no doubt that boldness has increased in films, on OTT platforms, and even on television. But somewhere, it has also started giving people a false impression — that being bold automatically makes you likable or popular. That if you’re bold, people will praise you, follow you, and give you attention. But the reality is, this often leads to objectification, especially for young girls entering the industry. And the boys who are seeing this narrative are also developing a skewed perspective — one where they’re respecting women less and objectifying them more.” He added, “Content reflects society, but now society is also being shaped heavily by content. The constant exposure to certain themes, be it extreme boldness, fast relationships, or dysfunction in families, is influencing young minds. They start believing that what they see is the norm. Parenting has also shifted; soft parenting is more common now. Children are growing up in a very different emotional environment. They are less tolerant, lack resistance, don’t have patience, and honestly, they don’t always understand what truly matters. They're easily influenced and emotionally fragile.” When asked whether audiences today are becoming overexposed—particularly to personal and emotional content onscreen, Rahul Sharma said he believes we are overstimulated in every aspect of life, constantly surrounded by an overwhelming amount of content, visuals, and opinions. “We are overexposed to everything. That’s one of the biggest issues. We’re constantly bombarded with content, visuals, and opinions, and it’s too much. This overexposure is making us impatient and intolerant.” “Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai,” which is produced under Rajan Shahi’s banner Director’s Kut Production, stars Rohit Purohit and Samridhii Shukla in the lead roles.

    ‘Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai’ actor Rahul Sharma reflects on how boldness is reshaping Indian television

    Disappointing for both of us, it shouldn’t have happened: Rahul on Pant’s run-out before lunch at Lord’s

    Disappointing for both of us, it shouldn’t have happened: Rahul on Pant’s run-out before lunch at Lord’s

    Namibian female Cheetah Nabha succumbs to injuries

    Namibian female Cheetah Nabha succumbs to injuries

    EAM Jaishankar to visit China today for SCO meeting

    EAM Jaishankar to visit China today for SCO meeting

    Trending Tags

    • Commentary
    • Featured
    • Event
    • Editorial
  • Politics
  • National
  • Business
  • World
  • Opinion
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Travel
  • News
    Kainaat Arora reveals why Sanjay Dutt once advised her not to enter Bollywood

    Kainaat Arora reveals why Sanjay Dutt once advised her not to enter Bollywood

    ‘Imlie’ fame Sumbul Touqeer shares how she stays true to herself amid social media pressure

    ‘Imlie’ fame Sumbul Touqeer shares how she stays true to herself amid social media pressure

    ‘Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai’ actor Rahul Sharma reflects on how boldness is reshaping Indian television Television actor Rahul Sharma, who is currently seen playing the role of Anshuman in “Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai,” has shared his thoughts on the changing nature of TV content. He pointed out that boldness on television is on the rise, with shows becoming more experimental and less restrained than before. Sharma shared, “There’s no doubt that boldness has increased in films, on OTT platforms, and even on television. But somewhere, it has also started giving people a false impression — that being bold automatically makes you likable or popular. That if you’re bold, people will praise you, follow you, and give you attention. But the reality is, this often leads to objectification, especially for young girls entering the industry. And the boys who are seeing this narrative are also developing a skewed perspective — one where they’re respecting women less and objectifying them more.” He added, “Content reflects society, but now society is also being shaped heavily by content. The constant exposure to certain themes, be it extreme boldness, fast relationships, or dysfunction in families, is influencing young minds. They start believing that what they see is the norm. Parenting has also shifted; soft parenting is more common now. Children are growing up in a very different emotional environment. They are less tolerant, lack resistance, don’t have patience, and honestly, they don’t always understand what truly matters. They're easily influenced and emotionally fragile.” When asked whether audiences today are becoming overexposed—particularly to personal and emotional content onscreen, Rahul Sharma said he believes we are overstimulated in every aspect of life, constantly surrounded by an overwhelming amount of content, visuals, and opinions. “We are overexposed to everything. That’s one of the biggest issues. We’re constantly bombarded with content, visuals, and opinions, and it’s too much. This overexposure is making us impatient and intolerant.” “Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai,” which is produced under Rajan Shahi’s banner Director’s Kut Production, stars Rohit Purohit and Samridhii Shukla in the lead roles.

    ‘Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai’ actor Rahul Sharma reflects on how boldness is reshaping Indian television

    Disappointing for both of us, it shouldn’t have happened: Rahul on Pant’s run-out before lunch at Lord’s

    Disappointing for both of us, it shouldn’t have happened: Rahul on Pant’s run-out before lunch at Lord’s

    Namibian female Cheetah Nabha succumbs to injuries

    Namibian female Cheetah Nabha succumbs to injuries

    EAM Jaishankar to visit China today for SCO meeting

    EAM Jaishankar to visit China today for SCO meeting

    Trending Tags

    • Commentary
    • Featured
    • Event
    • Editorial
  • Politics
  • National
  • Business
  • World
  • Opinion
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Travel
No Result
View All Result
Latest Online News
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

The World Bank as a cash-transfer algorithm

newsedgechd by newsedgechd
October 23, 2021
in Business, News
0
The World Bank as a cash-transfer algorithm
0
SHARES
12
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

Post its underwhelming response to the pandemic and the damaging Doing Business scandal, the World Bank should focus on getting money to poor countries. Here, it can provide them with concessional loans and untied aid

Since its founding, the World Bank has evolved to perform three main functions: provide global public goods, generate valuable data and independent analysis, and transfer mostly concessional resources to poorer countries.

READ ALSO

Kainaat Arora reveals why Sanjay Dutt once advised her not to enter Bollywood

‘Imlie’ fame Sumbul Touqeer shares how she stays true to herself amid social media pressure

Having recently undermined its credibility with regard to the first two objectives, the Bank should now focus on the third.

Start with global public goods. The COVID-19 pandemic presented the World Bank with an ideal opportunity to burnish its credentials. But the Bank’s performance – standing on the sidelines as the COVID-19 Vaccine Global Access (COVAX) facility unravelled and failing to release money it had pledged for vaccine procurement – fell short on both health and economic grounds. For now, at least, we must therefore temper our expectations of the Bank’s willingness to provide global public goods, particularly in the face of more difficult challenges such as climate change.

Now consider data and analysis. Over the years, the data collected and compiled by the Bank – including the World Development Indicators, estimates of global poverty and purchasing power parity, and various surveys – have been some of its major contributions. But revelations that the Bank’s senior management had manipulated data in multiple editions of the flagship Doing Business report (in order to improve the rankings of China and Saudi Arabia in particular) risk undermining confidence among policymakers and researchers.

In the wake of these stumbles, the Bank’s redemption – or at least its relevance – will increasingly depend on its financing function. But that requires recognising how much the world has changed. For starters, the share of the world’s population living in low-income countries has plummeted from nearly 60% in 1990 to around 10% today. Rapid economic growth in developing countries over the past three decades – especially in China and India – has gradually reduced the number of low-income countries from 48 in 1990 to 34 in 2019. And the total population living in poor countries has fallen from three billion to just over 760 million.

These dramatic changes mean that the resource-transfer responsibilities of the rich world in general, and the World Bank in particular, are now confined to a small share of humanity in a narrow set of countries. For countries like China, India, Indonesia, or Vietnam, which have graduated to middle-income status since the 1990s, the Bank’s relevance has shrunk. This is largely because, according to our estimates, private credit grew sixfold over this period, doubling its share of these economies’ total external finance to roughly two-thirds.

But the share of the world’s poor living in low-income countries, which fell from about 93% in 1990 to a low of just over 30% in 2010, has since rebounded rapidly, to over 40% in 2017, as the poorest countries lag behind fast-growing emerging markets. Low-income countries’ financing needs thus remain central to helping poor people.

ADVERTISEMENT

For countries such as Ethiopia, Mozambique, Afghanistan, and Nepal, foreign aid in the form of grants still accounts for about half of gross external financing, and World Bank loans comprise another 15% or so. The overall level of foreign aid to low-income countries has risen from about $8 billion a year in 1990 to roughly $30 billion, driven largely by a surge in funding for public health. Meanwhile, the Bank’s share of these countries’ external financing has remained fairly constant.

Non-concessional financial flows to these countries remain small. Tapping private markets is still less common: total private finance, including sovereign bonds and commercial loans, accounts for only about 10% of their governments’ external inflows. These governments have increasingly obtained resources from China – just under $4 billion a year in the 2010s, according to research by AidData – but most Chinese overseas projects benefit slightly wealthier countries.

ADVERTISEMENT

The World Bank should base its financing on two principles: low-income countries need a lot of concessional resources, and their governments should exercise more agency (“country ownership” in aid argot) in their policy choices. Private finance is costly and still beyond their reach; Chinese lending appears both expensive and heavily tied to infrastructure; and concessional aid seems to be tied to health. The Bank can therefore distinguish itself by providing both concessional financing and untied aid that strengthens local policymakers’ agency.

Accordingly, the Bank should align its priorities with the growing trend in poor countries to adopt cash transfers and a universal basic income. In a caricatured version of this idea, a simple algorithm based on “need” could determine the resource transfers required for each country over a time horizon of, say, 5-10 years. This approach would not only transfer agency back to borrowing governments, but also should be a step toward simplifying the large and complicated international aid architecture and restraining the excesses of its self-perpetuating bureaucracy.

ADVERTISEMENT

The ongoing talks about replenishing the International Development Association, the Bank’s concessional lending arm, offer an opportunity to codify this idea. The Bank’s recent failures are no excuse for the United States, the European Union, and other donors to be stingy toward the IDA. Rather, they are a reason to be clear-eyed about what the Bank can do, and to ensure that it is fully funded and focused on its most important remaining function: getting money to poor countries.

The fact that institutions such as the World Bank are losing their relevance is more cause for celebration than lamentation, because it is a sign that poorer countries have less need for outside help. But losing relevance need not imply looming extinction. The Bank may be only a limited provider of global public goods, and a reluctant speaker of truth to power, but it still has a vital, if narrowing, financing role to fill. Doing that will require the Bank to become less of a sprawling bureaucracy and more of a mean-and-lean global cash-transfer algorithm. The governments of 2-3 dozen poor countries, and several hundred million people, stand to benefit.

.

Tags: The World Bank as a cash-transfer algorithm
ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

Kainaat Arora reveals why Sanjay Dutt once advised her not to enter Bollywood
Entertainment

Kainaat Arora reveals why Sanjay Dutt once advised her not to enter Bollywood

July 13, 2025
‘Imlie’ fame Sumbul Touqeer shares how she stays true to herself amid social media pressure
Entertainment

‘Imlie’ fame Sumbul Touqeer shares how she stays true to herself amid social media pressure

July 13, 2025
‘Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai’ actor Rahul Sharma reflects on how boldness is reshaping Indian television Television actor Rahul Sharma, who is currently seen playing the role of Anshuman in “Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai,” has shared his thoughts on the changing nature of TV content. He pointed out that boldness on television is on the rise, with shows becoming more experimental and less restrained than before. Sharma shared, “There’s no doubt that boldness has increased in films, on OTT platforms, and even on television. But somewhere, it has also started giving people a false impression — that being bold automatically makes you likable or popular. That if you’re bold, people will praise you, follow you, and give you attention. But the reality is, this often leads to objectification, especially for young girls entering the industry. And the boys who are seeing this narrative are also developing a skewed perspective — one where they’re respecting women less and objectifying them more.” He added, “Content reflects society, but now society is also being shaped heavily by content. The constant exposure to certain themes, be it extreme boldness, fast relationships, or dysfunction in families, is influencing young minds. They start believing that what they see is the norm. Parenting has also shifted; soft parenting is more common now. Children are growing up in a very different emotional environment. They are less tolerant, lack resistance, don’t have patience, and honestly, they don’t always understand what truly matters. They're easily influenced and emotionally fragile.” When asked whether audiences today are becoming overexposed—particularly to personal and emotional content onscreen, Rahul Sharma said he believes we are overstimulated in every aspect of life, constantly surrounded by an overwhelming amount of content, visuals, and opinions. “We are overexposed to everything. That’s one of the biggest issues. We’re constantly bombarded with content, visuals, and opinions, and it’s too much. This overexposure is making us impatient and intolerant.” “Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai,” which is produced under Rajan Shahi’s banner Director’s Kut Production, stars Rohit Purohit and Samridhii Shukla in the lead roles.
Featured

‘Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai’ actor Rahul Sharma reflects on how boldness is reshaping Indian television

July 13, 2025
Disappointing for both of us, it shouldn’t have happened: Rahul on Pant’s run-out before lunch at Lord’s
Featured

Disappointing for both of us, it shouldn’t have happened: Rahul on Pant’s run-out before lunch at Lord’s

July 13, 2025
Namibian female Cheetah Nabha succumbs to injuries
Featured

Namibian female Cheetah Nabha succumbs to injuries

July 13, 2025
EAM Jaishankar to visit China today for SCO meeting
Business

EAM Jaishankar to visit China today for SCO meeting

July 13, 2025

POPULAR NEWS

After criticism, AMU extends tenure of sacked doctors

Jacqueline poses topless to thank fans on garnering 46mn Insta followers

October 26, 2020
Car used by Waze was parked outside Sena MLA’s office: Rane

Urvashi Rautela to make her debut in Tamil with Legend

March 19, 2021
Modi to visit Varanasi for ‘Dev Deepawali’

Rashami Desai sizzles in hot pink bikini photoshoot

November 30, 2020
Models shed clothes for annual Bodypainting Day in NYC

Models shed clothes for annual Bodypainting Day in NYC

July 29, 2021
'Bigg Boss OTT' winner Divya Agarwal to host curtain-raiser

‘Bigg Boss OTT’ winner Divya Agarwal to host curtain-raiser

October 3, 2021

EDITOR'S PICK

Hope for Metro rail connectivity to Hyderabad’s old city

Hope for Metro rail connectivity to Hyderabad’s old city

July 11, 2023
U’khand CM Dhami calls on PM, discusses state issues

U’khand CM Dhami calls on PM, discusses state issues

August 1, 2023
Inktober art challenge: Artists come up with interesting prompt list

Inktober art challenge: Artists come up with interesting prompt list

September 30, 2021
Patnaik announces cash awards for medal winners in Tokyo olympics from Odisha

Patnaik announces cash awards for medal winners in Tokyo olympics from Odisha

July 9, 2021
ADVERTISEMENT

About

We bring you the best Premium WordPress Themes that perfect for news, magazine, personal blog, etc. Check our landing page for details.

Follow us

Categories

  • Business
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Featured
  • Food
  • Gaming
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • National
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized
  • World

Recent Posts

  • Kainaat Arora reveals why Sanjay Dutt once advised her not to enter Bollywood
  • ‘Imlie’ fame Sumbul Touqeer shares how she stays true to herself amid social media pressure
  • ‘Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai’ actor Rahul Sharma reflects on how boldness is reshaping Indian television
  • Disappointing for both of us, it shouldn’t have happened: Rahul on Pant’s run-out before lunch at Lord’s
  • Contribute
  • About Us
  • Contcat Us

© 2022 newsedge360 - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by CP Grafix.

No Result
View All Result
  • Homepages
    • Home Page 1
    • Home Page 2
  • News
  • Politics
  • National
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Food
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinion
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Travel

© 2022 newsedge360 - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by CP Grafix.