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Asian economies are so successful and rich in surplus capital that the Asian Development Bank must change radically in the next 15 years or risk becoming irrelevant to its main borrowers, according to a report to be published today. ½ñÈÕ½«·¢²¼µÄÒ»·Ý±¨¸æÈÏΪ£¬¼øÓÚÑÇÖÞ¸÷¾¼ÃÌåÈç´Ë³É¹¦£¬Ó¯Óà×ʽð·Ç³£³äÅæ£¬ÑÇÖÞ¿ª·¢ÒøÐÐ(Asian Development Bank)δÀ´15Äê±ØÐë»ý¼«¸Ä¸ï£¬·ñÔò¾ÍÓпÉÄÜÓëÆäÖ÷Òª´û¿î¿Í»§Íѽڡ£ The report ¨C prepared by an Eminent Persons Group convened by Haruhiko Kuroda, the ADB president ¨C says the rapid decline of Asian poverty calls into question the old model of a bank transferring surplus capital from the developed world to needy developing countries. ÓÉÑÇÐÐÐг¤ºÚÌï¶«Ñå(Haruhiko Kuroda)ÕÙ¼¯µÄ½Ü³öÈËʿС×é(Eminent Persons Group)׫дµÄÕâ·Ý±¨¸æ±íʾ£¬ÑÇÖÞÆ¶À§Ë®Æ½µÄѸËÙϽµ£¬¶ÔÓÉÒøÐн«Ó¯Óà×ʽð´Ó·¢´ï¹ú¼Ò×ªÒÆÖÁƶÀ§·¢Õ¹Öйú¼ÒµÄ´«Í³Ä£Ê½Ìá³öÁËÒÉÎÊ¡£ World Bank projections suggest that 95 per cent of east Asians will live in middle-income countries by 2020, and fewer than 25m out of 2bn east Asians will live below the poverty line by then. ÊÀ½çÒøÐÐ(World Bank)µÄÔ¤²âÈÏΪ£¬µ½2020Ä꣬½«ÓÐ95%µÄ¶«ÑÇÈËÉú»îÔÚÖеÈÊÕÈë¹ú¼Ò£¬½ìʱ£¬ÔÚ20ÒÚ¶«ÑÇÈË¿ÚÖУ¬½«Ö»Óв»µ½2500ÍòÈËÉú»îÔÚÆ¶À§ÏßÒÔÏ¡£ ¡°In this transformed Asia, the traditional model of development banking ... will become redundant,¡± the report says. ¡°It is clear in light of Asia¡¯s obvious successes that ADB must evolve more rapidly to suit the region¡¯s new and fast-evolving economic and political environment ¨C or risk becoming irrelevant to its major clients.¡± ¡°ÔÚ·¢ÉúÕâÖÖת±äºóµÄÑÇÖÞ£¬´«Í³µÄ¿ª·¢ÒøÐÐÒµÎñģʽ¡¡½«±äµÃ¶àÓ࣬¡±±¨¸æ±íʾ¡£¡°´ÓÑÇÖÞÃ÷ÏԵijɹ¦ÖпÉÒÔ¿´³ö£¬ÑÇ¿ªÐбØÐë¸üѸËÙµØÑÝ»¯·¢Õ¹£¬ÒÔÊÊÓ¦ÑÇÖÞµØÇøÐµġ¢Ñ¸Ëٱ仯µÄ¾¼ÃºÍÕþÖλ·¾³¡ª¡ª·ñÔò¾ÍÓпÉÄÜÓëÖ÷Òª¿Í»§Íѽڡ£¡± One problem for conventional international development institutions such as the ADB is that they are being undercut by Chinese lenders such as the China Development Bank. These banks can offer competitive loans and less onerous conditions to borrowers in Africa, Latin America or the poorer parts of Asia. ÑÇÐеȴ«Í³¹ú¼Ê¿ª·¢»ú¹¹ÃæÁÙµÄÒ»¸öÎÊÌâÊÇ£¬Öйú¹ú¼Ò¿ª·¢ÒøÐÐ(China Development Bank)µÈÖйúÒøÐÐÕýÔÚÇÀ×ßËüÃǵÄÉúÒâ¡£ÕâÐ©ÒøÐпÉÒÔÏò·ÇÖÞ¡¢ÀÃÀ»òÑÇÖÞ½ÏÆ¶À§µØÇøÌṩÓоºÕùÁ¦µÄ´û¿î£¬´û¿îÌõ¼þҲûÓÐÄÇô·±¸´¡£ In January, MWSS, a state water agency in the Philippines, switched its borrowing to the China Export-Import Bank from the ADB on the grounds that the Chinese were offering cheaper rates and faster approval. ½ñÄê1Ô£¬·ÆÂɱö¹ú¼ÒË®Îñ»ú¹¹MWSS·ÅÆúÑÇÐУ¬×ª¶øÏòÖйú½ø³ö¿ÚÒøÐÐ(China Export-Import Bank)´û¿î£¬ÀíÓÉÊÇÖз½ÒøÐÐÌṩµÄ´û¿îÀûÂʸüµÍ£¬ÉóÅú¹ý³ÌÒ²¸ü¿ì¡£ The group of authors, chaired by Supachai Panitchpakdi, secretary-general of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, recommends big changes in the way the ADB operates. ±¨¸æ×«Ð´ÕßÃǽ¨ÒéÑÇÐжÔÔË×÷·½Ê½½øÐÐÖØ´ó¸Ä¸ï¡£ÕâЩ׫дÕßÓÉÁªºÏ¹úóÒ׺ͷ¢Õ¹»áÒé(United Nations Conference on Trade and Development)ÃØÊé³¤ËØÅÁ²Â•°ÍÄá°ÍµÎ(Supachai Panitchpakdi)ǣͷ¡£ It argues the ADB should reduce its current emphasis on poverty reduction, stress environmentally sustainable growth, and act as a financial intermediary to connect borrowers and lenders within Asia. ±¨¸æÖ÷ÕÅ£¬ÑÇÐÐÓ¦¼õÉÙĿǰ¶Ô¼õƶµÄ¹Ø×¢£¬×ª¶øÇ¿µ÷»·±£µÄ¿É³ÖÐøÐÔÔö³¤£¬·¢»Ó½ðÈÚÖнéµÄ×÷Ó㬳䵱ÑÇÖÞÄÚ²¿½è¿îÕßÓë´û¿îÕßµÄÇÅÁº¡£ |
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