Monday, May 30, 2011

How Multilateral Agencies Profit From Global Taxpayers

I have suggested that we should end or abolish the IMF, for many reasons such as the seeming perpetual advocacy of various forms of interventionism, incompetence, wealth transfer, moral hazard and political inequality.

This suggestion should also apply to the other multilateral agencies as well.

Pajama Media reveals how these institutions have used politics to foster wealth inequalities (bold emphasis added, italics original)

Many of Washington’s 2,600 technocrats working at the International Monetary Fund do not regard Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s lavish lifestyle as an anomaly.

Privately they admire it, recognizing it as a description of their own standard of living. They call their many unseen perks “golden handshakes.” At the World Bank, Inter-American Development Bank, the African Development Bank, and at the IMF, you find extravagantly paid men and women who masquerade as anti-poverty fighters for the Third World. As one World Bank vice president said upon his resignation: “Poverty reduction is the last thing on most World Bank bureaucrats’ minds.”

These global institutions are supposed to act as non-profits, but big salaries and big perks rule as the norm. And you’re paying for them: as the largest single contributor, American taxpayers pick up the tab.

By now everyone knows about DSK’s extravagant $420,000 employment agreement that included an additional $73,000 for living expenses — a provision explained thusly by the IMF: “To enable you to maintain … a scale of living appropriate to your position.” Most of the non-profit development world remained silent when the Fund announced a $250,000 “golden parachute” severance for the indicted managing director.

A PJM survey found that a common annual compensation package for senior management at the anti-poverty banks exceeds $500,000 — tax-free. World Bank President Robert Zoellick currently receives $441,980 in base salary and $284,500 in other benefits. Strauss-Kahn’s deputy, John Lipsky, receives $384,000 in base salary plus “living allowances.”

Some may argue as the IMF did that global financial leaders — even from governmental organizations – should be highly compensated. But the IMF and World Bank payments for their executives are three times the annual salary for U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, and four times the salary of America’s Federal Reserve governors: Bernanke’s gross annual salary is set at $199,700; his governors receive $179,000.

The global banks’ stratospheric governmental salaries are not limited to chief executives. Ten of Zoellick’s deputies receive tax-free base pay of $321,00 to $347,000, plus enjoy an additional $210,000 in benefits. Even mid-level World Bank employees earn well into six digits: the average salary for a professional manager is $181,000, plus $97,000 in benefits. A senior adviser receives on average $238,000 plus $127,000 in benefits. A vice president receives $286,000 plus $153,000 in benefits.

The biggest hidden benefits are the off-the-book perks called “living allowances.” These perks can nearly double a stated salary. Of the 2,600 IMF and 10,000 World Bank full-time employees, all receive some form of supplemental living allowances in addition to their base pay. These include home leave grants, dependent allowances, travel perks, and education “grants” for their children to attend private schools. In addition, they offer generous pensions and health insurance policies.

Where do they get their lavish “golden handshakes”? From us, the productive sector, the taxpayers.

True, I am delighted that some of them have rediscovered the importance of economic freedom. But this isn’t anything new, as economic freedom has been long been advocated by classical liberals since the 19th century.

In other words we don’t need to have highly paid bureaucrats to tell us something our ancestors knew, long ago.

Yet if economic freedom is to be nurtured, then the more these institutions are hardly needed because the services that they offer can sufficiently be provided for by the private sector.

Remember, the resources used to finance “golden handshakes” are resources that could have been used to generate productive rather than consumptive activities.

Worst, the above only shows of how the political divide from these institutions increases social inequality.

And as Cato’s Dan Mitchell aptly points out,

Redistribution from rich to poor is not a good idea, but it is far more offensive when the coercive power of government is used to transfer money from ordinary people to the elite.

This serves as another instance of politically based parasitism.

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