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Regional Development Banks in Comparison Ruth Ben-Artzi (Providence College, Rhode Island)

Regional Development Banks in Comparison By Ruth Ben-Artzi (Providence College, Rhode Island)

Regional Development Banks in Comparison by Ruth Ben-Artzi (Providence College, Rhode Island)


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Summary

A comparative study contributing to international relations and international political economy theory, raising substantive issues relating to aid, development, international relations and globalization.

Regional Development Banks in Comparison Summary

Regional Development Banks in Comparison: Banking Strategies versus Development Goals by Ruth Ben-Artzi (Providence College, Rhode Island)

In a study that contributes to international relations and international political economy theory, Ruth Ben-Artzi raises substantive issues relating to aid, development, international relations and globalization. Regional development banks (RDBs), designed by politicians and economists to maneuver through labyrinths of economic, social, and political development, possess the potential to be central players in the long-term planning involved in healing and advancing poverty-plagued regions. However, RDBs in particular have received little attention. With a systematic analysis comparing four central regional development banks, this book explores why there is a variation in strategy despite similar institutional design. The formal arrangements and raison d'etre of RDBs is to assist developing countries in the process of poverty alleviation - a task that is often a risky investment. Focusing on the dichotomy between their banking and development roles, Ben-Artzi demonstrates that RDBs are potentially critical catalysts in the fight against poverty, even with their institutional limitations.

Regional Development Banks in Comparison Reviews

'Regional Development Banks in Comparison is one of the most important studies of regional development banks to date. Based on an impressive array of empirical evidence, Ruth Ben-Artzi demonstrates that, because these institutions tend to emphasize their banking goals, they have failed to meet their mandate of providing poorer countries with development assistance. The result is a book that makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of economic development, international institutions, and globalization.' Edward D. Mansfield, Hum Rosen Professor of Political Science, University of Pennsylvania
'Regional Development Banks in Comparison is a wonderful example of mixed-methods social science research. Ruth Ben-Artzi does a masterful job describing the split personalities of the world's most important regional development banks (RDBs) and asks whether their policy behavior reflects their identities as banks or as development institutions. The answer varies over time and across institutions, and the behavior of RDBs can be explained by synthesizing different theories of international organization. This book is a must-read for anyone who is interested in the history of RDBs, but also for anyone trying to figure out how to reform existing institutions or explain the behavior of new institutions like the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.' Michael J. Tierney, Hylton Professor of Government and International Relations, College of William and Mary, Virginia

About Ruth Ben-Artzi (Providence College, Rhode Island)

Ruth Ben-Artzi is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Providence College, Rhode Island. Professor Ben-Artzi has been a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Pennsylvania's Browne Center for International Politics and a visiting fellow at Sciences-Po, Paris. She has worked as a researcher at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Development Centre, and she holds a Ph.D. from Columbia University, New York and an A.B. from the University of Haifa, Israel.

Table of Contents

Introduction; 1. International financial institutions, development, and regional development banks; 2. Multilateral governance: theoretical and empirical underpinnings; 3. Origins, politics, and structure of regional development banks; 4. RDB loans and developing countries; 5. Banks or development agencies?; 6. Political and economic constraints, principals and agents, and prospects for development; Conclusion.

Additional information

NLS9781316615201
9781316615201
1316615200
Regional Development Banks in Comparison: Banking Strategies versus Development Goals by Ruth Ben-Artzi (Providence College, Rhode Island)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2018-04-26
293
N/A
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