<pre> K. Gallagher.<br><br>Emerging countries have gone on the offensive to put an end to the</pre><pre>wink-wink succession rule whereby Europeans get to choose who </pre><pre>heads the International Monetary Fund and the US picks the president of the World Bank.</pre>
<pre> </pre><pre>Countries are expected to nominate at least two candidates: </pre><pre>Okonjo-Iweala, the Nigerian finance minister, and Jose Antonio Ocampo, former finance minister of Colombia. If the decision is finally based on merit, as it should be, Ocampo will win: he is far and away better than any on the list of credible names, including President Barack Obama’s nominee, Jim Yong Kim.</pre>
<pre> </pre><pre>Ocampo has the utmost credibility as a policy-maker and diplomat; he =</pre><pre>Works well with the US and developing countries alike; and he is one of the leading academic economists in the field of development.</pre>
<pre> </pre><pre>He is known as a former finance minister but he also served Colombia as</pre><pre>minister of agriculture and minister of planning. He has intimate</pre><pre>knowledge and experience working with both small and large farmers and on infrastructure and investment projects needed for sustainable growth. </pre>
<pre>This experience will be essential given the current global food crisis.</pre><pre> </pre><pre>As finance minister of Colombia he helped the country weather the =</pre><pre>effects of financial crises in Asia and Latin America. Indeed, he crafted unique and effective measures such as unremunerated reserve requirements whereby foreign investors had to park a certain amount of their capital at the Central Bank. He is now a member of a high-level task-force-on-regulating-global-capital flows that aims to help nations prevent and mitigate future crises.</pre>
<pre> </pre><pre>Ocampo won points from the US for these efforts and for collaborating =</pre><pre>With it on a clamp-down on drug-related money-laundering. Colombia is =</pre><pre>Arguably the closest partner in South America and Ocampo has earned the </pre>
<pre>trust of Americans at the highest level. The significance of this should not be overlooked given that it is the US that would have to </pre><pre>World Bank seat.</pre><pre> </pre>