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Trump’s Pick for Latin Bank Wants to Counter China Influence

Trump Candidate for Latin Bank Wants to Counter China Influence

A senior adviser to U.S. President Donald Trump said he would build the Inter-American Development Bank into a financial heavyweight to counter China’s influence in the Western Hemisphere should he win the presidency of the multilateral lender.

Trump’s Pick for Latin Bank Wants to Counter China Influence

Mauricio Claver-Carone said the Washington-based bank could supplant Beijing as a go-to lender across the region at a time when Xi Jinping’s administration is pulling back.

Last year, the Chinese Development Bank and China Export-Import Bank provided $1.1 billion in financing to the region’s governments and state-owned firms compared with more than $35 billion in 2010, according to a report by the Inter-American Dialogue and Boston University’s Global Development Policy Center. Even the IDB has turned to Beijing for support, which Claver-Carone blamed on the lack of buy-in from Democrats and Republicans in Washington.

He’s been making the rounds of some of the bank’s largest shareholders in Latin America and Europe, pushing for a capital increase.

“IDB Invest could be an extraordinary tool,” Claver-Carone said in an interview, referring to the lender’s investment arm.

Claver-Carone is mounting a campaign to head the IDB, which lends about $13 billion per year, after his nomination by Trump sparked controversy for breaking an unwritten tradition of Latin Americans presiding over the bank. While the Cuban-American is a front-runner in the Sept. 12 election, there’s no guarantee the vote will be held. A minority of shareholders including Argentina, Mexico and Chile are seeking to delay it and could prevent a quorum.

Partisan Baggage

Critics also argue that Claver-Carone brings partisan baggage that could prove particularly challenging if Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden wins the U.S. election in November.

At the White House, Claver-Carone led a hardline policy against Cuba as well as a diplomatic effort to win international recognition for Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido. A lawyer by training, he previously served as the U.S. Executive Director at the International Monetary Fund.

To assuage concern about a North American heading an organization normally led by Latin Americans, Claver-Carone said he’s held talks with the Brazilians about the IDB’s No. 2 position and added that he’ll appoint leaders from the Caribbean and Central America. He also committed to picking top advisers from a cohort of younger policy makers who have managed the Covid-19 fallout.

“I’m a big fan of Ecuador’s Richard Martinez, Peru’s Maria Antonieta Alva, Jamaica’s Nigel Clarke and Uruguay’s Azucena Arbeleche,” Claver-Carone said. “There’s no shortage of new generation talent throughout the region.”

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.