Business

Former World Bank president Wolfensohn dies

James Wolfensohn dies aged 86 at Manhattan home

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 26 Nov 2020 10:50AM

Former World Bank president Wolfensohn dies
Former World Bank president James Wolfensohn also served as chairman of the boards of Carnegie Hall and the John F. Kennedy Centre for the Performing Arts. – Wikipedia pic, November 26, 2020

WASHINGTON – James Wolfensohn, an investment banker who helped straighten out the finances of major US cultural institutions and served as president of the World Bank, died yesterday at the age of 86.

World Bank Group president David Malpas paid tribute, saying Wolfensohn “sharpened its focus on poverty reduction, and redoubled its efforts to combat corruption, give voice to the poor and magnify the impact of development investments”.

“Jim transformed the World Bank Group, increasing decentralisation, advancing the bank technologically, and making the organisation more open and transparent.”

International Monetary Fund managing director Kristalina Georgieva hailed Wolfensohn’s “lifelong commitment... to fight poverty with passion and professionalism”.

“He was a brilliant financier, a generous philanthropist, and above all, a great humanitarian who always put people first.”

Wolfensohn also served as chairman of the boards of Carnegie Hall and the John F. Kennedy Centre for the Performing Arts.

The Institute for Advanced Study described him as “a global champion of human rights, economic justice, scholarship, and the arts”.

Wolfensohn was born in Sydney, Australia, and was a veteran of the Royal Australian Air Force and member of the 1956 Australian Olympic fencing team.

He worked as a lawyer at an Australian law firm and went on to earn an MBA from Harvard University in 1959.

Wolfensohn, who became a naturalised US citizen in 1980, died at his home in Manhattan. – AFP, November 26, 2020

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