10914 INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT -SEVENTH ANNUAL REPORrr I93/- /-9S2 a A I INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT SEVENTH ANNUAL REPORT TO THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS 1 951-19 52 WASHINGTON, D. C. I INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT September 3, 1952 My dear Mr. Chairman: In accordance with Section 10 of the By-Laws of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, I have been authorized by the Executive Directors to submit to the Board of Governors this Seventh Annual Report of the Bank. The report includes financial statements as of June 30, 1952, based on an audit of the accounts of the Bank made pursuant to Section 19 of the By-Laws. It also incorporates, pursuant to Section 19 of the By-Laws, an administrative budget for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1953. The report as a whole covers the Bank's activities for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1951 and ending June 30, 1952. Sincerely yours, EUGENE R. BLACK, President. Chairman, Board of Governors, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter Page I-GENERAL ..................................................... 7 The Year in Review ............................................ 7 The Bank's Lending: 1947-52 ................................... . 8 Technical Assistance ........................... 10 International Finance Corporation ................................. 12 II-THE BANK'S OPERATIONS ...................................... 14 Africa . ..................................................... 14 Asia . ........................................................ 16 Australia . .................................................... 20 Europe ....................................................... 21 Western Hemisphere .............. ............................. 26 III-FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES ....................... 36 Earnings, Reserves, Repayments and Disbursements ................... 36 Funds Available for Lending ..................................... 37 Sales of Securities .............................................. 37 New Issues of the Bank's Bonds .............................. 38 Sales of Bonds from the Bank's Portfolio ....................... 38 Broadening Market for the Bank's Bonds ....................... 39 Financial Statements and Reports ................................. 39 IV-MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION .......................... 40 Personnel and Organization ...................................... 40 Training Program .............. ............................... 40 Staff Retirement Plan ........................................... 40 Administrative Budget ......................................... 40 Chapter Page V-MISCELLANEOUS .................. ............................ 41 Relations with Other International Organizations .................... 41 Membership and Subscription .................................... 41 Additional Reports to Board of Governors ......................... 42 Appendices . .................................................. 42 A. Balance Sheet-June 30, 1952 ............................. 44 B. Comparative Statements of Income and Expenses for the Fiscal Years Ended June 30, 1951 and June 30, 1952 ........... 46 C. Statement of Currencies Held by the Bank-June 30, 1952 ...... 47 D. Statement of Loans-June 30, 1952 . . 48 E. Statement of Subscriptions to Capital Stock and Voting Power- June 30, 1952 ........................................... 54 F. Notes to Financial Statements-June 30, 1952 ................ 55 G. Opinion of Independent Auditor ......... .. .............. 57 H. Administrative Budget for the Fiscal Year Ending June 30, 1953. 59 I. Voting Power and Subscriptions of Member Countries as of June 30, 1952 ...................................... 60 J. Governors and Alternates as of June 30, 1952 ................ 61 K. Executive Directors and Alternates and Their Voting Power as of June 30, 1952 ...................................... 62 L. Principal Officers of the Bank as of June 30, 1952 ............. 64 I I Chapter I - General THE YEAR IN REVIEW In the past fiscal year the Bank made 19 loans The Bank sent out a number of specialized in 16 countries for an amount equivalent to $298.6 missions to study specific development problems million. This brought the total of all Bank lend- in member countries. And in the normal course ing to $1,412 million, in 27 countries. Of this of its work on loan proposals and projects, it -amount, $29.7 million has been refunded or can- gave advice on a wide range of technical, finan- celed. Disbursements during the fiscal year cial and administrative matters. amounted to $184.8 million, compared with $77.6 The Bank added to its dollar resources by sell- million in the preceding 12 months. The total of ing $150 million of its own bonds in the United Bank disbursements is now $876.5 million. States. One issue, of $100 million, was sold in During the year, loans for agricultural develop- September 1951 and another, of $50 million, in ment were made in Chile, Iceland, Nicaragua, May 1952. Pakistan and Paraguay; for improved transporta- Bank bonds were also issued outside the United tion facilities in Brazil, the Netherlands, Pakistan States. The Bank's first public offering in Switzer- and Peru; for the production and distribution of land, in an amount of 50,000,000 Swiss francs electric power in Brazil, Colombia, Mexico and (approximately $11.6 million), was sold in July Southern Ithodesia; for irrigation and power in 1951; and in February 1952 the Bank marketed Turkey; and for power, industry and transporta- its first issue of securities in Canada, in the amount tion in Finland. A loan was made to Yugoslavia of Can $15 million. The Bank further added to for projects in seven important sectors of the its resources by selling $23.4 million of securities economy. Loans were made to Belgium and to from its portfolio, $10.4 million without its guar- the Belgian Congo to aid in carrying out the antee. Ten Year Development Plan for the Congo, and Several member countries made parts of their to Italy in support of its ten year plan for south- local-currency subscriptions to the Bank's capital ern Italy. The loan to the Congo was the first available for lending. Among them, Canada in made by the Bank to assist in the development May 1952 released the balance (Can $41 million) of an overseas territory of a member country. of her original Canadian-dollar subscription (Can The Bank has continued to help its members $58.5 million). This release is fully convertible to draw up long-term programs of economic de- and may be used without restriction for purchases velopment. The general survey mission continues in Canada and elsewhere. to be the Bank's chief means of giving assistance Two loans during the year, one to Iceland and of this kind. Reports of the missions to Guate- another to Yugoslavia, were made for disburse- mala, Cuba, Iraq and Surinam were presented to ment entirely in European currencies. The loan the Governments during the year. A report on of $27.2 million for the Pakistan railways induded Ceylon was ready for presentation, and a report the equivalent of $12 million in French francs, on Jamaica was in preparation. A variation of released from the French subscription to the the survey mission technique was used in Nica- Bank's capital. ragua; two staff members were stationed there At the beginning of the year it was expected during most of -the year, to work directly with that serious delays on Bank-financed projects the Government in drafting a broad development might be caused by shortages in the supplies of program and starting to put it into effect. capital goods. A special unit in the Bank followed 1171 supply developments closely, in Europe as well Development Advisory Board, a representative as in the United States and Canada, and helped group of private citizens appointed by the Presi- the Bank's borrowers to obtain priority ratings for dent of the United States in accordance with the equipment on order. No request by the Bank for Act for International Development, published a assistance in obtaining priority ratings for its report entitled Partners in Progress. This report, borrowers was denied; and no project was halted prepared after consultation with the management and no abnormal delays were caused by failure of the Bank, proposed, among other things, that to obtain necessary equipment. an International Finance Corporation be created In November 1951, after expressions of inter- as an affiliate of the Bank, to help finance private est by Iran and the United Kingdom, the Bank enterprise by equity investment or by loans made offered to try to work out a proposal under which, without governmental guarantee. During the as an interim measure, it might assist in restoring fiscal year, a report was prepared by the staff as oil operations in south Iran. Several weeks of dis- a basis for continuing to explore the proposal cussion with the Government in Iran did not pro- with member governments and interested business duce agreement on several major points. It was groups. In June 1952, after discussing the report, mutually decided to recess the talks, with the the United Nations Economic and Social Coun- understanding that they could be resumed if it cil approved a resolution requesting that explora- should appear that a basis of agreement might tions continue, and that the Bank inform the be reached. Council in 1953 of the results of its study and of In March 1951 the United States International any action it might take on the proposal. THE BANK'S LENDING: 1947-52 In its five years of lending the Bank has made war reconstruction during the period before the 68 loans amounting to the equivalent of $1,412 European Recovery Program was in operation. million, of which approximately $30 million has Since that time nearly all of the Bank's lending been canceled or refunded, leaving a total of has been devoted to providing basic utilities in the $1,382 million. The table on the opposite page less developed areas. It is the loans made after shows the purposes for which the loans were made the reconstruction loans of 1947 that are discussed and their geographical distribution. Altogether, in the following paragraphs. some 250 individual projects have been completed Agriculture: The Bank has engaged in a wide or are being carried out with the help of Bank variety of lending to increase agricultural produc- financing. tion. Among other things, it has helped to finance The amounts lent do not measure the magni- farm mechanization (in Australia, Chile, Colom- tude or the total costs of these projects. The Bank bia, Nicaragua and Paraguay), land clearance (in normally finances only the foreign-exchange costs India and Pakistan), irrigation (in Chile, India, of imported equipment and services, needed to Iraq, Thailand and Turkey), flood control (in complete projects; usually the larger part of the Iraq and Turkey), grain storage (in Nicaragua cost of any project is met by the borrower. The and Turkey) and improvements on individual total cost of projects completed or going forward farms (in Iceland). In all, the Bank's lending with the help of Bank financing amounts to more in direct support of agricultural development, in- than $3 billion. cluding small amounts for forestry, totals $128 The Bank's first four loans, amounting to $497 million. In addition, many of the Bank's loans million, were made in 1947 to France, Denmark, for electric power and transportation have been Luxembourg and the Netherlands to assist post- made to countries that are predominantly agri- [8] International Bank Loans Classified by Purpose and Area As of June 30, 1952 (In millions of United States dollars) Area Asia & Western Purpose Total Africa Middle Australia Europe Hems- East sphere I GRAND TOTAL .............. 1,382 125 129 100 699 329 RECONSTRUCTION LOANS: TOTAL France, The Netherlands, Denmark, Luxembourg .497 - - - 497 _ OTHER LOANS: TOTAL .885 125 129 100 202 329 ELECTRIC POWER (Machinery, equipment and construction materials) .391 58 19 27 34 253 TRANSPORTATION .179 24 67 20 33 35 Railroads: locomotives, rolling stock, rails and shop supplies .108 18 63 14 1 12 Shipping: vessels and marine equipment 12 - - - 12 - Airlines: planes and spare parts 7 - - 7 Roads: building machinery and equip- ment. 31 5 - 6 - 20 Ports: docks, loading and dredging ma- chinery and harbor craft. 21 1 4 - 13 3 COMMUNICATIONS (Telephone & tele- graph equipment and supplies) 25 1 - - - 24 AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY .128 - 43 44 25 16 Mechanization: general farm machinery and equipment .43 - - 29 2 12 Irrigation and flood control: construc- tion equipment and materials 55 - 31 10 13 1 Land improvement: machinery, equip- ment and construction materials... 20 - 12 5 1 2 Grain storage: construction materials. 5 - - - 4 1 Timber production: machinery and ve- hicles .5 - - - 5 - INDUSTRY .70 - - 9 61 - Manufacturing machinery .59 - - 6 53 Mining equipment .11 - - 3 8 - GENERAL DEVELOPMENT .92 42 - - 49 1 Development banks .12 2 - 9 1 General development plans .80 40 - 40 - [9] cultural, and have been designed in part to pro- 1955 add 700,000 kilowatts of generating capacity mote agricultural production and earnings. to the 1,000,000 that existed when the Bank made Transportation: The less developed countries its first loan for electricity there in 1949. need basic transportation facilities, to quicken in- Industry: The Bank's lending for industry has ternal and international trade and to provide new not been comparable in amount to its financing incentives for production. Without ready access for other purposes. The requirement of the Bank's to markets, farmers in many countries will con- charter that loans to private borrowers be govern- tinue to grow only what they need for their own ment-guaranteed has, as a practical matter, limited consumption; without adequate roads and rail- the extent to which the Bank can make loans direct roads to reach potential customers, industry will to industry (see p. 12). In many countries, more- - - not flourish; and raw materials beyond the reach over, the very lack of transportation, power and of transportation will lie idle. The Bank's lend- other basic facilities such as the Bank is trying ing for transportation amounts to $179 million. to provide, means that industrialization must begin It includes the financing of highway construction with many relatively small enterprises. It is diffi- (in Colombia, Ethiopia and Nicaragua), railway cult, at a distance, to assess the merits and feasi- rehabilitation (in Australia, Brazil, India, Paki- bility of such enterprises; and for that reason the stan, Thailand and the Union of South Africa), Bank in a number of cases has helped to organize and port development (in Peru, South Africa, local credit institutions and to provide funds for Thailand and Turkey). industry through them. The $70 million of in- Electric power: In many of the Bank's member dustrial financing summarized in the accompany- nations, agricultural and industrial demands for ing table reflects portions of loans to Australia, electric power are running ahead of supply; and Belgium, Finland, the Netherlands and Yugo- the Bank has lent $391 million for the genera- slavia. The $12 million attributed in the table tion and distribution of electricity. Bank-financed to development banks has been provided to credit power projects, for the most part still under con- institutions in Ethiopia, Mexico and Turkey; and struction, are situated in Australia, Belgium, Fin- the use made of these funds so far has been almost land, Iceland, India, South Africa, Southern entirely for industrial loans. Rhodesia, Turkey, Yugoslavia, and in six coun- Program Lending: Some of the Bank's lending tries of Latin America: Brazil, Chile, Colombia, in less developed areas has been in support of El Salvador, Mexico and Uruguay. The Bank's broad programs covering an entire country or lending in the Western Hemisphere has been pre- region. The $80 million shown in the table re- dominantly for electric power, and the contribu- flects loans of this kind to Belgium and the Bel- tion being made to the power capacity of Latin gian Congo for the development of the Congo, American countries is noteworthy. In Mexico, for and to Italy for a program embracing southern instance, projects financed by the Bank will by Italy and the Italian islands. TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE The Bank's technical assistance program is the been through the general survey mission-a group- outgrowth of its conviction that external financ- of experts specially organized to make an intensive ing, from whatever quarter, will be of most value firsthand study of a country's resources and for- in countries that are already making the best pos- mulate recommendations designed to serve as the sible use of their own resources. The principal basis of a long-term development program. way in which the Bank has endeavored to help Beginning with the general survey mission to member countries to achieve this objective has Colombia in 1949, the Bank has sent out eight L 10 such groups. As is detailed later in these pages, sults. After transmittal of the group's report in during thte fiscal year the Bank transmitted the 1950, a non-partisan development committee of reports of four of them, to Cuba, Guatemala, leading private citizens was appointed by the Iraq and Surinam. At the end of June, the report Government. Aided by Bank technicians, the of the mission to Ceylon was being made ready Committee spent more than a year outlining a for formal presentation to the Government and long-term program based on the mission's recom- the report on Jamaica was in preparation. mendations. In size and composition the missions have The Government is carrying forward this pro- varied according to the needs of the individual gram. It has adopted budgetary and banking country. Usually, they have induded advisers on reforms, lifted restrictions on imports, relaxed public finance and general economics, industry, exchange controls and adopted a liberal and en- power, transportation, and one or two agricul- couraging attitude toward foreign capital. Infla- tural specialists provided by the Food and Agri- tion has been checked. The Government has culture Organization. On occasion, experts in established a National Board of Economic Plan- public health and education, nominated by the ning that will serve as the focal point for the World Fhealth Organization and United Nations coordination of the country's whole development Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, effort. have been added. Additional experts in such fields The Bank is continuing to provide technical as mining and irrigation have been recruited, as assistance in Colombia to help carry on the work needed, on an international basis. At least one set in motion by the mission's report. It nominated or two Bank staff members have served in every the Economic Adviser chosen to assist the new case, and. the tendency is to use a larger propor- planning board. Consultants retained jointly by tion of Bank personnel. This assures that special- the Government and the Bank are making studies ized knowledge accumulated by the Bank will be of the administrative and financial aspects of a available to the survey group, and provides greater proposed reorganization of the railway system and continuity between the work of the mission and of ground facilities for civil aviation. In June subsequent activities of the Bank. 1952 the Bank was preparing to send to Colombia Whatever the size and composition of the par- the recommendations of a financial expert, also ticular group, the broad purpose has been the jointly retained by the Government and the Bank, same-to help in working out long-range pro- for measures to promote investment in industry grams designed to raise the level of productivity and to improve the market for government secur- and to increase the standard of living. The re- ities. sults achieved through this type of activity are In the case of most of the other countries that difficult ro evaluate. It is still too early to attempt have been visited by general survey groups, the any general appraisal; and in many cases, the mission reports are still too new to have had an most far-reaching contribution a mission can make impact similar to that of the Colombian Report. -may be the intangible effect of its work in chang- Nevertheless, beginnings are being made. In ing the approach of the government to its devel- Guatemala, for instance, construction of a high- ,opment problems. Nevertheless there is encourag- way between Guatemala City and the Atlantic ing evidence that the work done by the survey Coast-a project given top priority by the survey missions is achieving results in most of the coun- mission-has been started. A commission has tries to which they have gone. been appointed to make recommendations for re- In Colombia, for example, the stimulation pro- organization of the nationalized rural estates, an vided, directly and indirectly, by the Bank's gen- essential reform stressed in the recommendations eral survey mission has already had concrete re- presented to the Government; and several other [ 11 ] proposals are being followed out. In Turkey and up a development program. The members of the Iraq, analysis of the most recent development Bank's staff also helped the Government to ar- budgets indicates that governmental thinking has range for other experts to come to Nicaragua for been substantially influenced by the investment shorter periods to study agriculture, transporta- recommendations of the Bank's missions. The tion, fiscal problems, banking and credit, and the Government of Cuba has recently framed a com- organization of a development corporation. Al- prehensive request for technical assistance, based though the final report of the special representa- on the report of the Bank's survey group. In June tive has not yet been presented, the Government the Government enacted legislation reorganizing already has taken action. It has brought into the National Economic Planning Commission, in effective operation a National Economic Coun- - - accordance with the recommendations of the cil, is establishing a development corporation, has Bank's mission. adopted a five-year development program and a A variation of the survey mission technique budget for its first year, and has undertaken has been employed by the Bank in Nicaragua, major changes in fiscal, budgetary and tariff poli- with excellent results. Nicaragua originally asked cies. for a general mission. After discussion, it was During the year the Bank continued to provide mutually agreed, instead, that the Bank would a variety of technical assistance in addition to the provide one or two members of its staff to work general survey missions. These included: a joint directly with the Government on drawing up a Bank-FAO mission to make recommendations for development program and determining the first a program of agricultural development in Chile; steps needed to carry it out. the dispatch of specialists to advise on particular The Bank named a member of its economic development problems such as the stimulation of staff as special representative to Nicaragua. capital markets and the organization of develop- Assisted by a Bank engineer, he spent from July ment corporations; and the recruitment of ex- 1951 to May 1952 in Nicaragua helping to draw perts to serve as economic and financial advisers. INTERNATIONAL FINANCE CORPORATION As already noted, the report of the United borrowers, who fear that a governmental guar- States International Development Advisory Board, antee might lead to interference by the government published in March 1951, recommended that an in the conduct of their business. Governments, for International Finance Corporation be created as their part, hesitate to guarantee loans to private an affiliate of the Bank. This Corporation would enterprises for fear they might be charged with be authorized to make loans to private enterprise favoritism-no matter how useful the private without governmental guarantee and to make project may be. equity investment in participation with private Secondly, the Bank does not engage in equity investors. financing. The Bank has sometimes had to aban- This proposal was prompted by a recognition don consideration of promising projects because that the ability of the Bank itself to promote pri- they required more equity capital than the entre- vate enterprise is limited. In the first place, the preneur was able to obtain. Lacking equity funds, Articles of Agreement require that all loans to the Bank has had no way to adapt its operations non-governmental borrowers must be guaranteed to take advantage of such opportunities. by the government, or by the central bank or its The Bank has attempted to overcome these equivalent, of the country in which the project limitations by extending credits to private under- to be financed is located. This discourages private takings through a development bank or a consor- [ 12 3 tium of banks. This type of lending has been portfolio whenever possible at a fair price. useful to some extent, and the Bank hopes to do The Corporation is presented in the report as more of it, Intermediary institutions of this kind, an experiment in stimulating international private however, cannot entirely escape the necessity of investment. In the words of the report, "Although governmental sanction; and the extent to which the extent to which the Corporation could gener- borrowed funds can be used for equity invest- ate such flow of capital can be determined only ment is obviously limited. Moreover, these insti- by experience, there are good reasons for con- tutions are not well placed to attract the interest cluding that over a period of years the Corpora- and participation of foreign firms and investors tion would be able to give a substantial stimulus 'in the projects they finance. to the growth of private enterprise and thus con- During the past year the Bank's staff studied tribute significantly to the further development the proposal for creating an International Finance of the Bank's member countries." Corporation, and in May 1952 the management The President of the Bank sent a copy of this of the Bank made public a report on the matter. report, through the Secretary-General of the The report envisages that the capital of the United Nations, to the Economic and Social Coun- Corporation would be subscribed by member gov- cil as had been requested by it. In transmitting ernments and not by the Bank. The purpose of the report, he called attention to the fact that the Corporation would be to promote economic the Executive Directors of the Bank, in authoriz- development through the stimulation of private ing its transmittal, did not express any opinion investment, "by bringing together investment op- on the merits of the proposal or any opinion on portunities, capital (both domestic and foreign) behalf of the governments they represent. In and experienced management, and by helping to June the Economic and Social Council considered finance prjwvate productive undertakings through the report and adopted a resolution requesting equity investment and loans without government the Bank to continue its study in consultation with guarantee." The Corporation would not accept member governments and interested business responsibility for managing an enterprise in which it invested, and would not hold a controlling groups, and to inform the Council in 1953 of the equity interest in it. No special immunity or results of its study and of any action it might status would attach to any enterprise solely by take on the proposal. The Bank intends to ex- reason of the Corporation's participation. The plore this matter further with all interested Corporation would attempt to revolve its funds groups in order to determine the desirability and as rapidly as possible by selling securities in its feasibility of carrying this project forward. [ 13 ] Chapter II - The Bank's Operations This section is a country-by-country description country is a list by fiscal year of all loans made of the operations of the Bank in the past fiscal to that country. Unless otherwise indicated, gov- year. For each country in which the Bank was ernments are the borrowers; loans to other bor- active, information is given on one or more of the rowers are government-guaranteed. The interest following topics: loans made; negotiations and rates shown include the 1% commission which, surveys looking to possible loans; reports of prog- under the Bank's Articles of Agreement, is allo- ress on Bank-financed projects; and technical cated to the Bank's Special Reserve. Additional assistance. Brief mentions are also made of com- details, such as maturity dates of loans, amounts pletely disbursed loans more fully described in disbursed and repayments of principal, are shown previous Annual Reports. in a tabular summary of loans in Appendix D, Preceding the account of operations in each beginning on page 48. AFRICA Belgian Congo result of the expansion in both the public and Fiscal $40 million 25-year 41/2% Loan of Sep- private sectors of the economy, exports are ex- 1952: tember 13, 1951 to the Belgian Congo pected to rise by 30% to 50%0 during the life of for development. Made simultaneously the Plan. with loan of $30 million to Belgium (see page 21). The large expenditures contemplated will in- The loan to the Belgian Congo was the first crease the demand for imports of food and con- made by the Bank to an overseas territory of a sumer goods as well as capital equipment. The member country. The purpose of the loan, and Bank's $40 million loan to the Congo will help of the $30 million loan made simultaneously to to pay for part of the imports from countries other Belgium, is to help carry out the Ten Year Devel- than Belgium during the two years beginning opment Plan for the Congo. This Plan was put July 1, 1951. The franc equivalent of the Bank's into effect in 1950. Public investment under the $30 million loan to Belgium will be made avail- Plan is expected to reach the equivalent of $660 able to the Congo and used to pay for imports million; and private investment will probably from Belgium. equal this amount. The Bank's loans relate to Because of the wide variety of goods which Government expenditures totaling 11 billion Bel- will be imported, it was impracticable to base gian francs (equivalent to $220 million) which disbursements from the Bank's loan on purchases are to be made in the two years July 1, 1951 to of specified goods. Disbursement of the loan, June 30, 1953. Of this total, 7.1 billion francs therefore, is geared both to the rate of investment will be spent for transport and communications, under the general plan and to expenditures on 2.1 billion for housing and public health, and railways, ports, waterways and roads by the 1.8 billion for electricity, water supply, education Office d'Exploitation des Transports Coloniaux and research. (Otraco), a public organization which administers Private investment during the 10 years is ex- the larger part of the Congo transport network. pected in mining and manufacturing, large-scale To date $6.1 million has been disbursed under agriculture, commerce and electric power. As a the loan. [14' Egypt Southern Rhodesia On the basis of the report of a Bank mission Fiscal $28 million 25-year 43/4% Loan of Feb- which visited Egypt in the summer of 1951, the 1952: ruary 27, 1952 to the Colony of Southern whlch vlsted Egyp m the smmer or 951, theRhodesia for electric power development. Bank informed the Government that it was willing IO ober 195 a Bank missionmentt In October 1951 a Bank mission went to to consider the financing of a number of develop- . . . ment projects, subject to certain technical anda otenRoei oivsiaetepsiiiyo fina rojctissub. Tet Bain thas carand financing part of its program of development. As financial conditions. The Bank has arranged to arsl twsdcddta h akcudbs send an engineering consultant to Egypt in the at n second half of 1952 to study the capital works aid in carrying out this plan by financing equi ment needed for expanding the production and program-of the Egyptian State Railways. distribution of electric power. A loan of $28 Ethiopia million, guaranteed by the United Kingdom, was made for this purpose in February 1952. Fisc.al $5 million 20-year 4% Loan of Septem- Southern Rhodesia's four-year development plan, 1951: ber 13, 1950 for rehabilitation of roads. $2 million 20-year 4% Loan of Septem- extending to March 31, 1955, contemplates public ber 13, 1950 for Development Bank. investment equivalent to about $280 million. Pri- $1.5 million 20-year 4%o Loan of Febru- vate investment is expected to equal this amount. ary 19, 1951 for rehabilitation and Most of the public investment is to be in basic development of telecommunications. services such as transportation, electricity, com- Almost all the road-making equipment required munications and water supply. Railways and elec- for the highway project being financed by the tric power development will account for the largest Bank's $5 million loan has been delivered, and amounts. work has been carried out on important sections The Bank's $28 million loan will help finance of road that connect producing areas with Addis the purchase of imported equipment and materials Ababa and 'the Eritrean border. The Imperial required for power expansion during the three Highway Authority estimates that the three-year years ending March 31, 1955. The expansion program for 1951-54 will result in rehabilitation consists of the installation of about 230,000 kw. of about 900 miles of road and light maintenance of new thermal generating capacity, the erection on an additional 1,800 miles. of some 2,000 miles of transmission lines, and the Since it started operations in May 1951, the installation of distributing equipment. Most of - ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ . t~~~~~~he equipment to be bought abroad will come Development Bank of Ethiopia has entered into to agreements for four loans requiring about $555,- from the Uted Kgdom, though some wll come 000 cf foreign exchange. Nearly all of this from the Union of South Africa and a small amount, to be drawn from the $2 million loan amount from the United States. - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~South Africa has approved the use in the loan of the International Bank, will be spent to import o S of £1,000,000 from her capital subscription to the machinery and raw cotton for a textile project. Bank, for purchases Southern Rhodesia intends to The remainder is for the purchase of agricultural make in the Union. South Africa has also agreed machinery and equipment, and for woodworking to consider making an additional amount avail- machinery. The Development Bank has also made able later this year. -several loans requiring only local currency. several lareinA large part of the capital for the development The telecommunications project has not yet of Southern Rhodesia is being provided by the been started. The Bank has been in consultation London market. This investment will cause a with the Government regarding means for put- drain on the United Kingdom's foreign-exchange ting the project into effective operation. reserves: much of the equipment which will be 115] exported to Southern Rhodesia under the program in payment for turbo-generators, boilers and other might otherwise have earned foreign exchange; equipment for two new power stations at Hex and some of the materials going into the equip- River and Vierfontein and for the stations already ment must be bought with foreign exchange. operating at Vaal, Congella and Witbank. In The Bank's loan will be disbursed in dollars for spite of delays in deliveries, the %vork is going purchases in the United Kingdom, and will help well. offset the drain on her foreign-exchange reserves. About one-half of the $20 million transport Other British Territories in Africa loan has been spent for the purchase of rolling Throughout the year the Bank has kept in close stock and other equipment for the expansion and touch with the Colonial Office regarding Bank improvement of the system operated by the South assistance for colonial development in Africa. African Railways and Harbors Administration. Bank representatives visited Kenya, Northern Owing to delays in the delivery of rolling stock Rhodesia and Nyasaland in November 1951. A from the United Kingdom and Germany and Bank mission is to visit the Rhodesias in July 1952, difficulties in buying rails and steel sleepers in and some months later a mission will visit other France, progress has been slower than was ex- British territories in East and West Africa. pected. Difficulties have also been caused by a Union of South Africa shortage of skilled labor. Nevertheless, the double Fiscal $30 million 20-year 4% Loan of janu- tracking of some lines and improvements on the 1951: ary 23, 1951 to the Electricity Supply others, the purchase of new locomotives, and the Commission for power development pro- construction of new workshops are to be completed gram. in 1953. This will help the South African Rail- $20 million 15-year 3Y49o Loan of Janu- ary 23, 1951 for expansion of trans- ways and Harbors Administration to deal with portation facilities. the heavy increase in traffic brought about by the About one-third of the $30 million loan to the economic expansion during the war and the im- Electricity Supply Commission has been disbursed mediate postwar years. ASIA President's Visit to South and Southeast Asia a program of construction, with an estimate of The President of the Bank visited Pakistan, costs. The engineers have returned to their coun- tries to carry on their studies. They will meet March 1952. again in Karachi, together with Bank engineers, in November 1952. Use of the Waters of the Indus River System Ceylon The Governments of India and Pakistan ac- The Bank organized a general survey mission cepted an invitation from the President of the to study Ceylon's economic potentialities and make Bank to send engineers to the Bank to study, recommendations to assist the Government in together with Bank engineers, possible technical drawing up a long-range development program. measures to increase the supplies of water avail- The mission was composed of twelve members, able from the Indus system of rivers for purposes five of whom were from the Bank's staff. The of economic development. Meetings began on Food and Agriculture Organization of the United May 7, 1952 and continued until June 18. Agree- Nations nominated the agricultural technician and ment was reached on field studies to be under- paid part of his expenses. The public health taken by the engineers of the two countries as a expert was nominated by the World Health first step toward drawing up and recommending Organization. [16 ] The group arrived in Ceylon early in October jungle in India can be successfully carried out with 1951 and stayed about ten weeks. The mission's mechanical equipment. report will be published simultaneously in Co- The first of the three 50,000 kw. generating lombo and in Washington early in September units of the Bokaro thermal power plant in the 1952. Damodar Valley is expected to come into opera- India tion in November 1952 and the entire plant by March 1953. Work on the Konar dam, where a Fiscal $34 million 15-year 4% Loan of August . . . t 1950: 18, 1949 for railway rehabilitation; re- hydroelectric power station will be built, was re- duced to $32.8 million on May 16, 1950 tarded because of changes in design and delays at request of borrower. in the delivery of equipment. The dam should be $10 million 7-year 31/2% Loan of Sep- tember 29, 1949 for importation of completed by the middle of 1953. agricultural machinery; reduced to $8.5 A Bank mission visited India for seven weeks million on July 27, 1951 at request of in late 1951 to gain firsthand knowledge of the borrower. $18.5 million 20-year 4% Loan of April planning, financing and execution of the develop- 18, 1950 for power development project. ment program set forth in the Draft Outline of The Bank's $34 million loan of 1949 was used India's First Five-Year Plan. On the basis of the primarily for the purchase of loconiotives. There mission's report, and of discussions by the Presi- has been a continued improvement in the operat- dent of the Bank during his visit in February 1952, ing efficiency of the railways in the past year; this the Bank has expressed its willingness to consider and higher fares have brought about a substantial loans for selected projects. improvrement in railway finances. A number of technical missions already have The agricultural machinery loan was made to gone to India to make an examination of these enable the Central Tractor Organization of the projects. In May 1952 Bank representatives car- Goverwnment to clear large areas of land in central ried on discussions of possible assistance to the Industrial Finance Corporation, a private institu- India of a deep-rooted weed called kans grass, ho fo rvdn eimadln-emcei an t. deeo.ehd o cern ugeln tion for providing medium and long-term credit and tc dlevelop methods for clearing Jungle land toidsr.Iisepcdthtngiaosfr in northern India and opening it to cultivation. a lndto the Copor at begintson. Some of the organizational and managerial prob- In June 1952 oatmme of teBnk stfwe lems that had slowed the C.T.O. 's progress on to In June 1952 a member of the Bank's staff went kans grass clearance have been solved, and there of a tegrated p lopment chmetin has been a definite improvement in the adminis- th DamoderValey Aow ineJune a hmis in thle Damodar Valley. Also in June, a mission, or- tration of the project. ganized by the Bank and headed by the Chairman In central India, 500,000 acres have now been of The First Boston Corporation of New York, cleared of kans grass. In the 1951-52 season, arrived in India to study technical and financial the goal of 210,000 acres was exceeded. Better problems of the iron and steel industry, and to see results might have been achieved if all the State on what basis the Bank might be able to assist in Governments had made large blocks of land avail- expanding iron and steel production. able to the C.T.O. to permit operations to be carried out economically, and if one type of tractor, Iran being used under difficult conditions, had not had After expressions of interest by Iran and the mechanical failures. Jungle-clearance operations United Kingdom, the Bank offered in November in the Himalayan foothills have resulted in the 1951 to try to work out interim arrangements for reclamation and plowing of nearly 18,000 acres, the restoration of oil operations in south Iran. and have demonstrated that the clearance of After a preliminary visit to Iran by a Bank official [ 17 ] and a technical consultant, a mission headed by This proposal was discussed in Teheran for the Vice President of the 'Bank went in February several weeks, and also in London. Understanding to Teheran and London. There, conversations in general terms was reached on a number of were held with the Governments concerned and questions, but on several major points there was with the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. no agreement. In the absence of real progress in It was the hope of the mission that it could reconciling views on these points, it was mutually work out an agreement acceptable to the two decided to recess the talks, with the understanding parties to the dispute. As a basis for discussion that they could be resumed later if it should appear the Bank put forward a proposal which included that a basis for agreement could be reached. the following points: For a limited period of about two years, and without prejudice to the Iraq legal rights of the interested parties, the Bank Fircal $12.8 million 15-year 3¾4%o Loan of would operate the oil properties through a 1950: June 15, 1950 for flood control. management headed by neutrals. The Bank would Work on the flood-control project began early sell the crude oil and products for the most part in 1952. The project is designed to protect Bagh- to the principal purchaser, the Anglo-Iranian Oil dad and the surrounding agricultural area against Company, at prices and on terms to be mutually periodic floods of the Tigris River, by diverting agreed upon by the Company and Iran. Part of flood waters into a large uninhabited depression, the proceeds of sale would be retained by the northwest of Baghdad, known as the Wadi Bank pending final settlement. The Bank, as a Tharthar. In October 1951 a contract was awarded neutral institution of which both parties are mem- to a British firm for the excavation of a 33-mile bers, would act in the interests of both. It would long diversion channel into the depression, and have full freedom of action, during the interim work on this first phase of the project has now period, to manage the properties without inter- begun. ference so as to achieve the greatest possible The Bank's general survey mission, headed by efficiency and produce a substantial flow of oil to Dr. Ivar Rooth, presented its report to the Iraqi the purchaser and of revenues to Iran. The Bank Government in February 1952. The mission was would undertake to limit the employment of impressed by Iraq's potentialities for economic foreign technicians to a minimum consistent with development; and it outlined a five-year develop- efficient operations; and the employment of British ment program calling for a total expenditure technical personnel, among others, would not be equivalent to $470 million. It reported that Iraq's exduded. Appropriate provisions would be in- three principal resources-land, water and oil- cluded to protect the Bank's resources against can ultimately maintain a much larger population risks not incident to its usual operations, such as with a considerably higher standard of living. claims for damage to oil properties. The Bank Rapidly rising revenues from oil make it possible would undertake to see that, if necessary, funds for the Government to undertake a large-scale would be provided for the resumption of opera- development program over the next few years. tions; this would be accomplished in such a way Seventy percent of these revenues have been as to avoid affecting the Bank's credit. assigned to the Iraqi Development Board, an This proposal, if it had been found acceptable, autonomous agency established in 1950 for the would have given the parties to the controversy planning and financing of development. an opportunity to work out a final settlement. It Economic development, in the mission's opinion, would also have permitted a resumption of the should put major emphasis on agriculture. The flow of oil and oil revenues without any sacrifice most urgent needs are flood control and irrigation of legal rights on either side. to bring additional land under cultivation, drain- [18] age to improve existing crop land, and the intro- able the railways to keep pace with the growth of duction of better agricultural techniques. the Pakistan economy. In the industrial field the mission suggested the The railways urgently need rolling stock and expansion of certain existing industries and the repair facilities to replace equipment which de- creation of new ones. In particular, the mission teriorated from heavy use and insufficient mainte- suggested the establishment of a chemical plant nance during and after World War II. The loan which would use natural gas from the Kirkuk oil will be used to finance the purchase of diesel field to make fertilizer and other valuable chemi- electric locomotives, passenger cars, freight cars, workshop equipment, locomotive boilers and cross cal product:s. ties. This equipment will be purchased in the The mission found the transport system gener- United States, France and Canada. The French ally adequate for present needs; but for the Government has released to the Bank for this future it recommended the standardization of rail- loan the equivalent of $12 million in French francs way gauges to be carried out in conjunction with from its capital subscription to the Bank. a comprehensive replacement program, and the The agricultural loan will be used to help building of an adequate network of surfaced reclaim 660,000 acres of waste land in the Thal roads. Throughout its report the mnission stressed desert, an area in the northeastern part of West the importance of increasing the productivity of Pakistan. It will be used to finance the import workers by providing better education and effec- of tractors and ancillary equipment to dear, plow, tive measures for reducing the incidence of harrow and seed the land and to construct irri- debilitating diseases. gation ditches. The Government has already In June 1952 a Bank representative visited Iraq. constructed most of the irrigation canals planned He discussed with the Governmnent the recom- for the area and is now building roads. mendationis of the mission's report and the action This reclamation project is planned for com- taken by the Government to carry them into effect. pletion in about five years. The cleared land will be divided into 15-acre farms on which 44,000 Lebanon families, mostly refugees, will be settled. In- In May 1952 a Bank representative visited creased crop production will consist mainly of Beirut and had exploratory talks with the Govern- wheat and cotton. ment on the financing of development projects. The Bank is now discussing with the Govern- Further discussions of the type and extent of ment the financing of a paper-mill project in possible ]3ank assistance are in prospect. East Pakistan and is exchanging views with the Pakistan Government on other projects which may be the basis for further financing. Fiscal $27.2 million 15-year 45/8% Loan of 1952: March 27, 1952 for railway rehabilitation. In May 1952 the Government requested the $3.25 million 7-year 41/8% Loan of June Bank to help organize a Technical Research Insti- 13, 1952 for agricultural machinery. tute in Pakistan. The Institute would do applied The railway loan will help finance a program research designed primarily to promote industrial for the rehabilitation, improvement and moderni- development, and would be sponsored jointly by zation of the Government-owned railways in both the Bank and the U. N. Technical Assistance East and West Pakistan. The program is to make Administration. The Bank expects to send a up arrears in replacement, start substitution of representative to Pakistan in the second half of diesel for steam locomotives, improve the perma- 1952 to explore, for itself and UNTAA, the nent way and provide additional facilities to en- feasibility of establishing the proposed Institute. [19] Syria The Royal Irrigation Department has now com- In June 1951 the Bank advised the Government pleted the design for a barrage on the Chao Phya that it was prepared to negotiate loans which had River to regulate the flow of water in the River been requested for drainage and irrigation, high- and its branches and in the canal system on the way improvement and the development of the central plain. The design of the barrage has been Port of Latakia; and in September 1951 negotia- approved by the United States Bureau of Reclama- tion procedures were discussed with the Syrian tion, which is the Department's engineering con- Governor of the Bank. sultant. A firm of British contractors has been In May 1952 a Bank representative visited employed to supervise construction. Access roads Damascus. The Government informed him it was and a construction camp have already been built ready to open negotiations for loans for the pur- and clearing and foundation work has begun. poses mentioned. The Government said it also Nearly all the orders for equipment have been wished the Bank to consider, at the same time, placed, but delays in the delivery of equipment the financing of additional projects. The Bank is have set back construction of the dam by about studying the Government's proposals. a year. The $4.4 million loan for developing the Port Thailand of Bangkok became effective at the end of August Fiscal $3 million 15-year 334%o Loan of Octo- 1951. The greater part of the loan is being used i951: ber 27, 1950 for railway rehabilitation. to finance the foreign-exchange cost of deepening $18 million 20-year 4% Loan of October the channel through the sand bar at the mouth of 27, 1950 for irrigation project. $4.4 million 15-year 3¾4% Loan of the Chao Phya River, so that vessels of about October 27, 1950 for port development. 10,000 tons can enter the river and berth at the Almost two-thirds of the $3 million railway port. A dredging contract was awarded to a loan is being spent to rehabilitate and re-equip Dutch company; deepening of the channel may the railway workshops at Makkasan, near Bang- be completed by early 1953. The port develop- kok. Plans for reconstructing the workshops, ment project provides also for the improvement of together with a list of required equipment, were cargo-handling facilities at the Port of Bangkok. prepared by engineering consultants retained by Orders for equipment needed for this phase of the Government. A Bank engineer visited Thai- the project are now being placed. land in June 1952 and approved the plans and In March 1952 the Government and the Bank the list of equipment required. Orders have been agreed that the alleviation of the power shortage placed for nearly half of the equipment needed should be given first priority in Thailand's further for the workshops, and for the signaling equip- development plans. A commission has been set ment that will consume most of the remainder of up to plan and coordinate the activities of the the loan. Government in the development of electric power. AUSTRALIA Fiscal $100 million 25-year 41/4% Loan of next nine months. A portion of the loan has been 1951: August 22, 1950 for development pro- spent on capital goods for public projects of the gram. Commonwealth and State authorities. A large The Bank's loan to Australia was to be spent part, however, has been spent on capital goods over a period of about two years. So far, about needed by farmers and private business concerns. two-thirds of it has been disbursed and it is Nearly all of these goods have been distributed expected that the rest will be withdrawn over the through normal commercial channels. [20] Tractors and other farm machinery, such as in service. Bank-financed mining machinery, such balers, grain combines and harvesters, valued at as coal cutters, conveyors and drills for privately $18 million, have been imported and retailed by owned mines in New South Wales, has helped commercial distributors. Industrial crawler trac- to raise coal production. About $11 million has tors and earth-moving equipment valued at $13 been spent on power plants of a total capacity million, have gone in the main to public authori- of 150,000 kw. which are being purchased for ties, or to private contractors working for public the State Electricity Commissions of New South authorities, for use on projects in various parts of Wales, Victoria and Queensland. In these States Australia. About $3 million worth of earth- there is an acute shortage of electric power. moving equipment, for instance, will be used on A Bank mission was in Australia in March and the Big Eildon dam project for the State Rivers April 1952, and the President of the Bank visited and Water Supply Commission of Victoria. The Australia at the invitation of the Commonwealth project will make possible the irrigation of 360,000 Prime Minister for a week during this period. additicinal acres in the Goulburn Valley and will Discussions covered economic developments of increas,e electric generating capacity by 120,000 kw. ' Bank-financed imports of locomotives and loco- the past two years, the part which the Bank's loan motive parts will help bring into -service 1 1 new has played, and the possibility of further Bank diesel-electric locomotives for the Commonwealth lending. The Prime Minister and the President Railways, 20 for the New South Wales Railways, of the Bank had further discussions of loan possi- 17 for the Victoria Railways, and 10 for Queens- bilities when the Prime Minister visited Washing- land Railways. Twenty steam locomotives have ton in May 1952 and again in June. At the end also been financed for the New South Wales of the fiscal year negotiations were far advanced Railways. Some of these locomotives are already for a new loan of $50 million. EUROPE Belg,ium raw materials and foodstuffs, and increasing the Fiscal $16 million 20-year 41/4% Loan of expenditure of foreign exchange. The loan was 19419: March 1, 1949 for steel plants and aimed at reducing the pressure on Belgium's electric power. foreign-exchange reserves during the two years Fiscal $30 million 25-year 41/2%o Loan of ending September 30, 1953. 19.52: September 13, 1951 for development of the Belgian Congo. Made simultaneously The loan is being disbursed to the National with loan of $40 million to the Belgian Bank of Belgium, which credits the equivalent in Congo (see page 14). Belgian francs to the Belgian Government. This The $30 million loan of September 1951 was equivalent will be available to the Congo to the first made to a member country to assist it in finance expenditures under the Ten Year Plan. promDting the development of an overseas terri- Disbursement of the loan is geared to the rate tory. The loan will aid in carrying out the Ten of investment in the Plan in general. Disburse- Year Development Plan for the Belgian Congo ment is also related more specifically to expendi- (see page 14). Belgium has long been the leading tures for transport and related installations by the supplier of manufactured goods to the Congo, Office d'Exploitation des Transports Coloniaux and she will provide most of the capital equip- (Otraco). ment required to execute the Congo program. The two steel plants and the thermal power Additional demand for goods for the Congo plant financed by the $16 million loan of 1949 stimulates economic activity in Belgium-raising have been completed and are in operation. The employment and income, increasing imports of thermal power plant, of the Union des Centrales [21 ] Electriques de Liege-Namur-Luxembourg (Lina- million loan of August 1949 for modernization lux), started operating at full capacity (100,000 and expansion, and also benefited from a second kw.) early in 1952. loan of $2.3 million made in October 1949, mainly Denmark to aid forest operations. The new loan will help these industries to buy much needed modern Fiscal $40 million 25-year 4¼%4S Loan of 1948: August 22, 1947 for reconstruction. equipment to increase their capacity for making The loan made in 1947 financed the import of the more highly processed products, such as chemi- essential gods which contributed to Denmark's cal pulp, newsprint, paper, paperboard and recovery in the immediate postwar period. This cardboard. recovery has continued, but Denmark's dollar More electric power is needed to keep pace p.osiio has reainued diffcul. Teconry con- with, and make possible, Finland's continued in- positiones t relhaviloneddifficult.The country con dustrial growth. The Bank's loan will provide ttnues to rely heavlly onimports of raw materials fromes thredollar aea, an i eduction in thers equipment for four hydroelectric generating plants from the dollar area, and reductions in these in northern and eastern Finland and one steam imports would cut down production. Yet Denmark enerating plant in western Finland. By 1957 has not been able to increase dollar earmings t rapidly enough, partly because of restrictions on teelants wil havadded 27,0 i wn to the entry of dairy products into the United States. present capacity by nearly a third and raising it Denmark's dollar problem will remain particularly faresent c ty bnewarl aethIr andrision it acut beauseof argedolar lanswhic maure far above the prewar level. In addition, trans- acute because of large dollar loans which mature mission lines will be erected to bring power to in the next three years. the principal industrial centers in the southern Late in 1951 two Bank representatives visited and western parts of the country. The Bank's loan Copenhagen for consultations with the Govern- will be used for the import of construction ma- ment on payments problems. The Bank will con- chiner aluminum transmission cables, turbines, tinue its close collaboration with the Governrment generators and switch gear on this and other matters of common interest. genro and sic ager. The $1 millilon for agriculture will pay for Finland imported tractors and earth-moving equipment Fiscal $12.5 million 15-year 4%o Loan of to be used for dearing land and building forest 1950: August 1, 1949 to the Bank of Finland roads. It will aid a Government program begun for development of power, wood-products in 1940 for increasing agricultural and forestry industries and limestone powder produc- tion. output. This program has also been important in $2.3 million 2-year 3% Loan of October resettling farmers from Karelia. 17, 1949 for equipment for timber pro- The recent loan followed a review of economic duction; reduced at the request of the borrower to $2.1 million on September developments and investment needs made by a 30, 1951. Bank mission in November 1951. A smaller Fiscal $20 million 18-year 4¼4%o' Loan of April supplemental loan in Swedish kronor to cover the 1952: 30, 1952 to the Bank of Finland for further development of power and wood- purchase of machinery in Sweden for the wood- products industries and for agricultural products industries is now under consideration. improvement. The Swedish Government has been asked to re- Of the $20 million loaned to Finland in April lease part of its subscription to the Bank's capital 1952, $9.5 million is for the wood-products indus- for this purpose. tries, $9.5 million for electric power production, More than four-fifths of the $12.5 million loan and $1 million for agriculture. of August 1949 has been disbursed and the loan The wood-products industries had previously will probably be withdrawn in full by the end of obtained $10.45 million of the Bank's $12.5 1952. [22] The $2.3 million loan of October 1949 was situation by broadening the country's economic repaid in full in 1951. This loan financed the base. purchase of forestry equipment to help Finland The loan made in 1951 is helping to finance to increase her exports of sawn timber to Western hydroelectric projects on the Sog and Laxa Rivers. Europe. These are several months behind in construction because of delays in procurement and technical Fiscance $250 million 30-year 4V4%Loan of Maydifficulties. The estimated cost of the projects Fiscal $250 million 30-year 41/% Loan of May has risen by about 20%0, mainly as the result of 1947: 9, 1947 to Credit National for recon- ial prien rises. struction. ternal price rises. This loan was completely disbursed during the Approximately two-fifths of each of the above This loan was completely disbursed during the loans has already been disbursed, the Bank second half of 1947, and financed imports of a making use of sterling raised in the London wide range of raw materials, fuels and equip- market in May 1951 and of parts of the capital ment. It helped to maintain economic activity subscriptions of the United Kingdom, France, and employment, facilitated the rehabilitation of Denmark and Norway. essential transport facilities, and made possible The Bank has discussed with the Icelandic new construction in heavy industry, notably for Government ways of channeling investment to the production of steel. achieve better balanced economic development. Iceland An officer of the Bank visited Iceland in October Fiscal £875,000 ($2,450,000) 22-year 438% 1951 to advise the Government on the organi- 1951: Loan of June 20, 1951 for power de- zation and functions of a new investment insti- velopment. tution to be established in general accordance with Fiscal £360,000 ($1,008,000) 22-year 41/2% the recommendations of an earlier Bank mission. 1952: Loan of November 1, 1951 for agri- culture. Italy The agricultural loan will pay for the import Fiscal $10 million 25-year 41/2% Loan of of cement, steel, timber, fencing materials, seed 1952: October 10, 1951 to the Cassa per Opere Straordinarie di Pubblico Interesse nell' and fertilizer, which are needed by farmers for Italia Meridionale (Cassa per il Mezzo- building or improving farm houses and other giorno) for development of the South fambuilding s or imp oving ednadfecn of Italy. farm buiLdings and for re-seeding and fencing The loan is to aid in carrying out the Govern- grasslands. The equivalent of the loan in Icelandic ment's 10-year plan for the development of kr6nur wjill be set aside in a special account at the southern Italy, induding Sicily and Sardinia. The Agricultural Bank for loans to farmers. plan covers the period between July 1, 1950 and In the last few years both Government and June 30, 1960. It is administered by the Cassa per private agencies have become concerned at the il Mezzogiorno and supervised by a special com- neglect oif farm lands and the fall in agricultural mittee of the Council of Ministers. Investment is output. Exports of live sheep, frozen lamb, wool planned at the rate of 100 billion lire ($160 and other agricultural products, which once ac- million) a year from funds allocated by the counted for a fourth of Iceland's exports, now are Italian Treasury. Three-fourths of the total 10- only a tvelfth. Iceland has become excessively year appropriations of 1,000 billion lire ($1.6 dependent on the fishing industry; and this de- billion) will be used in agriculture. Of the amount pendence is a weakness which has been emphasized for agriculture, the largest part will be spent on in recent years by sharp fluctuations in the price irrigation, drainage and dearance of land. It is of fish and in the size of catches. The program estimated that the area under irrigation in southern of agricultural development will help correct this Italy will be increased tenfold. Other projects [23] ~~~~~~~~~ * ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~ F J \ t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ a wide range of goods, induding industrial equip- plants and plants for processing vegetable oils), ment and merchant ships. the establishment of new ones, and additional The 1948 loans to four shipping companies for public use of electricity. When completed, the the purchase of ships in the United States have power-generating and transmission facilities will been reduced to $7.8 million by repayments. All be turned over for operation to a private corpora- of these loans were sold by the Bank with its tion. Both the Government and private capital guarantee in 1948 and 1949. will share in the ownership of this corporation, The $15 million loan of 1949, now reduced to but the majority of the stock will be held by $7.9 million, was made to the Finance Corpora- private interests. tion for National Reconstruction (Herstelbank) The port and grain-storage projects are be- to provide foreign exchange for manufacturing hind schedule. Construction of the 29 steel sheds industries in the Netherlands. Of the 35 projects for grain storage is now well under way and for which the loan was used, seven were com- should be completed this summer. Some of the pleted by the end of 1951 and 21 more are inland silos may also be completed this year. expected to be completed by the end of 1952. Engineering studies required for the three large Turkey port silos have not yet been completed. Technical Fiscal $3.9 million 18-year 3k8% Loan of studies on several of the port development and 1951: July 7, 1950 for grain-storage facilities. construction projects have been finished and con- $.12.5 million 25-year 4¼14% Loan of struction and cargo-handling equipment is being July 7, 1950 for development of ports. ordered. The delay in the execution of these $9 million 15-year 33Y4% Loan of October 19, 1950 to Industrial Develop- projects has hampered the handling of Turkey's ment Bank of Turkey for development recent large surplus of grain. of private industry. The Industrial Development Bank has steadily Fiscal $25.2 million 25-year 43/4% Loan of increased the volume of its loans. By the end of 19A2: June 18, 1952 for multi-purpose dam and power facilities on the Seyhan River. May 1952, 15 months after the start of operations, The loan made in 1952 will finance the foreign- it had approved loans amounting to 22 million exchange costs of a dam, a power-generating plant, Turkish liras (about $7 million). Five of these and power transmission lines to industrial centers. projects, requiring foreign exchange equivalent to The dam will help control floods and will provide about $1.9 million, were submitted to the Inter- water for irrigation and electric power in the national Bank in accordance with the loan agree. Adana Plain, a productive agricultural and indus- ment and were approved. One of these loans will trial area in south-central Turkey. The dam iS help build a cotton-ginning and oil-seed plant; one the key to the Seyhan Project, a comprehensive plan being carried out by the Turkish Government w for the control and use of the waters of the are for cotton textile mills. Seyhan River. The economic development of the In August 1951 the Turkish Government signed Adana Plain has been lirited by ruinous seasonal a contract with the Development Bank by which floods, an inadequate and irregular supply of the latter will make loans to private enterprises w ater for cultivation, and a serious shortage of from T. L. 54.5 million of ECA counterpart funds. electric power. The power plant at the dam will have an initial Yugoslavia capacity of 36,000 kw. Housing will be provided 1950: 17, 1949 for equipment for timber pro- fDr an additional 18,000 kw. generator which may duction. le installed later. The power generated will make Fiscal $28 million equivalent 25-year 41/2% of existing industries (textile 1952: Loan of October 11, 1951 for power, possible the growth of existig mdustnes (textile mining, industrial and other projects. [ 25 In October 1951 the Bank lent Yugoslavia an tries which authorized the use or their capital. amount in various currencies equivalent to $28 Purchases in the United States and Canada are million to provide the foreign exchange needed being financed through conversion of Sw6iss francs to complete projects in the fields of electric obtained from the Bank's security sales in Switzer- power, coal mining, non-ferrous metals de- land, and purchases in Germany are being financed velopment, industry, forest products utilization, through conversion of sterling from the Bank'< agriculture and fisheries, and transportation. In London bond issue. It is expected, therefore, tha: addition to the amount of the Bank's loan, sub- the loan will be repayable entirely in currencies stantially larger amounts of foreign exchange and other than dollars, local currency are being invested by Yugoslavia. During the year the $2.7 million tiniber- The projects selected by the Bank and the Yugo- equipment loan was completely repaid. The object slav Government for Bank assistance were those of the loan was to provide additional Cquipmlenm that would increase Yugoslav production and im- to expand production of sawn softwood and prove its balance of payments position promptly pitprops. and substantially. In several cases the imports to be financed are relatively small amounts of key Mediterranean Training Center equipment needed to complete projects on which A Training Center on Agriculture and Allied considerable investments have already been made. Projects was established in Ankara, Turkey, from Because of the present and probable future October to December 1951, to train government pattern of its foreign trade, Yugoslavia is able to officials in appraising and drawing up agricultural service foreign indebtedness in Western European development projects. The Center was sponsored currencies with less difficulty than in dollars. The develypby prkecthe U nted Nations od Bank therefore obtained permission from Belgium, Jointly by Turkey, the United Nations, the Food Denmark, France, Italy, the Netherlands and the and Agriculture Organization and the Bank. It United Kingdom to use parts of their capital was attended by 60 participants: 40 from Turk- subscriptions for this loan. Purchases are being and 20 from 10 other Mediterranean countries made in Germany and in the United States and and territories. Instructors included two members Canada as well as in the Western European coun- of the Bank's staff. WESTERN HEMISPHERE Brazil The $25 million loan of June 27, 1952, will Fijcal $75 million 25-year 41/2% Loan of finance imported equipment needed for the elec- 1949: January 27, 1949 to Brazilian Traction, tric power program of the State of Rio Grande Light and Power Company, Ltd. for power and telephone development pro- do Sul. The borrowver is a State-oo. nd agenc-, gram. the Comissao Estadual de tc-.er(ia 1L l 'r rca Fiscal $15 million 25-year 41/4% Loan of May (CEEE) 1950: 26, 1950 to Companhia Hidro EIetrica do Sao Francisco for power development Additional power is urgently re£ded i.i Ui project. Grande do Sul. Because of its favorable cli ate. Fiscal $15 million 25-year 41/4% Loan of fertile land and vigorous population the State is 1951: January 18, 1951 to Brazilian Traction, Light and Power Company, Ltd. for an important agricultural and cattle-raising area. power development program. Related industries, such as food processin}g, shoe,, Fiscal $25 million 25-year 4¾/4% Loan of June manufacturing and textile plants, hav'e already 1952: 27, 1952 to the Comissao Estadual de been established there. The State contains Brazil's Energia Eltrica of Rio Grande do Sul for power development program. largest known deposits of coal. Prospects are good- $12.5 million 15-year 458% Loan of for further development of industry as we7l as June 27, 1952 for improvement of rail- agriculture. ways. [26 ] Demands for electric power for both industrial, This project is to be completed in about three commercial and residential purposes have been years, except for track rehabilitation, which is steadily increasing, and shortages have necessi- expected to take about five. The total cost is tated power rationing. In the north-central sec- estimated at the equivalent of approximately tion of the State, over 3,000 industrial plants now $76 million. Of this amount, the Brazilian Gov- have to generate their own power with relatively ernment will provide $64 million in cruzeiros and small and inefficient units. the Bank will provide $12.5 million in foreign The State has undertaken an electrification pro- exchange. gram to meet present needs and to provide for The Central do Brasil Railroad serves the eco- future requirements. The program is being carried nomic center of Brazil. It links the important out in two stages. The first, now almost com- cities of Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo and Belo pleted, will add about 40,000 kw. to present Horizonte; and serves Volta Redonda, Brazil's capacity and will relieve the most critical power largest steel plant, and the mining State of Minas shortages. The second stage, which is to be com- Gerais. The railroad is a large carrier of iron pleted in 1960, will provide power for longer ores, steel, fuel and food products, as well as of range development. It will add 185,000 kw. to passengers. the State's power system through the construction The $90 million loan made in two installments of four hydroelectric power stations, two steam to the Brazilian Traction, Light and Power Com- turbine plants and some small diesel plants. By pany, Ltd., is financing most of the foreign- 1960, the system is to have more than twice its exchange cost of a $270 million program for present capacity. expanding hydroelectric generating and transmit- ting facilities in the Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo The Bank's loan will be applied to projects in areas. The loan has already enabled Brazilian the second stage of the program which are to be a reas e its powea capait Bstan completed in or before 1957. The funds required tiactyo to hydrelectr generatnuits,bwta duin thttm-ilb qiaett bu tially. Two hydroelectric generating units, with a duringlthat Time wailibe equivlerntnnto abo total capacity of 117,000 kw., have been installed, $80 o million thegt BraziianlGovernmen t wf 16 mill and a 30,000 kw. floating power planl has been finance works costing the equivalent of $16 mil- added to the system. The first phase of the comn- lion; CEEE will receive $39 million worth of addt h ytm h is hs ftecm lin rEEwl eeve$9mlinwrho plex Paraiba-Pirai River diversion project, built to cruzeiros from the proceeds of a State electrifica- pre anamPle water supply efor the ne tion tax and from operating revenues; and the povide an and te old fon t, has Bank's oan wil provie $25 illion For,cacava plant and ttile old Fontes p"lant, has Bank's loa will provide $25million,been completed. The ComPany expects the first The $12.5 million loan of June 27, 1952 was unit at Forcacava to be in opefatin1 early next made directly to the Brazilian Government. It year, thus adding 35,000 kw. to the system. The will be used to purchase imports needed in an total planned capacity of this plan7t .s 33000 kw., urgent project for rehabilitating the Central do of which 195,000 kw. is expected to be in opera- Brasil Railroad and adding to its carrying capacity. tion by the end of 195 3. The project is to add to rolling stock, improve Already the Company's output of po!er hlas maintenance, rehabilitate broad-gauge track and been increased by one billion kilowatt-hours per strengthen bridges. Most of the loan will be annum. About half the power sold is for the use used to buy components of freight cars to be of industrial consumers. The first installment is assembled in Brazil. The remainder will be used also helping to finance expansion of telephone to buy equipment for track maintenance, stone facilities in the same area. The program for quarrying (to provide track ballast), maintenance augmenting telephone facilities is scheduled for shops and switches. completion before the end of 1952- [ 27] Work is continuing on the project of the Com- project is being carried out by Chile's Department panhia Hidro Eletrica do Sao Francisco for the of Public Works. All equipment required for the construction of a hydroelectric power plant at project has been purchased and technical experts Paulo Afonso Falls in northeastern Brazil. In from abroad are at work. spite of construction difficulties, this project is The Endesa hydroelectric project is proceeding. being carried forward in a satisfactory manner. satisfactorily. The Bank-financed unit at Pilmai- In November 1951 the President of the Bank qu6n (capacity 10,800 kw.), which serves the visited Brazil for two weeks to learn at first hand fertile agricultural area in the south of Chile,. about Brazil's development problems and plans. started operations early in 1952. Tihe i 6,000 kw.- His trip took him to Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo, unit at Los Molles, which will ser\e the area of Porto Alegre and Belo Horizonte. La Serena, some 500 kilometers north of Santiago,' is expected to go into operation by September or British Guiana October 1952. The Los Cipreses hydroelectric In June 1952 two members of the staff visited plant, with a generating capacity of 54,000 kw., British Guiana to discuss a request that the Bank is expected to start operating during the second arrange a mission to study the major economic half of 1953. In response to a request f:rom problems of the colony. Fomento and Endesa, the Bank has agreed to permit the Los Cipreses project to be enlarged Chile to include the construction of a transmission line Fiscal $13.5 million 20-year 41/2% Loan of linking the south-central power area with that of 1948: March 25, 1948 to Corporaci6n de Santiago. This will assure a steady supply of Fomento de la Producci6n (Fomento) and Empresa Nacional de Electricidad, power for Santiago and for the industrial center S. A. (Endesa) for power development. of Concepci6n. Because of economies effected in $2.5 million 61/2-year 33/4% Loan of the original project, the foreign-exchange costs of March 25, 1948 to Corporaci6n de the proposed extension can be met from the Fomento de la Producci6n for impor- oin loan. tation of agricltural machinery. original loan. Fiscal $1.3 million 10-year 43/8% Loan of Virtually all equipment provided under the 1952: October 10, 1951 to Corporaci6n de Bank's agricultural machinery loan has been sold Fomento de la Producci6n for explora- tion and use of water resources of the to farmers. Spot checks indicate that dealers are Rio Elqui Valley. providing adequate repair facilities and spare The project in the Rio Elqui Valley in north parts; farmers are making good use of the equip- central Chile will be carried out in two stages. ment and giving it proper maintenance. In the first stage, the volume of underground Bank representatives visited Chile Jir February water, already known to be large, will be precisely 1952 to examine a project for th- mstrucLon ot determined. In the second stage, permanent pulp and newspriat plants, and at th : ose pumps and electric power facilities for operating fiscal year, negotiations ftc a loan were well them will be installed. advanced. The Bank has -also been corsicing Agricultural production in the river valleys in requests submitted by two private coal mini.ng northern Chile is severely limited by irregularity companies for assistance in financing the rehabili- in the flow and volume of surface waters available tation and modernization of their mines. for irrigation. The present project is a pilot The joint Bank-FAO -nission, which -mnade a undertaking. If successful, it would point the field study of agricultural development in Chli.e way to a much larger development of irrigation in collaboration with the Chilean Goverrriaent and agriculture, both in the Rio Elqui Valley and and other technical experts, returned to 'WVashing- in other river valleys of northern Chile. The ton in September 1951. In Tunle, the chief^ of [281 mission returned to Chile to discuss the mission's mileage included in the project. The additionial major findings and recommendations with the foreign-exchange requirements are being met by Government and with FAO and Point Four using part of the unallocated funds available from specialists. The mission's final report and recom- the Bank loan. Additional local-currency financing mendations for a program of agricultural develop- will be provided from Colombian budgetary ment will soon be formally presented to the sources. Government. The loan for the purchase of agricultural ma- Colombia chinery by the Caja de Credito Agrario was fully Fiscal $5 million 7-year 31/2% Loan of August disbursed early in 1951. All the machinery bought 1950: 19, 1949 to Caja de Credito Agrario, with the loan has been distributed for sale on Industrial y Minero for importation of agricultural machinery; reduced at the credit to farmers, and most of it iS actually in use. request- of the borrower to $4.9 million Payments made by the purchasers are accumulating on April 2, 1951. in a revolving fund from which the loan eventu- i5cal $3N53 millie 2,950yto Central Hidro- ally will be amortized. To the extent that the el6ctrica del Rfo Anchicaya, Limitada, sales proceeds are not immediately needed for for power development project. the purpose of amortization, they are used by the $2.6 million 20-year 4% Loan of Decem- . . . ' ber 28, 1950 to Central Hidroel6ctrica Caja to acquire additonal machiery. Farmers de Caldas, Limitada, for power develop- payments for this machinery, in turn, are put back ment project. in the fund. More machinery has been purchased $16.5 million 10-year 37/8A% Loan of m.aneryas beenced b April 10, 1951 for highway construc- out of the fund than was orginally financed by tion and rehabilitation. the Bank's loan. Fiscal $2.4 million 20-year 4½2% Loan of The Bank has under consideration a project for 1952: November 13, 1951 to Central Hidro- electrica del Rio Lebrija, Limitada, for the construction of a Magdalena Valley Railroad power development project. which would greatly improve the communication The most recent of three Bank loans for the between the Caribbean coast and the central part development of electric power in Colombia was of Colombia. The railroad would replace river made to the Central Hidroelectrica del Rio transportation on part of the Magdalena River, Lebrija, a publicly owned company, to increase where traffic is subject to serious interruption in the supply of power for the city of Bucaramanga, dry seasons. It would thereby provide a reliable, the center of the tobacco-processing industry. The year-round route between the Bogota area and the project provides for the building of a hydro- Caribbean ports, and an all-rail route between electric plant, construction of transmission lines, Bogota and Medellin. Its completion would also arid the enlargement of the present distribution provide better access for colonization of fertile system. The plant initially will have an installed areas of the Magdalena Valley. Since December capacity of about 7,500 kw. but is designed for 1951, consulting engineers engaged jointly by the art eventual capacity of about 15,000 kw. Work Bank and the Government have been studying the is already far advanced and the project is railway system with a view to suggesting measures scheduled for completion in late 1953. for administrative and financial reorganization. Progress under the Bank's other two power These engin.ers are also making a study of a loans has been satisfactory. In December 1951 proposed corporation to operate ground and com- the first generator installed by the Central Hidro- munications facilities for civil aviation. Their electrica de Caldas began to supply power for the report is expected to be ready in the latter part city of Manizales. of 1952. In 1952 the highway rehabilitation project was The Bank has continued to provide a variety of changed, to pave 50%0 instead of 15%, of the technical assistance to aid the Government, in [29 l carrying out a long-range development program. In its report the mission expressed the belief that The Economic Development Conimittee, estab- Cuba has ample resources, both human and ma- lished in 1950 to work out specific recommenda- terial, with which to increase its output, broaden tions for a development program based on the its economic base, and create a better standard of report of the Bank's general survey mission, com- living for its people. The report offers a large pleted its work in September 1951. Several mem- number of suggestions and recommendations in bers of the Bank's staff assisted the Commnittee various fields and urges that the Cubans work out in its studies. In August 1951 the Vice President for themselves a long-term strategy for develop- of the Bank visited Colombia to discuss the ment aimed at the following objectives: progress being made; and early in 1952 a member 1. To make Cuba less dependent on sugar by pro- of the staff was stationed for several weeks in moting new enterprises-not by curtailing sugar BogotA as a special representative of the Bank. production. 2. To expand existing-and create new-industries The Colombian Government is carrying out producing sugar by-products or using sugar as a measures recommended by the Economic Develop- raw material. This objective deserves a first priority because progress in this direction will ment Committee. In April 1952 it named a make the sugar sector of the economy more stable. National Board of Economic Planning, to advise 3. To promote vigorously the export of non-sugar on the coordination of development activities and products in order to reduce the dependence on exports of sugar. This will help both to raise to direct a newly established central planning total income and employment and to stabilize the office. An Economic Advisor nomninated by the economy. Among the most promising possi- bilities for achieving this aim are the promotion Bank has been appointed by the Board. of exports of minerals and of various crude and In Noembe 195 theBank sent an expert to processed foodstuffs. In November 1951 the Bank sent an expert to 4. To produce in Cuba, for domestic consumption, Colombia to suggest ways of developing the capi- a wide range of foodstuffs, raw materials and tal market. His report has been completed, and consumer goods which are now imported. will soon be transmitted to the Colombian To foster development, the mission outlines Government. action that should be taken in applied research, education, labor-management relations, and in the Costa Rica field of government policy and reform. It also At the request of the Government, a Bank mis- makes recommendations on ways of increasing sicn visited Costa Rica in October 1951 to study agricultural and industrial production, and of im- proving railroad transportation. the economic situation and to examine the Govern- ment's development plans. The Bank afterward Dominican Republic informed the Government that it was willing in A Bank mission visited the Dominican Republic principle to help finance railroad, highway and in May 1952 to explore the Government's request airport projects, and to consider other projects for technical assistance in connection with the when they were ready. In February 1952 the development of hydroelectric power. As a result Government informed the Bank that, in view of of the visit, the Bank has given the Government a substantial budget surplus in 1951 and good a list of engineering firms qualified to make tech- revenue prospects for the current year, it would nical and market studies, and has agreed to be able to carry forward its immediate develop- nominate a consultant who can advise the Govern- ment program without external financial assistance. ment on problems of policy. Cuba Ecuador The report of the Bank's general survey mission The Bank has received technical studies on was presented to the Government in August 1951. projects for the construction of a new port for [301 Guayaquil and for highway development in the between Guatemala City and the Atlantic coast Province of Guayas. The Bank has informed the has begun. A commission has been appointed to Government that soon after the elections, held make recommendations for reorganization of the in June 1952, it would send a representative to nationalized coffee estates. The Government has Ecuador for preliminary discussions with the Presi- increased the tax on coffee exports; and technical dent and the President-elect. It has also stressed committees have been appointed to recommend the importance of the restoration by Ecuador of measures for the development of hydroelectric a satisfactory relationship with holders of its potential and of port facilities on the Atlantic external bonds. coast. El Salvador Jamaica Fiscal $ 12.545 million 25-year 41/¼? Loan of At the request of the Governments of the 1950: December 14, 1949 to Comisi6n Ejecu- United Kingdom and Jamaica, the Bank sent a tiva Hidroelectrica del Rio Lempa for general survey mission to Jamaica early in March power development project. 1952. The mission consisted of seven experts: Urntil early this year generally satisfactory four members of the Bank's staff, two agricultural progress had been made in the construction of specialists selected in cooperation with the Food the hydroelectric project on the Lempa River. In and Agriculture Organization (which shared the February and March, however, the contractor cost of their services), and a consultant on social encountered difficulties in diverting the river from services who was recruited by the Bank. This the dam site; and excavation and concrete pouring mission remained in the Colony for about two are now about two months behind schedule. months studying development requirements, and is now preparing its report. Giu,temala In July 1951 the Bank submitted to the Govern- Mexico merit the report of a general survey mission which Fiscal $24.1 million 25-year 41/2% Loan of visited Guatemala in the summer of 1950. The 1949: January 6, 1949 to Comisi6n Federal de Electricidad and Nacional Financiera for general program of development proposed by the power development. group was summarized in the Sixth Annual $10 million 1-year 41/2% Loan of Janu- Report. ary 6, 1949 to Comisi6n Federal de Report. Electricidad and Nacional Financiera for T'he Government established a Citizens' Com- power development. (Refunded) mittee to study the mission report and to make Fiscal $26 million 25-year 41/2% Loan of April recommendations for a long-term development 1950: 28, 1950 to Mexican Light and Power program. A member of the Bank's staff spent Fiscal Company, Ltd. for power development. Fscl$10 million (maturity dates 1952-1957) several months in Guatemala assisting the Com- 1951: 31/2% Line of Credit of October 18, mittee and advising the Government on various 1950 to a Consortium of Eight Mexican Banks and Nacional Financiera for finan- aspects of the program proposed in the report. cial assistance to small enterprises. Ex- The Committee endorsed nearly all of the mis- pired on June 30, 1952, with $0.556 siol1's recommendations, and in December 1951 million of loans outstanding. Fiscal $29.7 million 25-year 41/2% Loant of the Government announced that it would include 1952: January 11, 1952 to Comisi6n Federal the proposals of the Committee in its economic de Electricidad and Nacional Financiera program. The Government already is carrying for power development. out some of the measures suggested by the Bank's The Bank has now lent nearly $90 million for mission and endorsed by the citizens' group. the development of electric power in Mexico. By Con1struction of an urgently needed highway 1955, when the projects financed by the most [ 31 1 recent loan to the Federal Electricity Commission aid of the $24.1 million loan of 1949, the Federal and Nacional Financiera are completed, Bank- Electricity Commission is carrying out projects financed projects will have contributed 700,000 which will add 300,000 kw. to its generating kw. to Mexico's generating capacity. Total ca- capacity. Of this total, 155,000 kw. will be in- pacity in 1955 will be 1,850,000 kw., or nearly stalled in the Miguel Aleman hydroelectric system, double the capacity at the time of the Bank's first which supplies part of Mexico City's power; this power loan in 1949. Because of the rapid growth addition to the system is due to be completed in of population and industry, this increase will be 1953. sufficient only to meet the most essential require- In addition to its larger installations, the Com- ments. mission has built diesel-electric plants in several The latest loan for the Federal Electricity Com- areas that formerly had no organized public mission will help. finance two hydroelectric plants, utility supply of power. In these areas the smaller four steam electric plants, and increased distribu- plants have made a striking contribution to pro- tion facilities. The projects are located in widely ductive efficiency and to the well-being of the separated parts of the country. Some of them will people. serve industrial areas, such as Mexico City and The Mexican Light and Power Company, Ltd., Monterrey, where further development is ham- is also making progress on the construction pro- pered by lack of power. Others will help stimulate gram which the Bank helped to finance by its $26 the development of agriculture and industry in million loan of 1950. This program is intended, relatively undeveloped regions, such as Yucatan in combination with expansion of the Commis- and Lower California. sion's Miguel Aleman system, to ease the shortage One of the two hydroelectric plants, at Tingam- of power in the Mexico City area. Mexlight dis- bato in the State of Mexico, will generate 150,000 tributes the power generated in the Miguel kw. This will be the largest power plant in the Aleman system as well as that from its own country. The other hydroelectric plant, at El plants. The loan is helping Mexlight to add Cobano in the State of Michoacan, will generate 152,000 kw. to its generating capacity and to 55,000 kw. This plant will make use of hydraulic install added facilities for transmission and distri- works already constructed for irrigation. It will bution; these additions are expected to be finished supply power for an area where rapid industrial in 1953. development is taking place. In October 1950 the Bank opened a line of One of the steam electric plants (30,000 kw.) credit of $10 million to a consortium of eight will be built in Monterrey, the second most im- leading commercial banks and National Financiera portant industrial city in Mexico, and another for the purpose of assisting industrial develop- (10,000 kw.) at Veracruz, the chief seaport. ment. Specific loans were to be provided through Smaller plants will be built in Lower California the members of the consortium to finance medium- and Yucatan. sized and small industrial projects. As of June 30, In the State of Sonora new distribution facilities 1952, the last day on which the Bank's approval will permit fuller use of the generating stations of loans under the line of credit was to be given, constructed at Ciudad Obreg6n and Guaymas with only six loans, totaling $595,050, had been made; the aid of the Bank's previous loan to the and one of these had been canceled by the Commission. borrower. The construction programs financed by the The disappointing results of this experiment Bank's earlier power loans are now well advanced. can be traced to several causes. First, the line of Some of the projects are already making impor- credit became effective at a time when the foreign- tant contributions to the power supply. With the exchange holdings in Mexico were increasing [ 32 ] rapidly, and the Mexican banks did not feel the engineer, and coordinated the work of other ex- need for this credit; private capital from abroad perts, enlisted by the Government (or by the Bank became more readily available, and the Bank's on the Government's behalf) to advise on prob- line of credit became correspondingly less attrac- lems in their special fields. Consultants included: tive. Second, the requirements of Mexican law a representative of the Corporaci6n de Fomento de regarding loans for private industry are both strict la Producci6n of Chile, who gave advice on the and complex, and have made the practical opera- organization of a development corporation in tion of the line of credit difficult. Third, potential Nicaragua; a staff member of the Federal Reserve borrowers under the line of credit were reluctant Bank of New York, who made recommendations to assume any part of the foreign-exchange risk for fiscal reforms; a Food and Agriculture Organi- involved. zation expert, who made a survey of agricultural needs; and a member of the Bank's own staff, who Niraragua made recommendations on the development of Fiscal $3.5 million 10-year 41/8% Loan of transportation and communications. In addition, 1951: June 7, 1951 for highway construction, the Bank gave leave of absence to a Nicaraguan $1.2 million 7-year 4% Loan of June 7, 1951 to the Banco Nacional de Nicaragua member of its staff in December 1951 so that he for importation of agricultural ma- could serve as Executive Secretary of the National chinery. Fiscal $550,000 10-year 43/8% Loan of Octo- Economic Council. 1952: ber 29, 1951 for construction of grain- The Bank's special representative returned to storage facilities. Washington in May 1952. At the end of the fiscal 'The drying and storage plant to be financed year his report was being reviewed in the Bank by the loan of October 1951 will have a capacity before being submitted formally to the Govern- of 6,000 tons. It will be built at Managua, the ment. Already, however, the Government has largest center of grain consumption. At present, taken a number of steps along the lines suggested Nicaragua loses a substantial portion of her grain by him. It has (1) undertaken the organization through spoilage because of a complete lack of of a National Development Institute to promote modern facilities for drying and storage. Success- the growth of industry and agriculture; (2) started ful operation of the plant would demonstrate the work on a number of projects which will be part advantages that could be obtained by building of a five-year development program; (3) drawn sirnilar plants in other parts of the country. Such up a budget which provides for a marked increase installations would bring greater stability in the of development expenditure; and (4) undertaken supply and price of grain and grain foods, im- major changes in its fiscal, budgetary and tariff provement in the quality of grain marketed for policies. The Government is also studying other local consumption, and an increase in the quantity major administrative changes which will aid in and quality of grain available for export. carrying out the five-year development plan recom- Satisfactory progress has been made under the mended by the Bank's representative. farm machinery and highway construction loans made by the Bank in June 1951. A considerable Panama part of the agricultural machinery has been de- The mission mentioned in the Sixth Annual livered. Procurement of the highway machinery Report visited Panama in September and October is going forward and road construction has begun. 1951. Its report is now being considered by the A special representative of the Bank arrived in Government. Nicaragua in July 1951, to help the Government's The mission concluded that it would be difficult new National Economic Council prepare a de- for Panama to prepare and carry out a compre- velopment program. He was assisted by a Bank hensive development program until various fiscal [ 33 j and administrative reforms had been made. It made, these requirements have not been fully met believed, however, that if these reforms were and the loan has not become effective. actively begun, the Bank could consider the financing of agricultural projects witliout waiting Peru for the preparation of a complete development Fiscal $2.5 million 15-year 41/2% Loan of programn. 1952: January 23, 1952 for improvement of the Port of Callao. Paraguay This loan will be used to provide modern Fis*al $5 million 9-year 4~/8% Loan of Decem- facilities for the handling of general cargo and for Fiscal $5 millionl 9-year 43/87 Loan of Decem- 1952: ber 7, 1951 for the importation of agri- the unloading and storage of bulk grain. These cultural machinery and supplies and cargoes account for about 80 to 85%o of the road-building equipment. freight moving through the port. More efficient This loan will finance imports of farm ma- handling of these cargoes will reduce the turn- chinery and supplies, road-building and mainte- around time of ships, eliminate losses of grain nance equipment, and trucks. Wider distribution from spillage, and effect savings of foreign ex- and use of farm machinery and supplies should change. To assure efficient operation of the port, enable farmers to increase the acreage under the Government is setting up an autonomous Port cultivation and improve yields per acre. Better Authority under the direction of an experienced roads and motorized transport will link isolated Port Administrator. producing areas, and should not only reduce losses Under consideration for Bank financing are of perishable goods between farm and market, projects for highway construction and mainte- but should also induce farmers to raise larger nance, irrigation, purchase of agricultural ma- crops. ciinery, and the provision of agricultural credit. The farm machinery and supplies will be sold During the past year Peru has been actively to farmers either for cash or on credit extended by negotiating settlement of her dollar and sterling the Banco del Paraguay and by the Cr6dito Agri- debts. In November 1951 the Government an- cola de Habilitaci6n (CAH). For farmers who nounced the terms of a readjustment plan for the cannot afford to buy machinery, machinery pools dollar debt, negotiated with the Foreign Bond- will be established by the Ministry of Agriculture holders Protective Council, Inc., of New York. and Livestock. Provision has been made for skilled In April 1952 the Peruvian Congress passed a law operators and effective repair and maintenance authorizing the Government to put the settlement facilities for each pool. into effect. Negotiations have also taken place The road-building and maintenance equipment with the Council of Foreign Bondholders in will be used by the Ministry of Public Works and London on two sterling bond issues but so far Telecommunications for the completion or con- these negotiations have not led to agreement. struction and maintenance of trunk roads in selected farming regions. Trucks will be operated Surinam by the Banco del Paraguay for distributing farm At the request of the Netherlands and Surinam supplies and bringing crops to market. Governments, a general survey mission from the The Loan Agreement required that steps be Bank visited Surinam in November 1951. The taken to strengthen the financial position and six-man mission induded four members of the organization of CAH and to improve accounting staff and two experts nominated by the Food and methods and procedures for controlling the distri- Agriculture Organization. A report of its findings bution of tihe Bank-financed farm implements and has been transmitted to the two Governments. supplies. While substantial progress has been The report contains recomnmendations for the [341 development of agriculture, forestry, fisheries, The report of a joint Bank-FAO tnission was transportation and social services, aimed at presented to the Government in July 1951. The strengthening the country's economy and maintain- report contains a series of recommendations on ing the standard of living of the growing measures to stimulate and improve agricultural population. and livestock production, to reduce costs of pro- The mission recommends a 10-year public in- duction and to improve marketing methods. It vestment program beginning in mid-1952 of stresses the need for expanding research, which 100 million Surinam guilders, on the assumption requires, among other things, the provision of that financing from the Netherlands would be facilities to develop and test new methods for available to the extent of 4 million Surinam increasing productivity. In addition, the report guilders a year and that other external credits recommends a program of increased afforestation could be obtained. The mission outlines a supple- to protect agricultural and grazing land and to meritary program of 30 million guilders, to be increase domestic fuel and lumber supplies. In undertaken to the extent that additional resources, the opinion of the mission, there are also wide technical as well as financial, prove to be available. opportunities for improvement in the transpor- T'he program of public investment recom- tation, storage and marketing of agricultural mended by the mission places primary emphasis products. on improving agricultural production and open- The report outlines suggested changes in the ing up the tropical forests. The mission suggests organization of public agencies concerned with that the program be administered by a develop- agriculture, to assure the services needed for menit board to be created jointly by the Govern- successful execution of the recommended produc- ments of the Netherlands and of Surinam. tion and marketing program. While the mission ldid not attempt to calculate precisely the amount UJruguay of capital investment which would be required to Fascal $33 million 24-year 41/4% Loan of carry out its recommendations, it noted that the 1951: August 25, 1950 to Administraa6n General de las Usinas Elctricas y los period of agricultural prosperity then prevailing Telefonos del Estado for power and was a favorable time to undertake important telephone development program. adjustments and improvements. As a result of delay in making this loan effec- tive and in concluding contracts for the principal Training Center and Seminar sections of the project, the power program will A Latin American Training Center on Agri- probably be about a year behind schedule. Con- culture and Allied Plans and Projects was con- tracts have now been awarded and orders placed ducted in Santiago, Chile from October to Decem- for the 50,000 kw. thermal generating unit at ber 1951, to train government officials in apprais- Montevideo, for the diesel engines for power ing and drawing up agricultural development plants in the interior of the country, and for projects. The Center was sponsored jointly by equipment for the lower part of the western Chile, the United Nations, the Food and Agri- transmission circuit which will serve the south- culture Organization and the Bank. It was western region of Uruguay. The expansion of attended by 68 participants from 20 Latin Ameri- telephone services is proceeding according to can countries. Instructors included two members scledule. of the Bank's staff. [351 Chapter III - Financial Activities and Resources EARNINGS, RESERVES, REPAYMENTS AND DISBURSEMENTS Net income during the fiscal year 1951-52 All repayments of principal due during the amounted to $15,872,883 as compared with yearwerereceived. Theyamountedto$4,239,011. $15,156,947 during the previous fiscal year. In In addition, $1,863,000 was paid by borrowers accordance with a decision of the Executive Direc- to investors to retire portions of loans which had tors and the Board of Governors this net income been sold by the Bank. has been placed in a general reserve against losses Disbursements on loans during the year on loans and guarantees. On June 30, 1952 this amounted to $184,777,004 as compared with reserve amounted to $58,028,100. $77,564,969 during the previous year. Cumulative Loah commissions for the year totaled disbursements to June 30, 1952 amounted to $7,558,906 and, as required by the Articles of $876,504,133. Of this amount $827,364,519 was Agreement, they were credited to the Special repayable in United States dollars. The equivalent Reserve for meeting the Bank's obligations. The of $49,139,614 was repayable in Belgian francs, Special Reserve amounted to $27,684,654 on June Canadian dollars, Danish kroner, French francs, 30, 1952. Total reserves of the Bank on that date Italian lire, Netherlands guilders, Norwegian aggregated $85,712,754. kroner, pounds sterling, Swedish kronor and Swiss francs. Of the $184.8 million disbursed during Gross income for the fiscal year, exclusive of the year, $116.5 million (63%) was spent in the loan commissions, was $35,188,744. Of this United States and $68.3 million in other countries. amount, loan income totaled $26,587,555, in- The geographical distribution of total expendi- come from investments, $8,500,740 and other tures financed by the Bank through June 30, 1952 income, $100,449. Gross expenses increased is as follows: from $13,045,595 in the 1950-51 fiscal year to Amount $19315,861 in the past fiscal year. The increase (Expressed in resulted almost entirely from increases in inter- A1rea of Expenditure millions of U. S. $) United States ............ 622.1 est rates and other costs of the Bank's borrow- Europe .125.0 ings. More and more of the loans made by the Latin America ........ . ............ 62.5 Bank are being financed out of borrowed funds, Canada . 61.7 Near East ..............2.5 as nearly all of the capital subscribed by mem- Africa .2.5 bers and released for lending has been com- Far East ..2 mitted. Total . $876.5 [ 36 ] FUNDS AVAILABLE FOR LENDING Fands available to the Bank for lending on duras, Mexico and Paraguay have released all or June 30, 1952, in U. S. dollar equivalent, are sum- part of their 18%o capital subscriptions for the marized below: purchase of goods in their respective territories. 2% paid.in portinofubTo date borrowers have not made any purchases 2% paid-in portion of subscription of all members ............ $165,475,000 in these countries, and it is unlikely that they will 18% portion of subscriptions do so in the near future. The amounts released made avalilable by: by them therefore have not been included in the Canada ...... 53,356,000 statement of funds available for lending. Other Denmark ..... 1,066,000 members have expressed a willingness to consider France ....... 23,911,000 Italy ........ 1,199,000 releases from their 18°19 subscriptions when bor- Netherlands ... 300,000 rowers propose purchases in their countries. South Africa 2,800,000 Canada, the United Kingdom and the United Sweden ...... 150,000 States have agreed that the Bank may relend all United Kingdom 5,461,000 their 18% funds which are repaid by borrowers United States . .571,500,000 United Stts' or recovered through sales from portfolio. Canada Total ............. 663,443,000 and the United States, and to a limited extent Total available capital subscriptions. . $828,918,000 France and the United Kingdom, have agreed Funds available from operations ..... 59,000,000 that funds released by them may be converted into Funds available from sale of bonds . . 499,859,000 Funds available from sale of loans various currencies to cover the cost of goods pur- and principal repayments ........ 66,717,000 chased in other countries. Gross total available funds ........ $1,454,494,000 There are still large amounts of 18%7 currency Loans disbursed .... .......... 876,504,000 which the Bank has not yet received permission Excess of available funds over loan dis. to use but which could be of the greatest ad- bursements .$ 57!,990,000 vantage in its lending operations. Releases of these funds would enable the Bank to expand its This table includes only those funds which have activities in countries which have a limited ability been used by the Bank or which are expected to to repay dollar obligations but have adequate be used without further approval of members. In earnings to service external debt in other cur- addition, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Hon- rencies. SALES OF SECURITIES Direct obligations of the Bank sold to investors million. The lendable resources of the Bank were during the year amounted to $175.3 million. This also replenished by sales of bonds from its port- is the largest volume of the Bank's bonds issued in folio, equivalent to about $23.4 million. any single fiscal year since 1947-48, when the There has been an encouraging broadening of initial issues, totaling $250 million, were offered the market for the Bank's obligations, with more in the United States market. Sold during the year general acceptance of the bonds by large were two issues in the United States in a total institutional investors in the United States and amount of $150 million; one issue in Switzer- institutional and individual investors in other land in the amount of Sw fr 50,000,000, the countries. It is estimated that of the total direct equivalent of approximately $11.6 million; and and guaranteed obligations outstanding in an an issue in Canada amounting to Canadian $15 amount equivalent to approximately $536.7 mil- [ 37 ] lion, about $130 million is held by investors out- a Canadian syndicate of investment dealers and side the United States. chartered banks headed by the Dominion Securi- Conditions in the United States money market ties Corpn. Limited, A. E. Ames & Co., Limited, were unsettled during the year, with intermittent and Wood, Gundy & Company Limited. The periods of strength and weakness complicating bonds were heavily oversubscribed. the task of large-scale financing. The general On May 14, 1952 the Bank sold an issue of trend, however, was toward higher interest rates, $50 million 33A%8 Twenty-Three Year Bonds of and this increased the costs of long-term borrow- 1952, due May 15, 1975, to an underwriting group ing to the U. S. Treasury and to other borrowers, of 119 commercial banks and investment banking both public and private. The Bank, despite the firms managed jointly by Morgan Stanley & Co. further seasoning of its bonds and a widening and The First Boston Corporation. The bonds, distribution, has likewise had to pay higher inter- offered to the public at 981/2, were in strong est rates on its bonds, and there has been a cor- demand. The direct, negotiated sale to under- responding rise in the rates of interest on its loans. writers was a method not previously used by the Bank in the sale of its bonds in the United New Issues of the Bank's Bonds States market. The initial issues offered in 1947 In the Sixth Annual Report it was noted that were sold on an agency basis through approxi- arrangements had been completed for the first mately 1,700 security dealers; the next issue was public offering of the Bank's bonds in Switzerland. sold early in 1950 through competitive bidding to On July 3, 1951 a syndicate of leading Swiss a group of commercial banks and investment bank- banks publicly offered at par Sw fr 50,000,000 ing firms; and for the two issues sold in 1951, the (approximately $11.6 million) of the Bank's sponsorship agency method was used but with the 31/27% Twelve-Year Bonds due August 1, 1963. number of participating banks and investment The issue was heavily oversubscribed. The bank- firms greatly reduced. The several methods have ing syndicate was headed by The Swiss Bank been employed to determine which was best suited Corporation, of Basle, the Credit Suisse, of Zurich, for the most efficient distribution and which would and the Union Bank of Switzerland, of Zurich. best serve the interests both of the investor and On September 12, 1951 the Bank offered in the the Bank. The results achieved in the last issue United States a new issue at par of $100 million proved highly satisfactory. 31/4% Thirty-Year Bonds of 1951 due October 1, All of the Bank's United States dollar bond 1981. The issue was offered through a Sponsoring issues are listed on the New York Stock Exchange Group of 32 leading United States commercial and certain of them are also listed on the ex- banks and investment banking firms managed changes in Amsterdam, Antwerp, Brussels, Istan- jointly by The First National Bank of Chicago and bul, Mexico City and Paris. The Sterling 31/2's Halsey, Stuart & Co. Inc. The distribution of of 1966/71 are listed in London and the Swiss the bonds was accomplished through a large sell- Franc 31/2's of 1963 are quoted on the stock ing group which included three European and two exchanges of Basle, Zurich, Geneva and Berne. Canadian participants. United States savings banks pension and trust funds and life insurance com- Sales of Bonds from the Bank's Portfolio panies were the principal purchasers. Canadian, Sales of the obligations of the Bank's borrowers European and Asiatic institutions also purchased continued to increase in the fiscal year. During an impressive amount. the period, the Bank sold the equivalent of On February 5, 1952 a new issue at par of Can $23,359,192 principal amount of borrowers' obli- $15 million 4%o Ten-Year Canadian dollar bonds gations, of which $12,950,001 carried its uncondi- of 1952 due February 1, 1962 was offered through tional guarantee and $10,409,191 were sold with- [38] out recourse to the Bank. Obligations of 16 bor- In the United States, mutual savings banks, life rowers were sold either with or without the Bank's insurance companies, and pension and trust funds guarantee. Included among the sales without the are the principal investors in the Bank's bonds. Bank's guarantee is the participation to the extent Each of these three groups holds approximately of $3.5 million by an American banking institu- 20%o of the outstanding total. Another 20% is tion in the loan by the Bank to KLM Royal held by commercial banks and other investors. Dutch Airlines. Cumulative sales of the secu- The remaining 20% is owned by investors out- rities of borrowers from the Bank's portfolio side the United States; this includes the major to June 30, 1952 expressed in United States dol- portion of the Bank's obligations not denomi- lars were $56,376,688, consisting of $41,499,001 nated in United States dollars, equivalent to sold with the Bank's guarantee and $14,877,687 about $50 million; and an estimated $69 million without. of direct obligations of the Bank payable in United States dollars. Among the non-United States pur- Broadening Market for the Bank's Bonds chasers are the central banking institutions of There is evidence of an expanding market for 12 member nations, which have some of the the Bank's bonds in the United States. During largest holdings of the Bank's obligations. In the fiscal year some large institutional investors addition, approximately $11 million of the obliga- macde their first purchases of the Bank's bonds, tions of borrowers, to which the Bank has added others re-established earlier positions, and many its unconditional guarantee of principal and inter- added substantially to their holdings. est, are held outside the United States. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND REPORTS Appendices A through G provide a balance ment of loans up to the end of the fiscal year, an sheet showing the financial position of the Bank opinion of the auditor, and other schedules giving as of June 30, 1952, a comparative statement of details about the assets and the capital structure income and expenses for the fiscal years ended of the Bank. Jun-e 30, 1951 and June 30, 1952, a complete state- [39] Chapter IV - Management and Organization Personnel and Organization for the fifth annual course, which begins in Mr. Chauncey G. Parker, Director of Adminis- January 1953. tration, returned to the Bank on April 16, 1952 The Public Finance Training Program has made on completion of duty in Germany with the training available to an income tax official from United States Government. Since January 1, 1951 Iraq and to central bank officials from Thailand he had held the post of Assistant U. S. High aod iran. This program will be continued in the Commissioner. c On November 1, 1951 the Staff Office was redesignated the Technical Assistance and Liaison Staf Retirement Plan Department and Mr. Richard H. Demuth was Total assets of the staff retirement plan on named Director. The new department is respon- December 31, 1951 were $1,704,000, an increase sible for the Bank's technical assistance activities of $440,000 over the previous year. Of the 445 and for liaison with the United Nations and other participants, 427 are presently employed. The specialized agencies. average yield on the purchase price of securities During the fiscal year there have been 76 ap- held on December 31, 1951 was 3.83%7o per pointments to the permanent staff of the Bank annum, as compared with a yield of 3.61%o on and 67 terminations. As of June 30, 1952, the December 31, 1950. There were no amendments staff of the Bank consisted of 433 regular mem- to the plan during the year. bers from 31 countries. Administrative Budget Training Program There is attached as Appendix H the Adminis- The fourth course of the Junior Professional trative Budget of the Bank for the fiscal year end- and Administrative Training Program began in ing June 30, 1953. This budget has been prepared January 1952 with trainees from Australia, Aus- by the President and approved by the Executive tria, Chile, Egypt, France, India, South Africa. Directors in accordance with Section 19 of the and Syria. To date, citizens of 28 of the Bank's By-Laws. A special report on the budget is being member countries have participated in this pro- submitted to the Board of Governors at the Annual gram. Selection is now being made of candidates Meeting. [40 1 Chapter V - Miscellaneous Relations with Other ings of the Technical Assistance Board of the International Organizations United Nations and of the Technical Assistance During the year the Bank continued to main- Committee, which reviews the Board's activities tai c:Lose relations With the International Mone- on behalf of the Economic and Social Council. tary clFseurelationsdwith the Uni Nationsand Mote- As the international technical assistance programs tary Fund, the United Nations and otherexperts are international organizations. As in the past, repre- sen oupbnted salized agncies and bte sentatives of the Bank attended meetings of the sent out by the specialized agencies and by the UnitedS Nations General Assembly and the Eco- United Nations Technical Assistance Administra- nomic and Social Council. In addition, the Bank tion, there have been increasing consultation and womicasepesntd at meetin. of othe tion,thernatn interchange of information between these experts wagreniesen sbets of intert o .th a and Bank personnel both at headquarters and in agencies when subjects of interest to the Bank the field. were discussed. At the Thirteenth Session of the Economic and The joint Bank-FAO mission to Chile to make Social Council in Geneva, the Bank's representa- recommendations for agricultural development tives participated actively in the discussion of has been mentioned in another part of this Report. various proposals put forward to aid in the financ- Agricultural and forestry experts for the Bank's ing of development in the less developed coun- general survey missions have continued to be tries. The President of the Bank addressed the selected in cooperation with the Food and Agri- Economic Committee of the General Assembly in culture Organization, which has also shared the Paris in December 1951 during the Committee's cost of their services. The World Health Organi- consiseration of problems of economic develo'- zation has nominated the public health specialist cons(eatin o prbles o ecnomc dvelp- when this field has been included in a mission's ment. The President also presented a report on studd. the Bank's activities to the Fourteenth Session of study. the Economic and Social Council in New York, As mentioned earlier, during the year the Bank and spoke for the Bank during the Council's joined with the Food and Agriculture Organization consideration of the report prepared by the Bank's and the United Nations in sponsoring two training staff on the proposal for an International Finance centers on agricultural and allied projects, one at Corporation. Ankara, Turkey, for Mediterranean countries, During the course of the year representatives of and one at Santiago, Chile, for Latin American the Bank also attended meetings of the United countries. Nations regional commissions and of the Consul- tative Committee on Economic Development in Membership and Subscription South and Southeast Asia. The Bank also kept in Sweden (subscription $100 million) and Burma close touch with the Organization of American (subscription $15 million) became members of States. the Bank on August 31, 1951 and January 3, 1952, The President of the Bank attended several respectively, bringing the membership to 51. The meetings of the United Nations Administrative Bank's total subscribed capital was $8,453.5 mil- Committee on Coordination, and staff members lion as of June 30, 1952. The application for attended meetings of its subsidiary committees. membership by the Hashemite Kingdom of the The Bank was represented at numerous meet- Jordan (subscription $3 million) was approved [ 41 ] by the Board of Governors on April 21, 1952, (d) Fourth Regular Election of Executive and that country has until September 30, 1952 Directors. to accept membership in the Bank. The appli- In the absence of new developments, no report is cations by the Federal Republic of Germany (sub- being submitted on the Advisory Council. scription $330 million) and by Japan (subscription Appendices $250 million) were approved by the Board of Governors on May 28, 1952 and those countries In addition to Appendices A through 1-1 con- have until August 15, 1952 to accept membership taining the financial statements and reports and in the Bank. the administrative budget of the Bank, there are also included for the information of the Governors Additional Reports to Board of Governors the following appendices: In addition to this Annual Report, reports are Appendix I - Voting Power and Subscriptions being submitted to the Board of Governors at of Member Countries as of the Seventh Annual Meeting on the following June 30, 1952. subjects: Appendix J - Governors and Alternates as of June 30, 1952. (a) Administrative Budget. Appendix K -Executive Directors and Alter- (b) Allocation of Income by Executive Direc- nates and their Voting Power tors to Reserve. as of June 30, 1952. (c) Regulations Relating to Executive Direc- Appendix L - Principal Officers of the Bank tors and Alternates, as of June 30, 1952. [42] APPENDICES I I . 0 I APPENDIX A Balance Shed EXPRESSED IN UNITED STATES CURRENC ASSETS Due from Banks and Other Depositories (See APPENDIX C) Member currencies, including $6,121,409 United States Dollars Unrestricted ............. .................... $ 7,935,286 Subject to restrictions-NOTE B ................ . 129,781,910 $ 137,717,196 Non-member currency .13,398,628 $ 151,115,824 Investment Securities UJnited States Government obligations ($463,004,400 face amount; at cost less amortized premium) ............ ..................... $462,610,080 Canadian Government obligations (Can $10,000,000 face amount; at cost plus accumu- lated discount) .......... ................... 9,062,516 lJnited Kingdom Government obligations (£3,900,000 face amount; at cost) ................ 10,855,916 $ 482,528,512 Accrued interest .3,958,870 486,487,382 Receivable on Account of Subscribed Capital (See APPENDIX E) Receivable in United States currency Calls on subscription to capital stock-NOTE C.... $ 3,595,000 Receivable in other member currencies-NOTE B Non-negotiable, non-interest-bearing, demand notes.. 792,398,866 795,993,866 Loans Outstanding Held by Bank (See APPENDIX D) -NOTES D AND E 1,213,241,588 Accrued Interest, Commitment and Service Charges on Loans-NOTE E 6,544,203 Other Receivables and Other Assets Receivable from participant in loan (See APPENDIX D, NOTE 2) .$ 3,500,000 Miscellaneous receivables and other assets 531,428 4,031,428 Special Reserve Fund Assets-NOTE F Due from Banks-member currency-United States $ 41,323 Investment securities-United States Government obliga- tions ($25,740,600 face amount; at cost) 25,740,600 Accrued loan commissions-NOTE E ............... 1,902,731 27,684,654 Staff Retirement Plan Assets (Segregated and held in trust) 1,938,220 Total Assets $2,687,037,165 [44] I - I I I APPENDIX A -June 30, 1952 See Note A of Notes to Financial Statements, Appendix F. LIABILITIES, RESERVES AND CAPITAL Liabilities Accounts payable and accrued expenses, including $4,883,880 bond interest ....................... $ 5,373,180 lLjndisbursed balance of loans (See APPENDIX D) On loans held by Bank ......................... $ 401,081,338 On loans represented by obligations of borrowers sold under guarantee-NOTE D ............... 2,373,087 403,454,425 Funded debt-NOTE G Amount payable in United States Dollars 2%S Serial Bonds of 1950, due 1953-62 .......... $100,000,000 3% Twenty-Five Year Bonds of 1947, due 1972.. 150,000,000 3%/ Twenty-Five Year Bonds of 1951, due 1976.. 50,000,000 31/4% Thirty Year Bonds of 1951, due 1981 ..... 100,000,000 33/8% Twenty-Three Year Bonds of 1952, due 1975 50,000,000 $ 450,000,000 Amount payable in Canadian Dollars 4% Ten Year Bonds of 1952, due 1962 (Can $15,000,000) ............................ 13,636,364 Amount payable in Pounds Sterling 31½2% Twenty Year Stock of 1951, due 1971 (£5,000,000) ............................ 14,000,000 Amount payable in Swiss Francs 21/2% Serial Bonds of 1948, due 1953-54 (Sw fr 17,000,000) .......... ................... $ 3,955,788 21/2% Serial Bonds of 1950, due 1953-56 (Sw fr 28,500,000) .......... ................... 6,631,763 31/2% Twelve Year Bonds of 1951, due 1963 (Sw fr 50,000,000) ....................... 11,634,671 22,222,222 499,858,586 Bonds called for redemption not presented ........... $ 2,102 Less funds on deposit with Fiscal Agent therefor ... . 2,102 Reserves for Losses Special reserve-NOTE F ........................ $ 27,684,654 General (Supplemental) reserve-NOTE H .......... 58,028,100 85,712,754 Staff Retirement Plan Reserve .... 1,938,220 Capital (See APPENDIX E) Capital stock Authorized 100,000 shares of $100,000 par value each Subscribed 84,535 shares ...................... $8,453,500,000 Less-Uncalled portion of subscriptions-NOTE I 6,762,800,000 1,690,700,000 Contingent Liability-OBLIGATIONS OF BORROW- ERS OUTSTANDING SOLD UNDER GUARANTEE -NOTE D ....... $34,484,914 Total Liabilities, Reserves and Capital $2,687,037,165 [45] APPENDIX B Comparative Statement of Income and Expenses For the Fiscal Years EndedJune 30, 1951 and June 30, 1952 EXPRESSED IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY See Note A of Notes to Financial Statements, Appendix F July 1-June 30 1950-1951 19,5 1 -1 9 s2 Income Interest earned on investments ................................ ............ $ 6,116,319 $ 8.500,740 Income from loans: Interest ......................... .............. 19,926,371 23,669,009 Commitment charges .............. .................................... 2,053,197 2,838,343 Commissions ......... .............................................. 6,388,543 7,558,906 Service Cbarges ......... . 88,207 80,203 Other income ......... ... . .......... 18,448 100,449 Gross Income ................. ............................... $34,591,085 $42,747,650 Deduct-Amount equivalent to commissions appropriated to Special Reserve- NOTE F ...................................... 6,388,543 7,558,906 Gross Income Less Reserve Deduction ............................ $28,202,542 $35,188,744 Expenses Administrative expenses: Personal services . .................................................... $ 2,778,456 $ 3,132,058 Expense allowance-Executive Directors and Alternates ....................... 4,317 5,144 Fees and compensation ................................................. 406,976 318,832 Representation ... ...................................................... 57,589 56,092 Travel ..................... 597,011 538,211 Supplies and material ............................ ..................... 45,060 42,574 Rents and utility services ................................................ 335,887 397,770 Communication services .............. .................................. 106,860 114,332 Furniture and equipment . .............................................. 29,513 33,586 Motor vehides .............. ......................................... 10,843 4,907 Books and library services ............................................... 56,554 69,463 Printing ............................................................. 84,018 67,765 Contributions to staff benefits ............................................ 300,322 336,559 Insurance ............................................................ 29,040 16,704 Handling and storage of gold ................ 2,080 Other expenses . ...................................................... 1,001 1,281 Total Administrative Expenses ......... -- ....................... $ 4,843,447 $ 5,137,358 Interest on bonds . ...................................................... 7,248,276 11,793,631 Bond registration, issuance and other financial expenses ......................... 953,872 2,346,692 Exchange adjustments ..38,180 Gross Expenses .......... .................. $13,045,595 $19,315,861 Net Income-Appropriated to General Reserve Against Losses on Loans and Guaran- tees-NOTE H . ....................................................... $15,156,947 $15,872,883 [46] APPENDIX C Statement of Currencies Held by the Bank- June 30, 1952 See Note A of Notes to Financial Statements, Appendix F Amount Expressed Total Expressed Unit of In Member Currency in Unitled S.tates Currency (Restricted) Rate of Exchange Dollars Member Currencies Australia Pound 159,840 $ = o.4464 $ 358,043 Austria Schilling 1,912,225 $ = 21.36 89,524 Belgium Franc 61,544,567 $= 50.00 1,230,891 Bolivia Boliviano 737,410 $ = 60.00 12,290 Brazil Cruzeiro 349,133,960 $ = 18.50 18,872,106 B,urma Rupee 128,542 $ = 4.7619 26,994 C:anada Dollar 43,605 $ = 1.10 39,641 Ceylon Rupee 134,589 $= 4.7619 28,264 C:hile Peso 194,518,726 $ = 31.00 6,274,798 China Gold Yuan 21,581,589 $ = 20.00 1,079,079 C:olombia Peso 12,240,243 $ = 1.950 6,277,109 C;osta Rica Col6n 1,996,515 $= 5.615 355,568 Cuba Peso 59,047 $ = 1.00 59,047 C;zechoslovakia Koruna 11,062,883 $ = 50.00 221,258 Denmark Krone 3,218,333 X = 6.907 465,943 Dominican Republic Peso 1,241 $ = 1.00 1,24l Ecuador Sucre 8,598,314 $= 15.00 573,221 Egypt Pound 21,632 $= 0.3482 62,118 El Salvador Col6n 436,740 $= 2.50 174,696 Ethiopia Dollar 1,290,651 $= 2.4845 519,487 Finland Markka 11572,329,035 $ = 230.00 6,836,213 France Franc 1,377,368,986 $ = 349.6 3,939,843 Greece Drachma 22,500,000,000 $ = 5,000.00 4,500,000 ciuatemala Quetzal 350,432 $ = 1.00 350,432 Flonduras Lempira 355,400 $ = 2.00 177,700 Iceland Kr6na 2,885,486 $ - 16.2857 177,179 India Rupee 3,140,799 $ 4.7619 659,568 Iran Rial 1,570,319 $ - 32.25 48,692 Iraq Dinar 4,035 $ = 0.3571 11,298 Italy Lira 7,200,757,169 $= 225.00 32,003,365 Lebanon Pound 1,762,886 $ = 2.1915 804,427 Luxembourg Franc 768,189 $= 50.00 15,363 Mexico Peso 100,956,670 $ = 8.65 11,671,291 Netherlands Guilder 1,452,793 $= 3.80 382,314 Nicaragua C6rdoba 688,951 $ = 5.00 137,790 Norway Krone 945,267 $= 7.1429 132.337 Pakistan Rupee 531,810 $= 3.3085 160,740 Planama Balboa 34,495 $ = 1.00 34,495 E'araguay Guarani 1,439,362 $ = 6.00 239.894 Pleru Sol 81,778 $ = 6.50 12,581 E'hilippine Republic Peso 2,383,000 $ = 2.00 1,191,500 Sweden Krona 92,942,927 $ = 5.1732 17,966,200 Syria Pound 4,966 $= 2.1915 2,266 1Thailand Baht 149,497 $ = 12.50 11,960 Turkey Lira 128,103 $= 2.80 45,751 tJnion of South Africa Pound 59,945 S = 0.3571 167,847 UJnited Kingdom Pound 341,438 $= 0.3571 956.027 UJnited States Dollar - - - S = -- tiruguay Peso 2,844,619 $= 1.519 1,872,631 Venezuela Bolivar 4,564,421 $ = 3.35 1,362,514 Yugoslavia Dinar 2,156,512,242 $ = 300.00 7.188.374 Restricted Currency (NOTE B) $129,781,910 Unrestricted Currency (Belgium, Canada, United Kingdom and United States) 7.935.286 5137,717,196 Nom-Member Currency (Switzerland) 13,398.628 Total S 151 -,115,824 [ 47 APPENDIX D Statement of Loait EXPRESSED IN UNITED STATES CURRENC Loan Date of Number Borrower and Guarantor Program or Project Loan Agreement Maturiti, 29 AU Australia Equipment and materials for development Aug. 22, 1950 1955-19' 14 BE Belgium Equipment for steel and power industries Mar. 1, 1949 1953-19( 48 BE Equipment and materials for 10-year De- velopment Plan of the Belgian Congo Sept. 13, 1951 1957-19i Belgium (Guarantor) 47 BE Belgian Congo Equipment and materials for 10-year De- velopment Plan of the Belgian Congo Sept. 13, 1951 1957.-19: *65 BR Brazil Railway rehabilitation June 27, 1952 1955-19( Brazil (Guarantor) 11 BR Brazilian Traction (First Installment) Electric power development and telephone equipment Jan. 27, 1949 1953-19 11 BR-S Brazilian Traction (Second Installment) Electric power development Jan. 18, 1951 1955-19- 25 BR Sao Francisco Hidro Elec. Co. Electric power development May 26, 1950 1954-19' *64 BR Comissao Estadual de Energia Eletrica Electric power development June 27, 1952 1957-19 Chile (Guarantor) 5 CH Fomento and Endesa Electric power development Mar. 25, 1948 1953-19( 6 CH Fomento Agricultural development Mar. 25, 1948 1950-19' 49 CH Fomento Exploration and use for irrigation of under- ground water resources Oct. 10, 1951 1955-i9( 43 CO Colombia Highway construction and rehabilitation Apr. 10, 1951 1954-19( Colombia (Guarantor) 18 CO Caja de Cr6dito Agricultural development Aug. 19, 1949 1952-191 38 CO CHIDRAL Electric power development Nov. 2, 1950 1954-19- 39 CO Caldas Hidro-Elec. Co. Electric power development Dec. 28, 1950 1952-19- 54 CO Hidro6lectrica del Rio Lebrija Electric power development Nov. 13, 1951 1954-19 3 DE Denmark Equipment and materials for reconstruction and development Aug. 22, 1947 1953-19- El Salvador (Guzarantor) 22 ES Comisi6n del Rio Lempa Electric power development Dec. 14, 1949 1954-19 31 ET Ethiopia Highway rehabilitation Sept. 13, 1950 1956-19- 32 ET Foreign exchange for Development Bank Sept. 13, 1950 1956-199 *42 ET Rehabilitation and extension of telephone and telegraph systems Feb. 19, 1951 1956-iT 21 Fl Finland Equipment for timber production Oct. 17, 1949 1950-19' Finland (Guarantor) 16 FI Bank of Finland Electric power development and equipment for wood products industries and lime- stone powder production Aug. 1, 1949 1953-19( *61 FI Bank of Finland Electric power, wood products industries and agricultural development Apr. 30, 1952 1955-19, [48 ] APPENiDIX D -June 30, 1952 See Notes A, D and E of Notes to Financial Statements, Appendix F Interest L nlisnbursed Rate Original Loans Cancellations Principal Obligations Effective Loans Principal Balance of (Including Principal Not Yet and Repayments of Borrowers Outstanding Amount Effective Commission) Amount Effective Reftundings to Bank Sold by Bank Held by Bank Disbursed Loans' 4,/4% $100,000,000 $ - $ - $ - $ - $ 100,000,000 $ 64,707,067 $ 35,292,933 4Y4 % 16,000,000 - - - 16,000,000 - 13,626,913 2,373,087 4'¸% 30,000,000 - - - - 30,000,000 4,575,000 25,425,000 4Y27% 40,000,000 - - - 40,000,000 6,101,000 33,899,000 4> 5s°o 12,500,000 12,500,000 - - - - 4Y2% 75,000,000 - - - 3,379,632 71,620,368 68,835,530 6,164,470 4Y4% 15,000,000 - - - - 15,000,000 8,458,441 6,541,559 4Y4% 15,000,000 - - - - 15,000,000 10,116,728 4,883,272 434% 25,000,000 25,000,000 - - - - - 414%7c 13,500,000 - - - - 13,500,000 7,706,498 5,793,502 3/4% 2,500,000 - - 518,000 991,000 991,000 2,500,000 - 4Y8% 1,300,000 - - - - 1,300,000 347,896 952,104 3,'8/%o 16,500,000 - - - - 16,500,000 7,950,347 8,549,653 3 f i2% 5,000,000 - 74,559 500,000 1,180,000 3,245,441 4,925,441 - 4%, 3,530,000 - - - - 3,530,000 1,629,260 1,900,740 4% 2,600,000 - - 95,000 2,505,000 2,172,453 427,547 4Y;% 2,400,000 - - -- 2,400,000 1,342,079 1,057,921 414 % 40,000,000 - - - - 40,000,000 40,000,000 - 414% 12,545,000 - - - 12,545,000 5,620,140 6,924,860 4% 5,000,000 - - - - 5,000,000 3,721,299 1,278,701 4% 2,000,000 - - - - 2,000,000 66,555 1,933,445 4% 1,500,000 1,500,000 - - - - - - 3%' 2,300,000 - 197,869 2,102,131 - - 2,102,131 - 4% 12,500,000 - - - 1,559,010 10,940,990 10,467,451 2,032,549 43Y4 % 20,000,000 20,000,000 - - - - - - (Continued) [49] APPENDIX D Statement of Loanis EXPRESSED IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY Loan Date of Number Borrower and Guarantor Program or Project Loan Agreement Maturities France (Guarantor) 1 FR Credit National Equipment and materials for reconstruction and development May 9, 1947 1952-1977 46 IC Iceland Electric power development June 20, 1951 1956-1973 53 IC Agricultural development Nov. 1, 1951 1956-1973 17 IN India Railway rehabilitation Aug. 18, 1949 1950-1964 19 IN Agricultural development Sept. 29, 1949 1952-1956 23 IN Electric power development Apr. 18, 1950 1955-1970 26 IRQ Iraq Construction of a flood-control project June 15, 1950 1956-1965 Italy (Guarantor) *50 IT Cassa per II Mezzogiorno Equipment and materials for 10-year De- veflopment Plan of Southern Italy Oct. 10, 1951 1956-1976 4 LU Luxembourg Equipment for steel mill and railroads Aug. 28, 1947 1949-1972 Mexico (Guarantor) 12 ME Financiera and Comision Electric power development Jan. 6, 1949 1953-1973 13 ME Financiera and Comisi6n Electric power development Jan. 6, 1949 July 1, 1950 24 ME Mexican Light and Power Co., Ltd. Electric power development Apr. 28, 1950 1953-19. s 33 ME Consortium of Eight Mexican Banks Foreign exchange for small private enter- and Nacional Financiera prises Oct. 18, 1950 1952-1957 56 ME Financiera and Comisi6n Electric power development Jan. 11, 1952 1955-1977 2 NE Netherlands Equi ment and materials for reconstruction ans development Aug. 7, 1947 1954-1972 2a NE Equipment and materials for reconstruction and development (Supplemental Loan Agreement) May 25, 1948 1953-1954 Netherlands (Guarantor) 7, 7a NE N.V. Stoomvaart Mij. "Nederland' Purchase of S.S. Raki and S.S. Roebiah July 15, 1948 1949-1958 .S NE N.V. Vereenigde Schvrt. Mij. Purchase of S.S. Almkerk July 15, 1948 1949-1958 9 NE N.V. Ned.-Amer. Stoomvaart-Mij. Purchase of S.S. Alblasserdijk July 15, 1948 1949-1958 "Holland-Amerika Lijn" 10, 10a N.V. Rotterdamsche Lloyd Purchase of S.S. Friesland and S.S. Drente July 15, 1948 1949-1958 NTE 15 NE Herstelbank Equipment for reconstruction and modern- ization of particular industrial plants July 26, 1949 1952-1964 59 NE KLM Royal Dutch Airlines Purchase of aircraft Mar. 20, 1952 1954-1958 45 NI Nicaragua Highway construction J-e - 7, 1951 1954-1961 52 NI Construction of grain storage facilities Oct. 29, 1951 1954-1962 Nicaragua (Guarantor) 44 NI Banco Nacional de Nicaragua Agricultural development June 7, 1951 1954-1958 60 PAK Pakistan Railway rehabilitation Mar. 27, 1952 1954-1967 *62 PAK AgriculturaL development June 13, 1952 1954-1959 *55 PA Paraguay Agricultural development Dec. 7, 1951 1954-1960 [ 50] APPENDIX D -June 30, 1952 (Continued) See Notes A, D and E of Notes to Financial Statements, Appendix F Interest Undisbursed Rate Original Loans Cancellations Principal Obligations Effective Loans Principal Balance of (Including Principal Not Yet and Repayments of Borrowers Outstanding Amount Effective Commission) Amount Effective Refunudings to Bank Sold by Bank Held by Bank Disbursed Loans' 4Y4%lo $250,000,000 $ - $ - $ - $ 5,335,000 $ 244,665,000 $250,000,000 $ - 4y8% 2,450,000 - - - - 2,450,000 1,159,381 1,290,61S 4Y2% 1,008,000 - - - - 1,008,000 457,157 550,842 4% 34,000,000 - 1,200,000 3,484,518 2,811,100 26,504,382 32,800,000 - 3Y2% 10,000,000 - 1,500,000 850,000 2,505,000 5,145,000 4,205,830 4,294,17( 4% 18,500,000 - - - - 18,500,000 8,965,307 9,534,692 33Y4%c 12,800,000 - - - 12,800,000 3,834,435 8,965,56W 4Y-% 10,000,000 10,000,000 - - - - - 4Y4%i° 12,000,000 - 238,017 171,983 1,007,000 10,583,000 11,761,983 4'2% 24,100,000 - - - 794,600 23,305,400 15,522,586 8,577,41' 4'2%0 10,000,000 - 10,000,000 (Refunding) - - - 4'2% 26,000,000 - - - 250,000 25,750,000 19,576,710 6,423,11) 3Y2% 10,000,000 - 9,443,997 13,650 - 542,353 222,090 333,91: 4'Y;% 29,700,000 - - - - 29,700,000 594,771 29,105,22, 4Y4% 191,044,212 - - - 820,000 190,224,212 191,044,212 4Y4% 3,955,788 - - - 3,025,015 930,773 3,955,788 3Y16% 4,000,000 - - - 4,000,000 - 4,000,000 3/9 lC/o 2,000,000 - - - 2,000,000 - 2,000,000 33%6% 2,000,000 - - - 2,000,000 - 2,000,000 3Yfi/6% 4,000,000 - - - 4,000,000 - 4,000,000 4% 15,000,000 - 7,070,000 - 849,331 7,080,669 5,563,815 2,366,18 4Y8% 7,000,000 - - - 3,500,0002 3,500,000 - 7,000,00 4'8% 3,500,000 - - 3,500,000 1,012,508 2,487,49 438% 550,000 - _ - 550,000 104,568 445,43 4% 1,200,000 - - - - 1,200,000 734,367 465,63 4~i% 27,200,000 - - - - 27,200,000 710,650 26,489,35 4Y8% 3,250,000 3,250,000 - - - - - - 43g% 5,000,000 5,000,000 - - - - (Continue4 [ 51 APPENDIX D Statement of Loals EXPRESSED IN UNITED S' T 'EAS Cl RREN C Loan Date of Number Borrower and Guarantor Program or Project Loan Agreement AlaIzaurirs 57 PE Peru Port development Jan. 23, 1952 1954-1967 40 SA South Africa Expansion of transport facilities Jan. 23, 1951 1956-1965. South Africa (Guarantor) 41 SA Electricity Supply Commission Electric power development Jan. 23, 1951 1954-1970 35 TH Thailand Railway rehabilitation Oct. 27, 1950 1954-1966 36 TH Irrigation Oct. 27, 1950 1956-197r 37 TH Port construction and development Oct. 27, 1950 1954-1966 27 TU Turkey Construction of grain storage facilities July 7, 1950 1954-1968 28 TU Port construction and development July 7, 1950 1956-1975 *63 TU Electric power development, irrigation and flood control June 18, 1952 1957-1977 Turkey (Guarantor) 34 TU Industrial Development Bank of Turkey Foreign exchange for development of pri- vate industry Oct. 19, 1950 1957-1965 United King,dom (Guarantor) 58 SR Southern Rhodesia Electric power development Feb. 27, 1952 1956-1977 Uru,uuay (Guarantor) 30 UR U. T. E. Electric power development and telephone equipment Aug. 25, 1950 1955-19- . 20 YU Yugoslavia Equipment for timber production Oct. 17, 1949 1950-1951 51 YU Equipment for electric power, coal mining, non-ferrous metal development, industry, forest products, agriculture and fishery, and transportation projects Oct. 11, 1951 1955-1976 TOTAL LOANS GRANTED Of the Undisbursed Balance of Effective Loans, the following amounts have been irrevocably committed by the Bank: Loan Number Borrower To Whom Committed Amount 5 CH Chile (Endesa) To Third Parties $ 1,011,334 11 BR Brazilian Traction (First Installment) Borrower 6,164,470 11 BR-S Brazilian Traction (Second Installment) Borrower 4,173,110 16 Fl Bank of Finland To Third Parties 658,613 26 IRQ Iraq To Third Parties 1,327,183 27 TU Turkey (Grain Storage) To Third Parties 821,464 28 TU Turkey (Ports) To Third Parties 281,122 32 ET Ethiopia (Bank) To Third Parties 166,000 36 TH Thailand (Irrigation) To Third Parties 946,043 37 TH Thailand (Ports) To Third Parties 10,915 38 CO Colombia (Anchicaya) To Third Parties 175,020 51 YU Yugoslavia To Third Parties 17,065,275 54 CO Colombia (Lebrija) To Third Parties . 308,748 Total $33,109,297 'Participation of The Chase National Bank of the City of New York. 'The amount of currency repayable may differ from the amount of currency disbursed as a result of the purchase of one currency with another for purpose of disbursement. The currency used to make the purchase is the currency repayable. * Denotes Loans Not Yet Effective. f 52 ] APPLINDIX P -June 30, 1952 (Continued) See N,ctei A, D and E of No/es to Financial Statements, Appendix F Interest Ulndisb6rsed Rate Original Loans Cancellations Principal Obligaiionis Effective Loans Principal Balance of (Including Principal Not Yet and Repayments of Borrowers Outstanding Amount Effectiv e .Commission) Amount Effective Refundings to Bank Sold by Bank Held by Bank Disbursed Loans 4%2//o $ 2,500,000 $ - $ - $ - $ _ $ 2,500,000 $ $ 2,500,000 3 334%$° 20,000,000 20,000,000 10,635,432 9,364,568 4%. 30,000,000 -- 30,000,000 10,858,093 19,141,907 334% 3,000,000 - 3,000,000 228,040 2,771,960 4%nc 18,000,000 - -- 18,000,000 8,145,219 9,854,781 3 $44 4,400,000 _ _ - 275,000 4,125,000 556,340 3,843,660 3,7P/9% 3,900,000 - - - - 3,900,000 665,853 3,234,147, 43¸4 % 12,500,000 - - - - 12,500,000 451,451 12,048,54(* 434°%o 25,200,000 25,200,000 - - - - - -- 33/i$% g9,000,000 _ - 9,000,000 107,850 8,892,150 4 4'%.1, 28,000,000 - - - - 28,000,000 - 28,000,000 4Y4% 33,000,000 - - - - 33,000,000 5,992,234 27,007,- 56 3% 2,700,000 ---- 2,700,000 - 2,700,000 - 4,I % 28,000,000 - 28,000,000 4,965,234 23,034,766 $1,412,133,000 $102,450,000 $29,724,442 $10,340,282 $56,376,688 $1,213,241,588 $876,504,133 $403,454,425 SUMMARY BY CURRENCY Principal Amount Disbursed Principal Recovered Carrency Disbursed Currency Repayable' By Repayment or Sale Balance Oatstand ng United States United States United States United States Currency Amount Dollar Equiv. Amount Dollar Equiv. Amount Dollar Equiv. Amount Dollar Equiv'. Belgian Francs 1,232,942,637 $ 27,168,563 124,353,292 $ 2,739,801 1,571,600 $ 35,963 122,781,692 $ 2,703,838 Canadian Dollars 46,991,573 43,779,244 26,627,461 24,380,903 4,170,432 3,946,125 22,457,029 20,434,77T Danish Kroner 3,591,579 519,981 3,514,448 508,814 - - 3,514,448 508,814 French Francs, 1,426,989,073 4,080,938 1,273,086,344 3,641,551 - __ 1,273,086,344 .,641,551 German Marks 4,876,600 1,161,413 - - - - - Italian Lire 281,984,584 451,550 211,980,570 339,169 - - 211,980,570 339,169 Netherlands Guilders 1,624,417 564,405 340,500 89,605 - 340,500 89,605 Norwegian Kroner 698,400 97,814 283,200 39,648 - - 283,200 39,648 Swedish Kronor 14,254,504 2,820,163 166,897 32,262 - _ 166,897 32,262 Swiss Francs 62,012,257 14,447,286 52,512,301 12,181,087 16,895,000 3,931,356 35,617,301 8,249,731 United Kingdom Pounds 9,265,610 26,236,514 1,769,334 5,186,774 - - 1,769,334 5,186,774 United States Dollars 755,176,262 755,176,262 827,364,519 827,364,519 58,803,526 58,803,526 768,560,993 768,560,993 $876,504,133 $876,504,133 $66,716,970 $ 809,787,163 Plus-Undisbursed Balance of Effective Loans 403,454,425 Effective Loans Outstanding Held by Bank $1,213,241,588 I 53 i APPENDIX E Statement of Subscriptions to Capital Stock and Voting Power June 30, 1952 EXPRESSED. IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY See Note A of Notes to Financial Statemerts. Appendix F Amounts Paid In In Currency of Non-Interest- Subject to Subscriptions Member Otber Bearing, Non- Call to Meet Than United Negotiable Amounts Obligations Number Amount United States States Dollars Demand Notes Due of Bank of Mllember Shares (Note J) Dollars (Note B) (Note B) (Note C) (Note 1) Votes 1 Australia 2,000 $ 200,000,000 $ 4,0Q0,000 $ 360.368 $ 35,639,632 $ - $ 160,000,000 2,250 ] 2 Austria 500 50,000,000 1,000,000 90,000 8,910,000 - 40,000,000 750 2 3 Belgium 2,250 225,000,000 4,500,000 3,844,422 36,655,578 - 180,000,000 2,500 3 4 Bolivia 70 7,,00QO 140,000 12,600 1,247,400 - 5,600,00O 320 4 5 Brazil 1,050 105,000,000 2,100,000 18,900,000 - - 84,000,000 1,300 5 6 Burma 150 15,000,000 300,000 27,000 2,673,000 - 12,000,000 400 6 7 Canada 3,250 325,000,000 6,500,000 16,675,909 41,824,091 - 260,000,000 3,500 7 8 Ceylon 150 15,000,000 300,000 32,997 2,667,003 - 12,000,000 400 8 9 Chile 350 35,000,000 700,000 6,300,000 - - 28,000,000 600 9 10 China 6,000 600,000,000 9,030,9D0 1,080,000 106,920,000 2,970,000 480,000,000 6,250 10 11 Colombia 350 35,000,000 700,900 6,300,000 - 28,000,000 600 11 12 Costa Rica 20 2,'000, 40,000 360,000 - - 1,600,000 270 12 13 Cuba 350 35,000,000 700,000 63,000 6,237,000 - 28,000,000 600 13 14 Czechoslovakia 1,250 125,9000,00 1,875,900 225,000 22,275,900 625,000 100,000,000 1,500 14 15 Dcnmark 680 68,000,000 1,360,000 991,066 11,248,934 - 54,400,000 930 15 16 Dominican Republic 20 2,000,000 40,000 3,600 356,400 - 1,600,000 270 16 17 Ecuador 32 3,200,000 64,000 576,00 - - 2,560,000 282 17 I8 Egypt 533 53,300,000 1,066,000 95,940 9,498,060 - 42,640,)O 783 13 19 El Salvador 10 1,000,000 20,000 180,000 - - 800,000 260 Is 20 Ethiopia 30 3,000,000 60,000 540,000 - - 2,400,000 280 2(, 21 Finland 380 38,000,000 760,000 6,840,000 - - 30,400,000 630 21 22 France 5,250 525,000,000 10,500,000 7,915,332 86,584,668 - 420,000,000 5,500 2. 23 Greece 250 25,000,000 500,000 4,500,000 -- _ 20,000,000 500 23 24 Guatemala 20 2,000,000 40,000 360,930 - - 1,600,000 270 24 25 Honduras 10 1,000,000 20,000 180,000 - - 800,000 260 25 26 Iceland 10 -1,000,000 20,000 180,000 - - 800,000 260 26 27 India 4,000 400,000,000 8,000,000 721,800 71,278,200 - 320,000,000 4,250 27 28 Iran 336 33,600,000 672,000 60,480 5,987,520 - 26,880,000 586 28 29 Iraq 60 6,000,000 120,000 20;880 1,059,120 4,800,000 310 23 30 Italv 1,800 180,000,000 3,600,000 32,400,000 - 144,000,00 2,050 30 31 Lebanon 45 4,500,000 90,000 810,OCO - - 3,600,000 295 31 32 Luxembourg 100 10,000,000 200,000 18,000 1,782,000 - 8,0,000 350 32 33 Mexico 650 65,000,000 1,300,000 11,700,000 - - 52,000,000 900 33 34 Netherlands 2,750 275,000,0<0 5,500,000 552,632 48,947,368 - 220,000,000 3,000 34 35 Nicaragua 8 800,000 16,000 144,000 - - 64C,Q00 258 35 36 Norwxav 500 50,000,000 1,000,000 174,C00 8,826,000 - 40,000,000 750 36 37 Pakistan 1,000 100,000,0) 2,000,000 180,008 17,819,992 - 80,000,000 1,250 37 38 Panama 2 200,000 4,000 36,000 - - 160,000 252 3S 39 Paraguay 14 1,400,000 28,000 252,000 - - 1,120,000 264 39 40 Peru 175 17,500,000 350,000 31,500 3,118,500 - 14,000,000 425 40 41 Philippines 150 15,000,000 300,930 1,200,000 1,500,000 - 12,000,000 400 41. 42 Sweden 1,000 1,00,000,00 2,00C,000 18,000,000 - 80,000,000 1,250 42 43 Svria 65 6,500,000 130,000 11,700 1,158,300 - 5,200,0Q 315 43 44 Thailand 125 12,500,000 250,000 22,500 2,227,500 - 10,000,000 375 44 45 Turkey 430 43,000,000 860,000 77,400 7,662,600 - 34,400,000 680 45 46 Union of Sourh Africa 1,000 100,000,000 2,000,000 180,000 17,820,000 - 80,00O,000 1,250 46 47 Unred Kingdom 13,000 1,300,000,000 26,000,000 4,050,000 229,950,000 - 1,040,000,000 13,250 47 48 United States 31,750 3,175,000,000 635,000,000 - -- 2,540,000,000 32,000 48 49 Uruguay 105 10,500,000 210,000 1,890,00C0 - . 8,400,000 355 49 50 Venezuela 105 10,500,000 210,000 1,365,000 525,000 - 8,400,000 355 50 51 Yugoslavia 400 40,000,000 800,000 7,200,000 -- 32,u00,000 650 51 84,535 $8,453,500,000 $736,975,000 $157,731,134 $792,398,866 $3,595,000 $6,762,800,000 97,285 [54 ] APPENDI F Notes to Financial Statements-June 30, 1952 NqOTE A from any additional currency furnished under the pro- Amounts in currencies other than United States dol- visions of the present paragraph, and which has not lars have been translated into United States dollars: been repurchased by the member for gold or for the currency of any member which is acceptable to the (i) In the cases of 41 members, at the par values Bank. established under the International Monetary Fund (b) Whenever the par value of a member's cur- Agreement as specified in the "Schedule of Par Values" rency is increased, the Bank shall return to such mem- published by the International Monetary Fund; and ber within a reasonable time an amount of that mem- (ii) In the cases of the remaining 10 members ber's currency equal to the increase in the value of the (Austria, Burma, Canada, China, France, Greece, amount of such currency described in (a) above. Italy, Peru, Thailand and Uruguay), the par values of (c) The provisions of the preceding paragraphs whose currencies are not so specified, at the rates may be waived by the Bank when a uniform propor- used by such members in making capital payments. tionate change in the par values of the currencies of (iii) In the case of non-member currency, all Swiss all its members is made by the International Monetary francs, at the rate of 4.2975 Swiss francs to 1 United Fund. States dollar. No representation is made that any of such currencies NOTE C i's convertible into any other of such currencies at any Under Article 1I, Section 8 (a) (i), any original rate or rates. See also Note B. member of the Bank whose metropolitan territories suf- fered from enemy occupation or hostilities during World NOTE B War II had a right to postpone payment of 1/2 of 1I% of These currencies and notes are derived from the 18%o the amount of its subscription payable in gold or United of the subscriptions to the capital stock of the Bank which States dollars until June 25, 1951. All members who is payable in the currencies of the respective members, received such a postponement have made payment in full Such 18% may be loaned by the Bank, and funds re- except China and Czechoslovakia. China has made a ceived by the Bank on account of principal of loans payment of $30,000 and has stated that it recognized its made by the Bank out of such currencies may be ex- obligation to the Bank and would pay the balance of changed for other currencies or reloaned, only with the $2,970,000 as soon as it was in a position to do so. approval in each case of the member whose currency is Czechoslovakia has claimed a further postponement un- involved; provided, however, that, if necessary, after the der Article II, Section 8 (a) (ii). On August 21, 1951, Bank's subscribed capital is entirely called, such curren- the Executive Directors rejected such claim. The Exec- cies may, without restriction by the members whose cur- utive Directors thereafter reported such action to the rencies are offered, be used or exchanged for the curren- Board of Governors which, on September 13, 1951, ap- cies required to meet contractual payments of interest, proved such report. other charges or amortization on the Bank's own borrow- ings or to meet the Bank's liabilities with respect to con- NOTE D tractual payments on loans guaranteed by it. These cur- The Bank has sold under its guarantee $41,499,001 rencies of the several members, and the notes issued by of borrowers' obligations received by the Bank in con- them for any part of such currencies, as permitted under nection with its loan operations of which amount a the provisions of Article V, Section 12, are held on de- total of $4,641,000 has been retired. Of the total of posit with designated depositories in the territories of $36,858,001 of obligations outstanding under guarantee the respective members. $2,373,087 is reflected in the balance sheet as a direct Article II, Section 9 provides for the maintenance of liability subject to withdrawal. value of such 18% currencies as follows: (a) Whenever (i) the par value of a member's cur- NOTE E rency is reduced, or (ii) the foreign exchange value The principal disbursed and outstanding on loans and of a member's currency has, in the opinion of the the accrued charges for interest, commitment fee, service Bank, depreciated to a significant extent within that charge and loan commission are receivable in United member's territories, the member shall pay to the Bank States dollars except the following amounts for which within a reasonable time an additional amount of its the dollar equivalent is shown: own currency sufficient to maintain the value, as of the Principal Outstanding $41,226J171 time of initial subscription, of the amount of the cur- . rency of such member which is held by the Bank and Accrued Interest, Commitment derived from currency originally paid in to the Bank and Service Charges 321,439 by the member under Article II, Section 7 (i), from Accrued Loan Commissions 85,810 currency referred to in Article IV, Section 2 (b), or Total $41,633,420 [55] APPENDIX F NOTE F NOTE I Thc amount of commissions received by the Bank on Subject to call by the Bank only wie: i loans made or guaranteed by it is required under Article meet the obligations of the Bank crc.tcd ha 1I IV, Section 6, to be set aside as a special reserve to be or guaranteeing loans. keplt available for meeting obligations of the Bank NOTE j crcated by borrowing or by guaranteeing loans. On all In terms of United States dolhlir' i loans granted to date the effective rate of commission is fineness in effect on JrIlv 1 19 l l 1 rr annum. GENERAL NOTE G The application for memberslip Ir t I As sinking funds, the Bank has agreecl to purchase Kingdom of the Jordain (proposed suhs, ript,o n I,! and retire or redcem bonds in varying amounts calcuLlated lion) was approved by the Board of Governors on Apr!l to retire bv maturity 33-1/37O of the Canadian Dollar 21, 1952 and that country will have until Septembcrt 3o. issue and 50%7 of the Sterling Stock and the United 1952 to accept membership in the Bank. The appi(.l- States Dollar Bonds except the Serial Bonds. On June tions by the Federal Republic of Germany (proposed 27, 1952, the Executive Directors authorized the re- subscription $330 million) and by Japan (proposed sub- 27, 1952, ~~~~~~~~~~scription $250 million) were approved by the Board of demption on or before September 1, 1952 of the 21/2%? Governors on May 28, 1952 and those countries havc Swiss Franc Serial Bonds of 1948, due 1953-54 in the until August 15, 1952 to accept membership in the Bank. principal amount of Sw fr 17 million. A premium of of I' (equivalent to $19,779) will be payable. LITIGATION A suit has been commilenced by an individual plaintiff NOTE H against the Bank asking damages of approximately Pursuant to action of the Board of Governors and $625,000 for alleged interference with plaintiff's con- Executive Directors the net income of the Bank has been tractual relationships (Frank H. Redicker z. Irarfiei et al., U. S. District Court, Southern District of New allocated to a General Reserve Against Losses on Loans York, Civil No. 61-210). The Bank has denied the and Guarantees Made by the Bank; and the future net substance of the charges contained in the complaint and income of the Bank will, until further action by the has been advised by trial counsel that the suit is without Executive Directors or the Board of Governors, be allo- merit. At June 30, 1952 there was no other litigation cated to this reserve. pending against the Bank. [ 56 ] APPENDIX G Opinion of Independent Auditor 1000 VERMONT AVENUE, N.W. WASHINGTON 5, D.C. August 12, 1952 To INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT, Washington, D. C. We have examined the financial statements listed below of Inter- national Bank for Reconstruction and Development as of June 30, 1952. Our examination was made in accordance with generally accepted audit- ing standards, and accordingly included such tests of the accounting records and such other auditing procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. In our opinion, such financial statements, with the notes thereto, present fairly the financial position of the Bank at June 30, 1952, expressed in United States currency, and the results of its operations for the twelve months then ended, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles applied on a basis consistent with that of the preceding year. PRICE WATERHOUSE & CO. Financial Statements Covered by the Foregoing Opinion Balance Sheet-June 30, 1952 ...................... APPENDIX A Comparative Statement of Income and Expenses for the Fiscal Years Ended June 30, 1951 and June 30, 1952 APPENDIX B Statement of Currencies Held by the Bank-June 30, 1952 ...................................... APPENDIX C Statement of Loans-June 30, 1952 ................. APPENDIX D Statement of Subscriptions to Capital Stock and Voting Power-June 30, 1952 ........................ APPENDIX E Notes to Financial Statements ...................... APPENDIX F [ 57] I% I I I APPENDIX Ii Administrative Budget For the Fiscal Year Ending June 30, 1953 There is outlined below the Administrative Budget for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1953, as prepare] by the President and approved by the Executive Directors in accordance with Section 19 of the By-Laws. For purposes of comparison there are also outlined below the administrative expenses incurred during the fiscal years ended June 30, 1951 and 1952. Actual Expenses Budget 1953 1951 1952 BOARD OF GOVERNORS $ 223,136 $ 114,220 S 206,000 OFFICE OF EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS 278,630 276,360 305,000 STAFF Personal Services 2,503,469 2,759,133 3,063.500 Staff Benefits 295,522 320,633 356,500 Consultants 120,703 107,927 100,000 Travel 345,352 378,170 363,000 Representation 43,504 3,308.550 41,833 3,607.696 40,000 3,923,000 OTHER ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES Fees & Compensation 55,119 47,809 46,000 Supplies 42,130 39.676 36,000 Rents & Maintenance 335,040 394,868 412,000 Communications 101,575 112,332 102.000 Furniture & Equipment 39,634 34,953 31.000 Books & Library Services 56,554 69,375 73,000 Printing 39,201 39,701 40,000 Insurance 29,040 16,704 38.0no Other 1,001 699,294 3,361 758.779 - 7,S.000 CONTINGENCY - - 100,000 TOTAL $4,509,610 $4,757.055 $5,312,000 SPECIAL SERVICES TO MEMBER COUNTRIES 333,837 380,303 400,000 GRAND TOTAL $4,843,447 $5,137,358 S5,712,000 No estimate has been made of bond registration, issuance and other financial expenditures for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1953. The amount of bonds which may be issued by the Bank during the next year is not known. These expenditures may amount to about $100,000, exclusive of commissions and premiums, for each l100 million of bonds which the Bank may issue. I ") I A tDENJI)E,- 5~~~~~~~~~~~,ran Ti I,'. MEs¸iFR CO1UNTIRIES - -f.v0¸tn of Dollars1j i'4lt A-ustin .1 . ..... Bel,cium . .. ..... .......2....2 Bulc:ia 5z.,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- 2 1 7.0'8 Print! . . . . 3 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~41 05.0 1 1 Burr,a .... .. ........ 40fl M) Canada .... ...... ...... . 46003 61 32 5.0 China .... ...... ... 620 (6-4 6 D00.0 C C.olo)mbia .. .. ....... .....60 3 5.0 Costs~ Rlh a ...... . . .... .. - 2 2.0 I.02 C-,-ba ............ . ............600 62 3-5.0 Czechoslovak,i .... .....I,C 40 125.0 1.18 Denmark............. 93 0 "6. Dominican Republic . .. ......2 70 28 2. 0 .0 2 Ecuador 2.........'82 219 3.2 .04 Egypt ..... ... .......783 80C 53.3 .63 Elk Salvador .. 260, .27 1.0 01I Ethiopia .......280 930) .04 FPInan,d 632...... ..3 8 0 45 Fmance .... .......4... 5.5,00 61525,0 6...2 .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .5..0 25,0 1 -iuatemala ....270 2 t 2.0 Honduras ...........260 21.0.0 l:elan!.......... ..... 2c 1,0 India 4>0 4 7 ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4c.0 4.>' Iran, ............. 42 Iraq ...... .0. le a non . .... ...... 295 4.5 ( Luxe mbourg ..350 Mfexico ....... .........9 0 0 6. Nˇ,~herlands . ... ... ... ..... 3, 0CC03 8 25C 3.26i i :c-aagu-,a ... 212... .... ... Pakctau ...............2..1020 .2g Pana-ma . . ... ............6 Paraguay ........264 7 .4 2 Philpipanes . . ... .. . ... Lu 15011 2 Thiad . ...............2.5 .1' Tu-,r ke2!y 6..2..2.. &( 43.0 Union of Souh Afr'a........a.1,250 100 0..c 1.18 Uniited Kingdom 1.... .. ..I32 210, .623 0 15.38 United States... .... ..... 3 2, 0u 32.89 17. 37.56 Ujrugu-ay,,... ........356 10 5 Venezuela ...... ...... 6.. aLess tIlan .005 pcatent. 60 APPENDIX I Governors and Alternates as ofJune 30, 1952 MEMBER GOVERNMENT GOVERNOR ALTERNATE AUSTIRALIA Sir Arthur Fadden Sir Percy Spender AUSTIRIA Reinhard Kamitz Wilhelm Teufenstein BELGIUM Albert-Edouard Janssen Maurice Frere BOLrIVA Hector Ormachea Zalles Jaime Gutierrcz Guerra BRAZIL Horacio Lafer Octavio Paranagua BURMA Minister of Finance General Manager, Union Bank of Burma CANADA D. C. Abbott John Deutsch CEYLON J. R. Jayewardene Sir Claude Corea CHILE Arturo Maschke -vacant- CHINA Chia Kan Yen Peh-Yuan Hsu COLOMBIA Emilio Toro Ignacio Copete-Lizarralde COSTA RICA Angel Coronas Mario Fernandez CUBA Luis Machado Joaquin E. Meyer CZECHOSLOVAKIA Jaroslav Docekal Antonin Bezkocka DENIJARK Svend Nielsen Hakon Jespersen DoM1NICAN REPUBLIC Wenceslao Troncoso Nicolas Vega ECUADOR Luis Ernesto Boria Ramon de Ycaza EGYPr Ahmed Zaki Saad Pasha A. Nazmy Abdel Hamid Bey EL SALVADOR Catalino Herrera Luis Escalante-Arce ETHIOPIA Jack Bennett Ato Menassie Lemma FINLAND Artturi Lehtinen Ralf Torngren FRANCE Minister of Finance Pierre Mendes-France GREECE George Mavros Gregorios Zarifopoulos GUATEMALA Manuel Noriega Morales Carlos Leonidas Acevedo HONDUkAS Rafael Heliodoro Valle Guillermo Lopez Rodezno ICELAND Jon Arnason Thor Thors INDIA Sir Chintaman D. Deshmukh Sir Benegal Rama Rau IRAN Ali-Asghar Nasser Abbas-Gholi Neysari IRAQ Abdul Wahab Mirjan Abdul-Ghani Al-Dalli ITALY Donato Menichella Giorgio Cigliana-Piazza LEBANON Joseph Oughourlian Raja Himadeh LUXE.MBOURG Pierre Dupong Pierre Werner MEXICO Carlos Novoa Mario R. Beteta NETHERLANDS P. Lieftinck A. M. de Jong NICARAGUA Guillermo Sevilla Sacasa Rafael Huezo NORWAY Gunnar Jahn Ole Colbjornseri PAKISTAN Mohammad Ali Amjad Ali PANAMA Roberto Heurtematte Julio E. Heurtematte PARAGUAY Juan R. Chaves Victor A. Pane PERU Fernando Berckemeyer -vacant- PHILIPPINES Miguel Cuaderno, Sr. Emilio Abello SWEDEN N. G. Lange S. T. G. Akermalm SYRLk Husni A. Sawwaf Rafik Asha THAILAND Prince Viwat Kajit Kasemsri TURKEY Hasan Polatkan Munir Mostar UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA N. C. Havenga M. H. de Kock UNITrED KINGDOM Richard Austen Butler Sir Leslie Rowan UNIrED STATES John W. Snyder David K. E. Bruce URUGUAY Carlos Quijano Nilo Berchesi VENEZUELA Manuel Reyna Carlos M. Lollet C. YUGOSLAVIA Lavoslav Dolinsek Bogoljub Lazarevic [ 61] APPENDIX K Executive Directors and Alternates and Their Voting Power As ofJune 30, 1952 VOTES BY TOTAL DIRECTORS ALTERNATES CASTING VOTES OF COUNTRY VOTES Appointed Andrew Overby John S. Hooker United States 32,000 32,000 Sir Edmund Hall-Patch Allan Christelow United Kingdom 13,250 13,250 Yueh-Lien Chang Tsoo-Whe Chu China 6,250 6,250 Roger Hoppenot France 5,500 5,500 B. K. Nehru B. R. Shenoy India 4,250 4,250 Elected Thomas Basyn Ernest de Selliers Belgium 2,500) (Belgium) (Belgium) Denmark 930 4,410 Finland 630 Luxembourg 350) Manuel Jose Diez Julio E. Heurtematte Mexico 900 (Panama) (Panama) Cuba 600 Philippines 400 Uruguay 35 5 Venezuela 355 5 Costa Rica 270 4,180 Dominican Republic 270 El Salvador 260 Honduras 260 Nicaragua 258 Panama 252 Guillermo Perez-Chiriboga Oswaldo Garcia Brazil 1,300) (Ecuador) (Ecuador) Chile 600 Colombia 600 Peru 425 4,061 Bolivia 320 Ecuador 282 Guatemala 270 Paraguay 264J Louis Rasminsky G. Neil Perry Canada 3,500 (Canada) (Canada) Iceland 260~ 3,760 J. W. Beyen Karl Skjerdal Netherlands 3,000), (Netherlands) (Norway) Norway 750 3,750 Yaqub Shah Djahangir Boushehri Pakistan 1,250 (Pakistan) (iran) Egypt 7, Iran 586 359 Syria 315 8 Iraq 310 Lebanon 295J I Leslie Galfreid Melville L. H. E. Bury Australia 2,250) 3,500 (Australia) (Australia) Union of South Africa 1,250 Costantino *Giorgio Cigliana-Piazza Italy 2,050 Bresciani-Turroni (Italy) Austria 750 3,300 (Italy) Greece 500 Cabir Selek Boonma Wongswan Turkey 680) (Turkey) (Thailand) Yugoslavia 650 l Ceylon 400 2,385 Thailand 375 Ethiopia 280 J * Acting temporarily. Member countries unrepresented by an Executive Director: Czechoslovakia with 1,500 votes. Sweden with 1,250 votes. Burma with 400 votes. [62] APPENDIX K ;[n addition to the Executive Directors and Alternates shown on the foregoing list, the following also served as Executive Directors or Alternates since June 30, 1951. EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS End of Period of Service William McChesney Martin, Jr. (United States) February 20, 1952 Sir Ernest Rowe-Dutton (United Kingdom) May 18, 1952 ALTERNATE EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS Sir Sydney Caine (United Kingdom) September 19, 1951 D. S. Savkar (India) October 31, 1951 W. R. Natu (India) November 29, 1951 Eduardo Sala2ar (Ecuador) December 31, 1951 Nasrollah Djahanguir (Iran) January 21, 1952 Thoralf Svendsen (Norway) February 29, 1952 Harry L. Wolfson (Canada) March 31, 1952 [63 ] APPENDIX L Principal Officers of the Bank As ofJune 30, 1952 Eugene R. Black ............. . ......... .... President Robert L. Garner .............. ......... .... Vice President William A. B. Iliff ............ Assistan.t to President A. S. G. Hoar ............ Loan Director D. Crena de Iongh ............ Treasurer Leonard B. Rist ............. , Economic Director Davidson Sommers ............. General Counsel Morton M. Mendels ............. Secretary George L. Martin ............. Director of Marketing *Chauncey G. Parker .............. Director of Administration Harold N. Graves, Jr .............. Director of Public Relations Richard H. Demuth ....... Director of Technical Assistance and Liaison * Mr. Parker submitted his resignation on July 15, 1952, to be effective July 28. William F. Howell has been appointed to succeed him as Director of Administration. [64 1