AIIB in quest for ‘best bank’ standards, says French ambassador to China
French ambassador to China says members of the new lender aim to lay the governance foundation for an efficient financial institution
Member states of the US$100 billion Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank aim to put high standards of internal governance in place, ensuring the lender becomes "the best bank possible", according to France's ambassador to China.
In an exclusive interview with the , Maurice Gourdault-Montagne said chief negotiators from the AIIB's 57 prospective founding members met in Singapore last month to discuss governance goals, including sustainability, safeguards, debt policy and procurement.
Finance ministers and central bank chiefs from the Group of Seven industrialised nations - four of which are AIIB founding members - met on Friday, urging the new lender to follow international standards and ensure transparency.
"We want to build up with other founding members the best bank possible, the most solid, the one that can lend money efficiently to countries that require the money," Gourdault-Montagne said.
Beijing has pledged to streamline the bank's governance and avoid the inefficient practices of lenders dominated by the West. The United States, in particular, has publicly expressed concern over how the AIIB - which is due to be launched by the end of this year - would operate. But that has not dissuaded some of its closest allies such as Britain and France from signing up.
There were some "good practices" and "some difficulties and some hurdles" in the members' discussions so far, Gourdault-Montagne said, without elaborating.