Victoria Kwakwa Appointed World Bank EAP Vice President
NEWS RELEASE
Victoria
Kwakwa Appointed World Bank Vice
President
for East Asia and Pacific
Region
WASHINGTON, April 15,
2016 – World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim
has appointed Victoria Kwakwa as the new Regional Vice
President for East Asia and Pacific, effective
today.
“The appointment of Victoria Kwakwa to this role ensures a seamless leadership transition for this region of increasing importance to the World Bank Group,” said Kim. “She knows the region well and has been part of our efforts in bringing about change at a time when East Asia Pacific has been rapidly developing and playing a pivotal global role.”
Kwakwa, a Ghanaian national, will lead the Bank’s advisory and lending operations in the region and oversee strategic engagement with the region’s 23 member countries. The Bank’s lending in East Asia Pacific is expected to reach $7.5 billion in the fiscal year ending June 30.
“I am honored to lead our engagement in a region that is key to the future relevance of the World Bank Group,” said Kwakwa. “In the last decade, East Asia and Pacific’s share in the world economy has tripled, to about 19 percent. That number is projected to rise to more than 30 percent by 2030. I look forward to working with our client countries to maintain their competitiveness and economic dynamism while tackling challenges including urbanization, vulnerability to climate change, rapid ageing and rising inequality. I am confident that the region will continue to find innovative solutions that will resonate around the world.”
Kwakwa was previously the World Bank’s Country Director of Vietnam, overseeing a multibillion-dollar lending portfolio and an innovative knowledge program. During her tenure, the Bank’s partnership with Vietnam has deepened, responding to the increasingly complex challenges of an emerging middle-income country.
Most recently, Kwakwa led a joint team with the government to produce the Vietnam 2035 report, which presents options for Vietnam to achieve its ambitious goal of becoming an upper-middle-income country in a generation.
Before moving to Hanoi, Kwakwa was the Country Manager for Rwanda, where she worked with the government to design and pilot programs in social protection, health financing and agriculture productivity.
From 2000 to 2006, she was a senior
economist and lead economist in Abuja, Nigeria, where she
set up a program of state-level analytical work and provided
policy advice on how to efficiently and transparently manage
oil revenues.
Kwakwa joined the Bank as a Young
Professional in 1989 and worked on the 2000-2001 World
Development Report on poverty. She holds a bachelor’s in
economics from the University of Ghana, Legon and earned a
master’s and doctorate from Queen’s University in
Canada.
For more information, visit www.worldbank.org/eap