Title 22Foreign Relations and IntercourseRelease 119-73

§262p–4h Discussions to increase productive economic participation of poor; reports

Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - INTERNATIONAL BUREAUS, CONGRESSES, ETC. › § 262p–4h

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Require the Secretary of the Treasury to tell the U.S. Executive Director at each multilateral development bank to push hard for programs that help poor people take part more in their country’s economy. The banks must make that a long-term goal. They must help countries make lasting national plans to fight poverty. Those plans should focus on improving people’s health and nutrition, basic schooling, and safe water and sanitation; giving poor people access to jobs, income, land, and credit; and talking with public social agencies and local charities and groups. When the banks talk with countries about major policy changes or loans, they must link that talk to the country’s anti-poverty plan and include government social agencies and grassroots groups. The banks must report each year on how well the poor are getting more productive roles, help countries measure progress with social indicators, set up staff and budgets to carry out the work (with input from non-government groups), give priority in concessional financing to countries that make real efforts, and require countries getting structural adjustment help to have a poverty-participation strategy after a reasonable phase-in. Before the end of the 1-year period beginning on December 19, 1989, the Secretary must send a report to the House Committees on Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs and on Appropriations, and the Senate Committees on Foreign Relations and on Appropriations. The report must cover: how advocacy and progress on the goals above are going (successes, obstacles, and future expectations); progress on developing measures and capacity to assess the poor’s well-being under section 262p–4f; and how well banks are involving non-governmental organizations in designing, running, and checking projects, programs, and policies.

Full Legal Text

Title 22, §262p–4h

Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Director for each multilateral development bank to vigorously and continually advocate, in all replenishment negotiations and in discussion with other directors of such bank and with such bank, the following:
(1)A major objective of such bank’s operations and financing in each borrowing country, as a long term priority, should be to increase the productive role of the poor in the economy of such country.
(2)Such bank should encourage and assist each borrowing country to develop sustainable national plans and strategies to eliminate the causes and alleviate the manifestations of poverty which keep the poor from leading economically and socially productive lives. Such plans and strategies should give attention to—
(A)the enhancement of human resources, including programs for basic nutrition, primary health services, basic education, and safe water and basic sanitation;
(B)access to income-generating activities, employment, and productive assets such as land and credit; and
(C)consultation with public sector social agencies and local non-governmental organizations.
(3)As an integral element of ongoing policy dialogue with each borrowing country to design structural adjustment plans and project lending programs, such bank should provide assistance consistent with achieving the objectives of the country’s national plan for increasing the productive economic participation of the poor. Such dialogue should be conducted with government agencies working in social and economic sectors and with non-governmental groups in the borrowing country, especially those that have grassroots involvement with poor people.
(4)In an annual review document, such bank should describe the extent to which the goal of increasing the productive economic participation of the poor is being advanced or retarded and the steps that are being taken to overcome obstacles to its fulfillment. Such review should be based on information contained in the bank’s country implementation review documents and in the country strategy documents for each borrowing country. Such country strategy documents should describe the national strategy for productive economic participation of the poor and the steps the bank plans to take to assist the borrowing country during the period covered by the country strategy document.
(5)Such bank should assist countries in assessing and monitoring progress in achieving poverty alleviation goals and targets through measurement by appropriate social indicators.
(6)Such bank should adopt procedures and budgetary allocations for administrative purposes, and establish appropriate staffing levels, to ensure that adequate resources are available to implement the bank’s program for enhancing the productive economic participation of the poor, in consultation with non-governmental groups.
(7)Such bank should adopt, as a separate and major criterion in the allocation of concessional financing resources, a preferential allocation to each country which undertakes significant efforts to enhance the productive economic participation of the poor.
(8)Such bank should require each country which receives structural adjustment assistance to have in place, after a reasonable phase-in period, a strategy to enhance the productive economic participation of the poor.
(b)Before the end of the 1-year period beginning on December 19, 1989, the Secretary of the Treasury shall submit to the Committee on Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives, and the Committee on Foreign Relations and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate, a report on the following:
(1)The status of advocacy and progress being made to implement the objectives of subsection (a), describing the success to date, the obstacles encountered, and future expectations of progress.
(2)A description of the progress to date in achieving the purposes of section 262p–4f of this title, including the institutional capacity and effort devoted to assisting in the development of statistical measures to assess the well-being of the poor.
(3)A description and evaluation of the progress to date in developing effective mechanisms for involving non-governmental organizations, directly or indirectly, in the design, implementation, and monitoring of development projects, programs, and policies of the multilateral development banks.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Prior Provisions

A prior section 1613 of Pub. L. 95–118 was renumbered section 1622 and is classified to section 262p–5 of this title.

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Change of Name

Committee on Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs of House of Representatives treated as referring to Committee on Banking and Financial Services of House of Representatives by section 1(a) of Pub. L. 104–14, set out as a note preceding section 21 of Title 2, The Congress. Committee on Banking and Financial Services of House of Representatives abolished and replaced by Committee on Financial Services of House of Representatives, and jurisdiction over matters relating to securities and exchanges and insurance generally transferred from Committee on Energy and Commerce of House of Representatives by House Resolution No. 5, One Hundred Seventh Congress, Jan. 3, 2001. Definitions The definitions in section 262p–5 of this title apply to this section.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

22 U.S.C. § 262p–4h

Title 22Foreign Relations and Intercourse

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73