By Beatrice Edwards, GAP’s Director of International Reform, appeared in several outlets across the country, including the East Texas Review and Asheville Citizen-Times.

With the world waiting for economic relief, the G-20 struck an agreement in April identifying actors who will ride to the rescue: nearly $1 trillion will be given to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) so that they can help “the vulnerable in the poorest countries.” But these institutions are culpable of accelerating the spread of poverty as the developing world confronts the crisis. In a frenzy of deregulation and poorly-planned privatization, the IMF and the World Bank (the largest MDB) cut away both oversight of the private sector and social safety nets for the poor beginning in the 1980s.

As a consequence, by 1998, these institutions were presiding over a spectacular financial collapse in East Asia, Russia, the former Soviet republics and Brazil, which was in hindsight, a harbinger of things to come. Three years later, Argentina (the IMF’s best student) went bust and half of its people were suddenly poor. After years of hewing to IMF financial dictates, citizens lost their jobs, bank accounts, savings and pensions overnight.

But let’s forget the “poverty-fighting” track record of these organizations for a moment. Where does each stand in relation to the systemic problem that caused the panic in the first place – lack of oversight? The IMF and World Bank are themselves without any real external oversight. They are virtually impenetrable by the legislatures of their member governments. Labyrinthine bureaucracies, coupled with immunities from national and international laws, have become, for them, impunity.

Neither institution has answered for its track record because no one is entitled to ask. Neither Bank nor Fund officials can be subpoenaed by national legislatures, nor can they be obliged to testify in court. No government can demand internal documents from them. While each has some disclosure policies, these often remain unimplemented because the organizations cannot be sued. This is the stunning contradiction of the G-20 action: the signatories declared that “the era of bank secrecy is over,” but then dumped a trillion dollars of public money into the most secretive financial institutions in the world.

To make matters worse, IMF and Bank staff members who witness corruption or fraud (and there are plenty) are not allowed to inform affected governments or the press, except under the most stringent constraints. If they do, they risk deportation back to their home countries. This assures perpetual corruption instead of beneficial reform.

One would think that steps to ensure whistleblower protections would have followed in the wake of the Bank’s biggest black mark in history – the resignation of president Paul Wolfowitz, forced by anonymous staffers who exposed his cronyism, favoritism, incompetence, and improper political dealings. Lost in his girlfriend-salary scandal were the revelations of coordinated support he received from the Bank’s General Counsel, the Department of Institutional Integrity (INT), Human Resources, and the Ethics Committee of the Board of Directors. The whistleblowers in the Wolfowitz affair have since been relentlessly pursued.

But protections from retaliation weren’t strengthened. The bank adopted a ‘whistleblower protection policy’ last year that staff members already recognize as a trap: confidentiality may be breached; investigative reports remain hidden; grievance hearings to address retaliation are neither impartial nor external; and guaranteed reinstatement rights (if a whistleblower is vindicated) don’t exist.

In the past year, the federal government has given away hundreds of billions of dollars without first ensuring an honest accounting for it. The results of such actions are not surprising – improper bonuses and wasteful spending has outraged the public. We cannot forget this episode so soon – if an institution is going to collect public money, then it must be accountable to the public. It must have in place the governance measures that ensure that corruption and fraud can be safely exposed by those who witness it. And neither the World Bank nor the IMF passes that test.