The World Bank Group (WBG) Scorecard is shifting the focus to measuring impact by prioritizing real-world development outcomes, results achieved, and results expected over simply counting projects.
The video explains the critical difference between "Results Achieved" - the tangible outcomes already delivered, such as new internet connections or safe drinking water, and "Results Expected," which signals the full ambition of our operations. By tracking both, the WBG Scorecard provides a transparent picture of the WBG's impact and future goals.
Moving beyond just tracking financing and activities to measure what truly matters for people, communities, and the planet. To better understand how progress is tracked, measured, and strengthened visit: http://wrld.bg/MmlA50Ytth8
The notion that the US is investigating the trade practices of some of its most important trade partners shouldn't be surprising in the current environment. However, you should be cautious about the phrase "unfair practices": does simply being able to produce at a lower price imply "unfair practices"?
It's clearly an attempt to justify more tariffs, but I'd argue that it's liable to impose an even higher burden on US consumers and have little effect on America's trade deficit.