Barber Conable Explained

Barber Conable
Office:President of the World Bank Group
Term Start:July 1, 1986
Term End:August 31, 1991
Predecessor:Tom Clausen
Successor:Lewis Preston
State1:New York
Constituency1: (1965–1973)
(1973–1983)
(1983–1985)
Term Start1:January 3, 1965
Term End1:January 3, 1985
Predecessor1:Harold Ostertag
Successor1:Fred Eckert
State Senate4:New York
District4:53rd
Term Start4:January 1, 1963
Term End4:December 31, 1964
Predecessor4:Austin Erwin
Successor4:Kenneth Willard
Birth Date:2 November 1922
Birth Place:Warsaw, New York, U.S.
Death Place:Sarasota, Florida, U.S.
Party:Republican
Spouse:Charlotte Williams
Education:Cornell University (BA, LLB)

Barber Benjamin Conable Jr. (November 2, 1922 – November 30, 2003) was a U.S. Congressman from New York and former President of the World Bank Group.

Biography

Conable was born in Warsaw, New York on November 2, 1922. Conable was an Eagle Scout and received the Distinguished Eagle Scout Award from the Boy Scouts of America. He graduated from Cornell University in 1942, where he was president of the Quill and Dagger society and a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. He then enlisted in the Marines and was sent to the Pacific front in World War II, where he learned to speak Japanese and fought in the Battle of Iwo Jima. After the war, he received his law degree from Cornell University Law School in 1948, where he lived at the Cornell Branch of the Telluride Association, having been admitted to the House as a law student, after an unsuccessful attempt as an undergraduate.[1] He later re-enlisted and fought in the Korean War.

In 1952, Conable married Charlotte Williams, his wife until his death. He died from a staphylococcus infection in 2003, at his winter home in Sarasota, Florida.

Legislative career

In 1962, Conable was elected as a Republican to the New York State Senate. After only one term, he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1964 from a Rochester-based district. He was reelected nine more times. He was known on both sides of the aisle for his honesty and integrity, at one point being voted by his colleagues the "most respected" member of Congress; he refused to accept personal contributions larger than $50. As a longtime ranking minority member of the House Ways and Means Committee,[2] one of his signal legislative achievements was a provision in the U.S. tax code that made so-called 401(k) and 403(b) defined-contribution retirement plans possible, and contributions to those plans by both employers and employees tax-deferred, under federal tax law.A long-time ally of Richard Nixon, Conable broke with him in disgust after the revelations of the Watergate scandal. When the White House released a tape of Nixon instructing his Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman to obstruct the FBI investigation, Conable said it was a "smoking gun", a phrase which quickly entered the political folklore.

In 1980, Conable appeared in Milton Friedman's PBS documentary Free to Choose.[3]

Conable retired from the House in 1984.

President of the World Bank

From 1986 until August 31, 1991, Conable was president of the World Bank. His experience as a legislator proved crucial as he persuaded his former colleagues to almost double Congress's appropriations for the bank.

After the Tiananmen Square protests and massacre, Conable opposed elements of the George H.W. Bush administration and Congress which sought to take a more punitive stance toward China. In Conable's view, those elements were motivated by the desire to improve their position in the 1992 by being overly harsh on China. Conable's view was that imposing excessive punishment was ill-advised at a time when Deng Xiaoping was struggling with domestic opponents over whether to continue economic reform. Conable successfully encouraged the World Bank Board of Governors to take an expansive view of humanitarian loans to China, including with regard to environmental loans because of the intrinsic merit of those investments. When asked by academic David M. Lampton what Conable was most proud of in his World Bank interaction with China, Conable answered, "We planted a billion trees in China."

Literature by and about Conable

References

  1. Book: Fleming. James S. Window on Congress: A Congressional Biography of Barber B. Conable Jr.. 2004. University of Rochester Press. 9781580461283. 34–36.
  2. Book: Lampton, David M. . Living U.S.-China Relations: From Cold War to Cold War . 2024 . . 978-1-5381-8725-8 . Lanham, MD . David M. Lampton.
  3. (Conable's segment begins at approximately 37:20)

External links

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