President Trump is expected to nominate Treasury Department official David Malpass, a vocal critic of the World Bank, to head the international financial institution later today.

Malpass, 62, is a conservative with longstanding ties to Trump. He once worked as chief economist at investment bank Bear Stearns, which collapsed in 2008 in the midst of the financial crisis. He also served in the administrations of Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush.

If approved by the countries that control the World Bank's governing board, which is considered likely, Malpass would replace Jim Yong Kim, who resigned in January before his term had ended.

The Washington-based World Bank, which is controlled by the world's richest countries, lends money to emerging economies for infrastructure and development. Malpass has frequently complained about corruption and mismanagement at the agency.

"The World Bank's biggest borrower is China. Well, China has plenty of resources, and it doesn't make sense to have money borrowed in the U.S., using the U.S. government guarantee, going into lending in China for a country that's gotten other resources and access to capital markets," he told the Council on Foreign Relations in November, 2017.

He also said at the same event that "multilateralism has gone substantially too far to the point that it is hurting U.S. and global growth."

At the Treasury Department, he has pushed for reforms in how the bank operates, and in December he told a Senate committee that the agency had committed to making "meaningful reforms."

The naming of Malpass is already generating outrage among some political critics and members of the international development community.

"David Malpass is a Trump loyalist who has committed economic malpractice on a wide range of topics," said Justin Sandefur, senior fellow at the Center for Global Development. "There is no case for Malpass on merit."

"David Malpass would be a disastrous, toxic choice for World Bank president," said Tony Fratto, who served in the Treasury department under President George W. Bush, on Twitter.

But it's not clear whether the controversy is enough to derail the appointment of Malpass.

While the World Bank board must approve the president, it traditionally defers to the U.S. over the appointment, and one World Bank official who asked not to be named said it wasn't certain whether member countries have the stomach to oppose the Trump Administration on the issue.

Though President Trump has often expressed skepticism and even disdain for international institutions, the administration surprised many by supporting a funding increase for the World Bank last year.

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