Glenn Westley – Bio Sketch
Glenn Westley is an independent consultant working in the area of credit
unions and microfinance. He was a senior adviser at the Consultative Group to Assist the Poor (CGAP), housed at the World
Bank, during 2008–11 after nearly 31 years at the Inter-American
Development Bank (IDB). During his time at the IDB, he held a number
of
positions, including senior adviser for microenterprise, senior
economist in the Office of the Chief Economist and acting division chief
of the Development Policy Research Division. He contributed to the
design of over 100 projects at the IDB, especially in the area of
credit unions and microfinance, where he worked since the early
1990s.
In 1998, Glenn and Brian Branch held a large international conference at
the IDB on the subject of rehabilitating, supervising, governing and
linking credit unions, which led to the jointly edited book, Safe
Money: Building Effective Credit Unions in Latin America. Glenn also
co-authored (with Tor Jansson and Ramón Rosales) the book, Principles
and Practices for Regulating and Supervising Microfinance, which
examines how to regulate and supervise both credit unions and other
microfinance institutions. This book has been cited numerous times in
publications by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, located on the Bank of
International Settlements website.
Glenn repeatedly assisted the Central Bank of Paraguay and the
Superintendency of Ecuador in designing new bodies of credit union
regulations.
Glenn received a doctorate in economics from the University of Pennsylvania
and has published numerous books, articles and monographs in the area
of credit unions and microfinance, including Credit Union Policies and
Performance in Latin America (with Sherrill Shaffer).
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