World

World Bank wins $100 billion replenishment of fund for poorest countries

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The total exceeds the previous $93 billion International Development Association replenishment announced in December 2021.

Donor countries have pledged a record $100 billion three-year replenishment of the World Bank's fund for the poorest nations, providing a vital lifeline for their struggles against crushing debts, climate disasters, inflation and conflict.

The World Bank made the announcement on Friday in Seoul at a pledging conference for the International Development Association (IDA), which provides grants and very low-interest loans to 78 low-income countries.

The total exceeds the previous $93 billion IDA replenishment announced in December 2021.

Countries will contribute $23.7 billion directly to IDA, only marginally increased in dollar terms from the $23.5 billion pledged in 2021, but the fund will issue bonds and employ other financial leverage to stretch that to the targeted $100 billion in grants and loans through mid-2028.

Pledging conference

The two-day pledging conference fell short of the $120 billion goal African heads of state had called for, partly because the US dollar's strength – pushed up by Donald Trump's US presidential election victory – diminished the dollar value of significant increases in foreign currency contributions by several countries.

At a G20 leaders' summit in Brazil last month, Norway increased its pledge by 50 per cent from 2021 to 5.024 billion krone. That's $455 million at current exchange rates, but at the start of 2024, it would have been worth $496 million.

South Korea boosted its pledge by 45 per cent to 846 billion won, ($597 million), Britain by 40 per cent to 1.8 billion pounds and Spain by 37 per cent to 400 million euros. Spain's pledge was worth $423 million on Friday, $10 million less than the day it was announced in October.

US President Joe Biden pledged a $4 billion US contribution, up from $3.5 billion in the previous round.

The World Bank did not immediately reveal the amounts of other pledges but said that 17 donor countries had committed to raising their contributions by more than 25 per cent, with 10 offering increases of 40 per cent or more.

"While some donors made some very important increases, a lot of historically big IDA donors did not," said Clemence Landers, senior policy fellow at the Centre for Global Development, a Washington think tank. "This is a sign of the times: for a lot of governments, global poverty issues are often a tough sell domestically."

‘Bold breakthrough’

Still, the pledges won some plaudits from non-profit groups, with ONE Campaign CEO Okonkwo Nwuneli calling it a "bold breakthrough" in leadership to aid some 40 African IDA recipients.

"ONE will be holding all donors to account, ensuring that these pledges are delivered in full, and we will be working closely with African governments and our civil society partners to ensure that the resources are maximized for impact," Nwuneli said.

World Bank President Ajay Banga said in a statement that the IDA will be able to stretch the new pledges further because of work done to optimize the development lender's balance sheet over the past two years, increasing its lending capacity by some $150 billion over 10 years.

Life-changing investments

The bank's ability to leverage contributions will transform "modest contributions into life-changing investments," Banga said in an open letter to shareholders and client countries.

About 35 countries have graduated from IDA to become donors, including China, South Korea, Chile, Jordan and Turkey.

Banga said the resources will allow the bank to put job creation at the centre of its work, even as it addresses climate change and other global crises.

"In this context, IDA is not just a financial instrument; it is a catalyst for job creation," Banga said. "It provides countries with the resources to build infrastructure, improve education and health systems and foster private sector growth."

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