Tag: IDA

  • IDA launches bond to boost investment in poor countries

    The International Development Association (IDA) yesterday in Washington DC, United States (U.S) launched its first bond in its nearly 60-year history.

    Global investors took advantage of the opportunity to invest in the triple A-rated asset, raising $1.5 billion to address some of the most pressing development issues to support life-changing investments in the world’s poorest countries.

    The World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim, said: “The bond issue will allow IDA to tap into the power of capital markets to tackle some of the world’s biggest challenges and help millions lift themselves out of poverty.”

    He said while IDA is a new bond issuer, it is “an established institution, with an almost 60-year track record as the leading source of development finance and expertise for some of the fastest growing economies in the world. As a borrower, it leverages its unrivaled capital position – the largest equity of any multilateral development bank – and decades of strong donor support, a solid track record of repayments, and prudent financial management.”

    Also speaking, the World Bank Group Managing Director and Chief Financial Officer, Joaquim Levy, said: “IDA’s inaugural bond issuance is a landmark in mobilising capital for development finance. By leveraging the balance sheet and the significant achievements of IDA for the first time, we are delivering shareholders value for money, opening new investment opportunities in the fixed income space and, most importantly, scaling up IDA’s ability to have an impact where it makes the greatest difference.”

    World Bank Vice President and Treasurer Arunma Oteh said: “IDA received a resounding response from the market for its debut issuance. Investors globally seized the unique opportunity to be the first to invest in IDA’s triple-A rated bond and make a positive impact in the lives of hundreds of millions of people around the globe.”

    She assured investors that as the World Bank grow’s IDA’s borrowing programme, “we will continue to ensure a strong financial condition and prudent financial and operational management for IDA. We will also continue to put to work for IDA the World Bank Treasury’s 70-year track record of innovation in connecting capital markets with development.”

    The bank’s Vice President for Development Finance Axel van Trotsenburg said three years ago, the international community agreed that business as usual is no longer enough for development finance, and committed to leveraging aid balance sheets, scaling-up, and raising more capital to help the poorest countries achieve Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.

  • World Bank support for Nigeria, others hit $14b

    World Bank support for Nigeria, others hit $14b

    The World Bank Nigeria Country Director, Mr. Rachid Benmessaoud, said on Tuesday that the World Bank Group’s support to fragile states, including Nigeria through its International Development Association (IDA) has doubled to more than $14 billion.

    Benmessaoud said this in Abuja at a conference with the theme: “Ideas forAction Africa” hosted by the bank, in conjunction with the African University of Science and Technology and the University of Lagos.

    He said the focus of the programme was to provide opportunities for the youths to contribute to the narrative shaping Africa’s 2030 agenda and also the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    According to him, the Ideas forAction Africa is a powerful platform that gives young people the means to have a say in the international development debate and provide practical solutions to the world’s most complex problems.

    He said to advance sustainable development and the implementation of the 2030 Agenda, the bank’s strategy was to invest more in people and pursue private sector solutions to maximise finance for development.

    Benmessaoud also said that the World Bank’s strategy also includes accelerating inclusive and sustainable economic growth through distribution of diversified economic opportunities across sectors and finally, fostering resilience to global shocks and threats.

    The World Bank official said: “The underlying challenge remains the need for countries to mobilise domestic revenues, for development to be sustainable. This is because ultimately the ability to implement and sustain these programmes depends on political will of the government.

    “Development has to be led by each country with a focus on protecting its most vulnerable and benefitting its poor.

    “It is a moral responsibility on the part of everyone to do more to help people lift themselves out of both fragility and extreme poverty, to help stabilise the countries they live in, and to give them hope for the future.

    “Against this backdrop, allocation for fragile states under the International Development Association (IDA) has doubled to more than $14 billion.

    “With this, we continue to find new and innovative ways to reach the poor and boost shared prosperity.”

    Benmessaoud urged young Nigerians to put forth their best ideas and be a part of the innovation that is Ideas for Action.

    Also speaking, the President, African University of Science and Technology, Prof. Kingston Nyamapfene described African youths as the engine of growth and positive change in the continent.

     

     

  • FG unveils $300m home scheme

    FG unveils $300m home scheme

    The Federal Government has unveiled a $300 million World Bank loan facility to support new housing scheme known as the National Housing Finance Programme (NHFP).

    The initiative, according to the Deputy Director, Other Financial Institutions of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr Adedeji Adesemoye is a Public Private Partnership (PPP) programme, designed to
    improve more access to financing housing projects in the country.

    Speaking at the unveiling yesterday in Abuja, he explained that the new structure was different from the National Housing Fund (NHF), stressing that it will encourage artisans, graduates and other low
    income earners to own personal homes with a guaranteed credit from the CBN.

    The International Development Association (IDA) loan is a credit facility with 40 years repayment period. Adesemoye added that interested individuals would get supports from nine accredited Micro-Finance Institutions (MFI) from across the country through the Mortgage Guarantee and Insurance component of the loan to fund their mortgages.

    His words: “It is designed to de-risk the sector through private partnership. We were opportuned to access an IDA facility which is a 40 years loan designed to assist in four different components. It is to help with a tier two capitals in NMRC. But for the institution to finance this kind of asset creation, we need to have institutions that will have access to a long-term debt capital.

    “So today, we are providing NMRC with a long term tier two capital. The total loan we got is $300m but $250m will be given to NMRC…. It’s a tier two capital, i.e a long-term debt with almost less than one per cent commission and interest charge.”

    Adesemoye said that the disbursement will be based on the performance of the loan, adding that about two tranches of the loan had been disbursed but left with four tranches.

    He noted that a mortgage guarantee and insurance scheme will be set up as well as housing microfinance system for the project.

    “Mortgage guarantee and insurance ought to address those who don’t have adequate equity. i.e young and elderly people who lack the 20 per cent required under the under-righting standard. So CBN designed the
    underwriting standard and hand it over to the NMRC.

    So we have completed the standard for the formal sector but we are currently working on that of the informal sector which is a larger part of Nigeria.

    “We are also working on non-interest mortgage underwriting standards for populations that want to get their mortgages through faith-based finance. These are all contributions of the CBN,” he added.

    Some of the participating microfinance banks include Lapo, Hazmal, Mpf, Ab, Wetland, Hasal, Fortis among others.

    In his remarks, the CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele described the initiative as an opportunity to transit home tenants to owners to guaranteed access to mortgage finance.

    Emefiele, who was represented by Mrs. Tokunbo Martins admitted that the sector had been bedeviled with several challenges including long-term credit to guarantee the mortgage.

    However, she called for more awareness on the initiative to assist prospective house owners benefit from the programme.

  • Strengthening the  DFIs to deliver on the  Transformation Agenda

    Strengthening the DFIs to deliver on the Transformation Agenda

    A structural change has occurred in finance since 2008. At global level, we have seen development financing assume a more critical role.

    In this period, the World Bank’s concessional lending resource – International Development Association (IDA) – has been replenished to record levels, as a number of countries in the developing world needed to access funds from external sources to make up for income shortfalls when the prices of commodities practically collapsed in the international market in the wake of the global financial market crisis. Our very own, The Coordinating Minister of the Economy (CME) and Honourable Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, then as Managing Director at the World Bank, led the IDA 16 replenishment to $49.3 billion, significantly higher than the level the Fund had ever attained in previous replenishment efforts.

    It is far more than the circumstantial reason of the financial crisis that the global development finance institutions (DFIs) have had to step up interventions in critical areas of poverty alleviation, climate change mitigation, infrastructure financing and more, in the developing countries. It is generally known that the World Bank is resourced with people of diverse and great technical knowledge of development programming and funding.

    Even in the best of times, private sector credit is often too expensive to finance long term projects, including infrastructure which are necessary to create jobs in the immediate term, while providing the basis for economic growth over the long-term. Moreover, with deployment strategies more policy-driven, the World Bank, although a very large institution, is able to quickly channel funding assistance to where it is best needed.

    This point helped in no small measure in shoring up the credibility of the Bretton Woods institution after its policy booboos, together with those of its twin institution, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), earned opprobrium in the developing countries in the 1980s and 1990s.

    At regional level, we have also seen a rise in the capacity to deploy financial assistance and policy advice by the African Development Bank (AfDB) and Asian Development Bank (ADB). Apart from its funding role in the development of infrastructure in Africa, the AfDB is the leading African institution that integrates the continent with international funding for climate change mitigation and adaptation.

    Europe boasts of multilateral DFIs including European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, European Investment Bank and The Council of Europe Development Bank, which prides itself as “The Social development bank of Europe”. These institutions are meeting needs that are beyond the scope and interests of the private banks. They are also fostering regional integration by lending to regional and sub-regional projects.

     

    DFI transformation in Nigeria

     

    The Administration of President Goodluck Jonathan has performed creditably well in strengthening the national DFIs in Nigeria, in line with global trends that recognise that additional financial frameworks are needed to serve the project markets that commercial banks may term too risky to lend to. Also, certain industries, which are at very early stages of development, require knowledge beyond the areas of business as usual for the commercial banks, who charge high interest rates for the credit they give.

    The DFIs become very relevant in this area, because as agents of the government, they are obligated to invest in knowledge development and provide early-stage financing to take specific industries off the ground, and prepare them to such a stage when they can begin to attract and able to afford commercial lending.

    With the banking sector significantly depressed by the financial market turmoil of 2008 and 2009, the government had to step in strongly to protect existing jobs, encourage creation of new ones and even stimulate nascent and moribund industries so as to sustain economic growth.

    The Nigerian Export-Import Bank (NEXIM Bank) has been in the frame of this development, and has received a lot of support under this Administration to deliver its mandate. As Nollywood’s profile steadily rose in the domestic and international environments, there was a need to support the industry to strengthen technically, and provide important infrastructure for the growth of the entertainment sector value chain.

    This was the key objective of the plan to launch an Entertainment Industry Fund as announced by President Jonathan in 2011. The promise has since been kept by Mr. President. NEXIM Bank is the institution that manages the Fund. This is in line with its mandate to support businesses, including the creative and entertainment sector, which have capacities to create jobs and earn foreign exchange for the country. Through its management of the Nigerian Creative and Entertainment Industry Stimulation Loan Scheme, NEXIM Bank has helped in raising the international profile of Nollywood. “Dr. Bello,” an international film financed with the Fund was premiered in Washington DC at the Kennedy Centre last year.

    Similar interventional funds have been supported by the Administration, including the Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) industry fund, which is managed by the Bank of Industry. The DFI also manages the textile industry intervention fund. The Fund is aimed at restoring the textile industry to its former glory, when it employed more than 25,000 Nigerians and attracted significant foreign investment from India and some other Asian countries.

    Today, the Nigerian project landscape is dotted with projects funded by the DFIs. To reinvigorate the institutional framework for improved performance, Nigerian Agricultural Cooperative and Rural Development Bank was restructured and rebranded as Bank of Agriculture, to increase lending to the agricultural sector. Similarly, Urban Development Bank of Nigeria Plc was transformed to Infrastructure Bank, with renewed focus on infrastructural investment. The Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria is also being reformed and backed by the government to raise its capacity for intervention and support government’s programme for the provision of affordable housing to Nigerians in formal and informal occupations.

     

    Raising the Performance Profile

     

    There is no doubt that there is much more scope for the DFIs to continue to help deliver on the Transformation Agenda of Mr. President. NEXIM Bank is working on four focal sectors, namely Manufacturing, Agro-processing, Solid Minerals and Services. These sectors form the “Mass Agenda” of the bank. More recently, there has been strong consideration for increasing our intervention in solid mineral mining. To this effect, we have been working with key stakeholders in the sector. However, the need to increase funding intervention capacity, especially low cost, early-stage, long-term funding for the industry, has been identified. Support for this agenda has come in the form of a mandate for NEXIM Bank to widen its partnership for accessing low-cost fund from other international DFIs, and consideration of an industry fund.

    The trend in development financing is that interventions are scaled up in the areas where results have been achieved. While financial results are not the primary objective of setting up the DFIs, they have to be financially sustainable. Therefore, it is not incongruent to their mandate that commercial viability of projects is ascertained to guarantee moderate financial return on the lending portfolios of the DFIs. This orientation is important for prospective project owners and the DFIs. Inadequate consideration of this factor had generated certain misgivings that the Entertainment Industry Fund was supposed to be operated as a grant, whereas it is a revolving loan fund.

    This is an important point because there is the need to create separate prudential guidelines for the DFIs. In certain quarters, the portfolios of DFIs are evaluated with the same yardsticks the credit assets of commercial banks are assessed for performance. This contradicts the very basis for setting up DFIs. It becomes necessary to establish DFIs as a result of the unwillingness of commercial banks to take some funding risks which DFIs are in fact mandated to take because of the development outcomes generated by the projects they fund. For this reason, Malaysia has a model which has a separate set of prudential guidelines for its DFIs; distinct from that which commercial banks have.

     

    Social Returns

     

    The social essence of development finance institutions is perhaps the more affirmed justification of their existence. DFIs are set up with the mandate of promoting social equilibrium in one way or another. It is important to support middle market institutions as well as grassroots businesses, and not just entirely focus support on the big businesses, although they could become multinationals and flagship businesses that symbolise the national economic stature. SMEs are very important for the spread of industry and prosperity around the country.

    Funding support for women entrepreneurship is another area of intervention to help society maintain social balance. Studies around the world have shown that women are not lagging behind in business formation. But orthodoxy in financial market operations denies women entrepreneurs access to funding. Discrimination against women in terms of financial access is of the scale that requires an intervention; thus we have begun to see positive policy responses as well as supportive products from the private sector to create needed leverage for women entrepreneurship.

    The social goals sit better with development finance institutions. They understand the importance of poverty alleviation and rural development. DFIs are leading providers of vital social statistics to assist policymakers and the larger market to understand the social milieu. All of these are geared toward giving citizens in all segments of society the sense of belonging to play their roles in ensuring social stability. This agenda has been strongly supported by President Goodluck Jonathan, and it is to his credit that policies of inclusiveness are being implemented by this Administration like never before.

     

    Environmental Stewardship

     

    Some of the most environmentally conscious financial institutions in the word are the DFIs. Environmental sustainability is one of other important development issues that moderate the pursuit of financial bottom line by DFIs. Because of the governmental relations that are involved in the funding operations of global and regional DFIs, consideration of environmental impacts of the projects they fund becomes even more important and vital for mitigating political risk. I don’t think national DFIs have any reason not to pursue environmental sustainability best practices. In any case, the Equator Principles have set codes of environmental sustainability practices for project finance which are voluntarily subscribed to by financial institutions of various hues.

    A lot of awareness on this is needed in the country, coupled with investment in regulatory capacity and project development re-orientation. This is one area the DFIs can jointly adapt international frameworks to suit the local context.

    NEXIM Bank has been investing in knowledge acquisition, and is seeking for technical collaboration with other development agencies to help develop carbon finance and climate change mitigation in the country.

    Although hope of a global agreement for trading carbon credit from emission cuts will probably not crystalise, experts believe that funding framework at bilateral level, as well as regional funding for climate change mitigation and adaptation, will continue to flourish.

    Besides, investments in environmental sustainability can generate enough returns in preservation of the natural environment and endangered species, apart from slowing down global warming and reducing environmental pollution.

    •Orya is Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Export-Import Bank