Publication: Blended Concessional Finance: Scaling Up Private Investment in Lower-Income Countries
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2018-11
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2019-02-01
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Blending funds from private investors with concessional funds from donors and philanthropic sourceshas a strong potential to scale up investment in lower-income countries and thereby acceleratedevelopment. The use of blended concessional finance is already prevalent in lower-income countriesrepresenting over 70 percent of IFC’s commitments. Recent strategies from development financeinstitutions including the World Bank Group indicate that the relative share of lower-income countries in the global mix of blended concessional finance will increase further. Scaling up engagements in lower-income countries requires solutions tailored to local contexts, as well as the deployment of the whole spectrum of development finance tools, including advisory work, regulatory dialogue and reform, and a mix of blending instruments encompassing both pricing and risk mitigation features.
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“Sierra-Escalante, Kruskaia; Karlin, Arthur; Lauridsen, Morten Lykke. 2018. Blended Concessional Finance: Scaling Up Private Investment in Lower-Income Countries. EMCompass;Note 60. © International Finance Corporation. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31199 License: CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO.”
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