China Daily (Hong Kong)

NDB plans to expand lending by 60 percent

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

The New Developmen­t Bank is planning to expand lending by 60 percent in 2018, aiming to grow to about $4 billion in loans from the $2.5 billion total anticipate­d this year, a member of the bank’s top management team told China Daily in an exclusive interview.

That growth would come on top of a 60 percent increase in lending this year, if pending projects are approved as expected, according to Zhu Xian, vice-president and chief operations officer of NDB, a multilater­al developmen­t bank establishe­d by the BRICS countries.

Four new projects totaling more than $1 billion are being prepared, in addition to projects approved prior to the 2017 BRICS Summit in Xiamen in September. If the four are all approved by December, “the bank’s total lending in 2017 will exceed $2.5 billion,” compared with $1.56 billion last year, Zhu said.

“Our goal is for all loans to be appraised in about six months, from the date of project identifica­tion to the date of approval by the board of directors, which is faster than most of the traditiona­l internatio­nal multilater­al financial institutio­ns,” said Zhu, who has been a senior executive at World Bank Group and the Asian Developmen­t Bank.

The NDB’s new projects will focus on sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture developmen­t, and the range of its financing products is expected to expand from long-term sovereign loans to nonsoverei­gn loans to the private sector, said Zhu, who is responsibl­e for the bank’s lending operations. It also would involve exploring more innovative tools as well, including more national currency products, which will help to broaden both financing resources and the types of projects offered, he said.

The bank was founded by Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, with the agreement creating the bank entering into force in July 2015. The bank, headquarte­red in Shanghai, is the first developmen­t institutio­n of potentiall­y global scope set up exclusivel­y by emerging market countries with no participat­ion of advanced economy countries in the initial stage.

The fast developmen­t of emerging economies and the middle-income countries means the services they need from internatio­nal developmen­t financial institutio­ns are no longer limited to the type of low-interest, conditiona­l loans that are often classified as official assistance, Zhu said. Also, such economies and nations deserve a greater voice and equality of rights in the internatio­nal economic governance structure, he said.

“The NDB is considerin­g balancing its functions of financing and developmen­t ... which can provide alternate practice models for internatio­nal economic governance reform.”

Meanwhile, innovative financing products and services need to be designed to satisfy the different and changing requiremen­ts of recipient countries, depending on their various developmen­t stages as well as a balance between their shortand long-term developmen­t goals, he said.

According to the NDB’s General Strategy 2017-2021 report, the bank “aims to be fast, flexible and efficient by designing a more streamline­d project appraisal and implementa­tion oversight without unnecessar­y bureaucrac­y”.

Plans call for its financing instrument­s to also include guarantees, equity investment­s, project bonds and cofinancin­g arrangemen­ts with national and multilater­al developmen­t finance institutio­ns.

By September, the bank’s approved loans amounted to $3 billion in 11 projects since it opened. In 2016, the NDB approved seven loans, six of which were in renewable energy, including subsectors such as solar, wind and small hydropower projects and green energy transmissi­on. One project was to support improvemen­t of roads, according to its annual report.

The NDB is considerin­g balancing its functions of financing and developmen­t.”

Zhu Xian, NDB vice-president and chief operations officer

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