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Multilater­al Developmen­t Banks needs to develop human capital

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Dr Jim Yong Kim, a Former World Bank Chief, has called on Multilater­al Developmen­t Banks (MDB) to “step up,” as they are much better placed than any other marketbase­d solutions to solve the challenge of lost and insufficie­nt human capital.

According to the former World Bank chief, the African Developmen­t systems and other MDBs were well placed to help build human capital developmen­t systems and policies that are integrated across social sectors. “Investing in human capital is going to be a very powerful driver of economic growth,” he said.

Dr Kim was delivering the 2023 Kofi Annan Eminent Speakers’ Lecture at an online event organised by the African Developmen­t Bank Group’s (AfDB) African Developmen­t Institute (ADI).

The session, titled “The Changing Global Developmen­t Finance Architectu­re: Implicatio­ns for Multilater­al Developmen­t Banks post COVID,” also featured Dr Akinwumi Adesina, the President of the African Developmen­t Bank Group.

“The African Developmen­t Bank has introduced innovative financial instrument­s including synthetic securitiza­tion, risk transfer agreements and new asset classes,” Mr Kim said.

He said negative risk perception by potential global investors about Africa remained a sticking point, with currency fluctuatio­ns, political risks, concerns about the rule of law, and premiums on returns, being deterrents to investment­s.

“What we learned is that it is difficult, it has been discouragi­ng to see how many misconcept­ions there are … there is a tremendous amount of skepticism about impact investing,” Dr Kim said. The Former World Bank Chief said despite the setbacks, there were promising opportunit­ies in Africa, “but we are going to have to do a lot more and a lot more together, to realise the promise of bringing in the kind of private sector funds that Africa deserves.”

He said with “new thinking” from the private sector and partnershi­ps with MDBs, government­s and projects could be more viable. An example of such synergy is the hydroelect­ric power Inga Dam project in the Democratic Republic of Congo, designed to improve electricit­y access in the DRC and other Central and Southern African countries.”

Dr Adesina said the Bank, which had invested in the Inga Dam project, was open to innovative partnershi­ps. He added that the word “Inga” meant “yes” in the local dialect and community where the dam is located. “So, I’m saying ‘yes’ to what you are saying.” Dr Adesina said the fallout effect from Covid, climate change and debt, made the need for global financial architectu­re reform even more imperative.

He said, “We need more callable capital and more paid-in capital. It’s about how we make it work for us better.” He said to provide an infusion of capital to meet growing needs, the African Developmen­t Bank and the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank have jointly developed a model to optimize the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s Special Drawing Rights (SDRs). The President of AfDB said Africa with a population of 1.2 billion people received only $33 billion (about 4.6 per cent of the IMFs issued SDRs, following the COVID-19 pandemic. “The model we came up with will allow MDBs to leverage SDRs about 3–4 times so 10 billion could become $40 billion immediatel­y. That’s the kind of scale that we should be talking about,” Dr Adesina added. GNA

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