Multilateral banks need major changes to boost lending – G20 panel

GANDHINAGAR, India  – Multilateral development banks (MDBs) must undergo big changes in the way they operate to eliminate poverty, triple sustainable lending levels by 2030 and create a new funding mechanism to further its agenda, a G20 panel said in a report on Tuesday.

The independent panel, headed by economists Lawrence Summers and N.K. Singh, was commissioned by the Group of 20 nations to propose reforms for MDBs with a focus on increasing funding for sustainable developments goals and climate change, among others.

“Individually and collectively, MDBs must become effective agents in all developing countries for integrating the development and climate change agendas,” said the report, which was tabled during the G20 finance meeting in the western Indian state of Gujarat.

MDBs, like the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, must work with governments and the private sector to reduce, share and manage risks and thus bring down the cost of capital, it added.

READ: World Bank could lend $50B more over decade with reform, says Yellen

Additional spending of around $3 trillion each year by 2030 would be required towards incremental investments in climate action and for meeting other sustainable development goals, the panel said.

Of this, around $1.8 trillion should go towards sustainable infrastructure, a four-fold increase since 2019, while $1.2 trillion would be need to achieve other goals, including a 75 percent increase in spending on health and education, it said.

“The international development finance system should be designed to support this spending by providing $500 billion in additional annual official external financing by 2030, of which one-third (should be) in concessional and non-debt creating financing and two-thirds in the form of non-concessional official lending.”

The group will continue to work toward resolving differences in helping low-income countries manage their debt burdens and free up funding for climate financing.

Countries like Zambia and Ghana have been waiting for big creditors to make progress in providing debt relief under the so called “Common Framework”, which is led by the G20.

MDBs should provide an incremental $260 billion of additional annual official financing, of which $200 billion should be in non-concessional lending, and help mobilize and catalyze most of the associated private finance, the panel said.

“A larger fraction of concessional assistance should be channeled through MDBs,” the panel said.

Global creditors, debtor nations and international financial institutions agreed in April to galvanize the Common Framework – a platform supposed to speed up and simplify the process of getting financially ailing economies back on their feet.

Zambia, locked in default for almost three years, struck a deal last month to restructure $6.3 billion in debt owed to governments abroad including China, but many challenges remain.

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