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Bottom lines, better lives? Rethinking multilateral financing to the private sector in developing co

 

The full report, by Action Aid, Bretton Woods Project, Campagna per la riforma della Banca Mondiale, Christian Aid, Eurodad, and Third World Network is available as a PDF pdficon_small.

Executive summary

Since 1990, financing to the private sector by multilateral development banks (MDBs) – has increased ten-fold, from less than $4 billion to more than $40 billion per year. Private sector finance is now a major part of the overall portfolio of many multilaterals. As organisations that work for poverty eradication, environmental sustainability and human rights, we believe this area of MDB operations can have significant impacts in developing countries, yet is little known and under-examined.

At a time when MDBs are seeking additional public funds to bolster their capital base and expand their activities, including their private sector work, this paper critically examines their overall approach. It focuses on the extent to which the mandates and missions, norms and procedures within the private sector operations of MDBs allow them to put poverty reduction, human rights, and environmental sustainability at the core of what they do.

Focussing on six of the main MDBs, it finds a number of areas of concern, and sets out an agenda for change. This agenda is based on two widely shared principles. First, MDBs should support country-owned development plans and strategies. Second, they should focus their activities in areas where they can most directly contribute to pro-poor, sustainable outcomes. The private sector can be a vitally important engine for sustainable development, but private companies can also have detrimental impacts on poverty, human rights and the environment. This paper finds that MDBs’ approach to the private sector and development has been controversial and not always sufficiently focussed on promoting sustainable development or reducing poverty. For example they have:

Further, the MDBs’ project selection, monitoring and evaluation procedures have tended to prioritise commercial rather than social and environmental returns. Internal evaluations have regularly found that MDBs have failed to demonstrate sufficient ‘additionality’ for their financing – meaning that they run the risk of merely replicating the activities of private financial institutions, rather than driving investment towards businesses or sectors that have the greatest benefit for sustainable development. The above and other problems mean that project selection is effectively biased against poorer countries and smaller companies. Monitoring and evaluation methodologies have also been insufficiently focussed on poverty reduction, and transparency and disclosure of information has been weak.

The rapid growth of ‘arms-length’ financial sector investments through financial intermediaries such as private banks or private equity firms is a particular cause for concern. The failure of MDBs to clearly define the development objectives of their investments is particularly worrying in this case, where operational decisions are delegated to the financial intermediary. MDBs’ procedures have not been sufficiently adapted to intermediary financing, and this part of the MDB investment portfolios is extremely poorly monitored, based almost exclusively on self-reporting. Furthermore, there is evidence that the environmental and social performance of MDBs’ financial sector investments is consistently low.

Time for change It is clear that the basis for multilateral support to the private sector needs to be fundamentally rethought. This paper proposes four key reforms.

In the aftermath of the financial crisis, there have been calls to increase multilateral financing to the private sector, and the multilateral development banks are eager to expand their activities. However, this paper argues that radical reform of MDB mandates, objectives, processes and governance is needed first.

Bottom lines, better lives? Rethinking multilateral financing to the private sector in developing countries

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