World Bank Group

World Bank Group

The World Bank Group comprises five institutions that have their own membership, articles of agreement and governing bodies but work as one in the service of partner countries:

  • The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD)
  • The International Development Association (IDA)
  • The International Finance Corporation (IFC)
  • The Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA)
  • The International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID)
The IBRD (soon to become known as the World Bank) was set up in 1944 to help countries that had been devastated by war. Its focus moved from reconstruction to development and particularly the funding of ambitious infrastructure projects. With the birth of the IFC (1956), private companies and financial institutions in the developing world could take advantage of loan facilities. Four years later, the IDA came into being with a remit to help the poorest countries. The subsequent founding of MIGA and ICSID further improved the World Bank Group’s opportunities to align global financial resources to developing world needs. These five institutions seek out sustainable solutions to reduce poverty and encourage prosperity for all. Their specific mission (target 2030) is to reduce to three percent the proportion of the world population that lives in extreme poverty. An important aim is to dramatically improve the incomes of the poorest 40 percent of people in all countries.  There are currently 189 member countries. The IBRD and IDA constitute ‘The World Bank’ and focus on helping the governments of developing countries. The latter works to help the world’s poorest and the former concentrates on the middle-income countries and the more creditworthy. The IFC, MIGA and ICID help strengthen the private sector in the developing world. The World Bank is funded through its accumulated reserves and money paid in by its members.

The World Bank: Local Currency Bonds Catch On as Countries Aim to Catch Up

Two years ago, the World Bank Group’s International Finance Corporation tried something that had never been done in the Dominican Republic. In a bid to increase access to finance to

MIGA (World Bank) – A New Boon for Emerging-Market Financing: Achieving Investment-Grade Bonds with MIGA’s Credit Enhancement

Many investors, lenders, and government officials are familiar with the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) of the World Bank Group. For 25 years, the agency has insured investments in developing

Otaviano Canuto, World Bank Group: Macroeconomics and Stagnation – Keynesian-Schumpeterian Wars

Policy makers in the advanced economies at the core of the global financial crisis can make the claim that they prevented a new “Great Depression”. However, recovery since the outbreak

World Bank: Helping Electrification Efforts in DRC

Sub-Saharan Africa is blessed with large hydropower resources that can bring electricity to homes, power businesses and industry, light clinics and schools, and spur economic activity, creating jobs and improving
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World Bank Support to Promote Transparency, Accountability and Job Creation in Jordan

A US$250 million loan, approved last week, will ease Jordan’s fiscal strains, which have been deepened by the influx of Syrian refugees and by regional turmoil that has disrupted its

The World Bank: Accelerating Africa’s Aspirations

As Sub-Saharan Africa develops rapidly, it is estimated that the continent will need millions of engineers just to reach a single Millennium Development Goal, that of access to safe water

World Bank Group: Financial Inclusion – Banking on Low-Income Households

Financial exclusion restricts economic opportunity and constrains poverty reduction. Yet today there are an estimated 2.5 billion adult people worldwide who go about their lives without any formal financial services

World Bank Group: Spurring Job Growth in the Western Balkans – Research and Innovation

By Paulo Correa and Christopher Colford Promoting economic growth and job creation requires innovative industries that can make imaginative use of business opportunities springing from new technologies and research and development (R&D)
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Otaviano Canuto, World Bank Group: Walking on the Wild Side – Monetary Policy and Prudential Regulation

Global financial integration and the linkages between the financial and the real sides of economies are sources of huge policy challenges. This is now beyond doubt, after what we saw

World Bank Reports on Affordable Housing in Egypt

Hamada Mohamed, a taxi driver, is married with a 3 -year-old boy, and expecting a new baby in the coming months. Like 75 percent of young families he has not

World Bank Response to Philippines Typhoon Disaster

“We have been encouraged by the resilience of the Filipino people and the determination shown by President Aquino and his team as they work to recover from a disaster of

MIGA (World Bank): Energy in Africa – The Many Sides of Sustainability

Africa is booming—mostly. Much of the continent has experienced strong and sustained economic growth over the last two decades. Many countries have also been shielded from the recent Great Recession
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