World Bank Group President Mr Jim
Yong Kim (credit: talkvietnam.com)
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The
World Bank on Thursday launched a new initiative that would bring together
governments, development institutions and private investors to form
public-private partnerships for infrastructure.
The
initiative, known as the Global Infrastructure Facility, would structure
projects to attract long-term investors such as pension funds and insurance
companies in order to meet the developing world's US$1 trillion in infrastructure
needs over the next six years, according to AP/Reuters.
"We
have several trillions of dollars in assets represented today looking for
long-term, sustainable and stable investments," World Bank President Jim
Yong Kim said. "The real challenge is not a matter of money but a lack of
bankable projects - a sufficient supply of commercially viable and sustainable
infrastructure investments."
The
idea has already attracted banking groups like Citibank and HSBC and the
reinsurance firm Swiss Re , as well as the Australian and Japanese governments.
The
facility itself would not
provide direct project funding but aims to bring in investors to advise
governments on how to structure potential projects in order to attract private
capital. It would also bring together a myriad of development institutions so
they do not give conflicting advice to countries.
"There's
a lot of money hidden under the mattress," Jordan Schwartz, head of the
GIF, told reporters ahead of the launch, adding that pensions funds in Canada
and Australia, and European insurance companies were particularly interested in
investing in long-term stable projects.
"In three to five years, (my
goal is that) this has become the standard way we design a significant
portfolio of projects," he said.
Kim
spoke at the annual meetings of the bank and its sister institution, the
International Monetary Fund, began.
He said his initiative, the
Global Infrastructure Facility, would involve institutional investors such as
pension funds, donor nations, multilateral development banks and the World
Bank.
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