Audio By Carbonatix
The African Development Bank (AfDB) arm lending to low-income countries will start raising $5 billion from capital markets every three years from 2027, a senior bank official said on Tuesday, as donor countries such as the United States cut support.
The Africa Development Fund (ADF) facility has provided $45 billion in concessional credit to 37 low-income African countries since it was established in 1972.
It counts the United States as its biggest cumulative donor, but President Donald Trump's administration wants to cut $555 million in funding.
"We have an ambition to go to the capital markets and raise funding, which would help us to diversify the way that we fund ourselves," said Valerie Dabady, AfDB's head of Resource Mobilisation and Partnerships, during a briefing.
"We believe that we can raise up to $5 billion in every three-year cycle. But to get there, we have to actually change our charter," she said, adding that the process of doing so was already underway.
ADF will then seek a credit rating and start undertaking the work of raising funds, following in the footsteps of the broader AfDB, which has issued a range of instruments in international capital markets over the years, Dabady said.
The Abidjan-headquartered AfDB is the continent's biggest development bank, and it approved a review of ADF's funding mix in December 2022, she said, before the geopolitical shifts that have stoked concerns about attainment of replenishment targets.
"It was very prescient and very timely that we should have done this... what it has done, the current geopolitical context, is to give a bit more impetus to what it is we want to do with the market borrowing," Dabady said.
The next round of replenishment for the ADF, which is held on a three-year cycle, is scheduled to take place from November, and AfDB has set a target of more than doubling the $8.9 billion that was raised in the last round.
"We had started off these discussions wanting to reach $25 billion, and I think that given the context, that's not something that's going to be possible, given the constrained environment and the like," Dabady said.
Latest Stories
-
Dr Maxwell Boakye to build 50-bed children’s ward at Samartex Hospital in honour of late mother
7 minutes -
One killed and 11 injured at Dubai and Abu Dhabi airports as Iran strikes region
13 minutes -
Former MCE, 8 others remain in custody over alleged land fraud in Kumasi
19 minutes -
Black Queens players stranded in UAE over Israel-Iran conflict
60 minutes -
James Owusu declares bid for NPP–USA chairman, pledges renewal and unity
1 hour -
Trump threatens strong force if Iran continues to retaliate
2 hours -
Lekzy DeComic gears up for Easter comedy special ‘A Fool in April’
3 hours -
Iran declares 40 days of national mourning after Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s death
4 hours -
Family of Maamobi shooting victim makes desperate plea for Presidential intervention
5 hours -
Middle East turmoil threatens to derail Ghana’s single-digit gains
5 hours -
Free-scoring Semenyo takes burden off Haaland
6 hours -
Explainer: Why did the US attack Iran?
7 hours -
Peaky Blinders to The Bride!: 10 of the best films to watch in March
7 hours -
Crude oil price crosses $91 as Strait of Hormuz blockade chokes 22% of global supply
7 hours -
Dr. Hilla Limann Technical University records 17% admission surge; launches region’s first cosmetology laboratory
8 hours
