Lend or suspend? Maximising the impact of multilateral bank financing in the Covid-19 crisis

22nd July 2020

Lend or suspend? Maximising the impact of multilateral bank financing in the Covid-19 crisis

The Covid-19 pandemic has triggered a collapse in global economic activity that will have lasting economic and social impacts across the world. Recent World Bank estimates suggest that there could be more than 100-million additional people earning less than $1.90 per day as a result of the crisis.

Yet, governments in lower income countries have been constrained in mounting responses of a comparable scale because of relatively lower tax revenues, more limited opportunities for domestic borrowing and, in many cases, a lack of access to international capital markets.

As a part of the financial response to Covid-19, multilateral development banks (MDBs) have gained traction, although they intend to fund longer-term development projects, not short-term liquidity. The objective of this paper to assess the best way to deploy MDB assets to help lower income countries respond to the global crisis triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic. It seeks to find answers to the following questions:

Report by the Overseas Development Institute