Skip to main content
  • Sections
  • Search

Center for Strategic & International Studies

User menu

  • Subscribe
  • Sign In

   Ranked #1 Think Tank in U.S. by Global Go To Think Tank Index

Topics

  • Climate Change
  • Cybersecurity and Technology
    • Cybersecurity
    • Data Governance
    • Intelligence, Surveillance, and Privacy
    • Military Technology
    • Space
    • Technology and Innovation
  • Defense and Security
    • Counterterrorism and Homeland Security
    • Defense Budget
    • Defense Industry, Acquisition, and Innovation
    • Defense Strategy and Capabilities
    • Geopolitics and International Security
    • Long-Term Futures
    • Missile Defense
    • Space
    • Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation
  • Economics
    • Asian Economics
    • Global Economic Governance
    • Trade and International Business
  • Energy and Sustainability
    • Energy, Climate Change, and Environmental Impacts
    • Energy and Geopolitics
    • Energy Innovation
    • Energy Markets, Trends, and Outlooks
  • Global Health
    • Family Planning, Maternal and Child Health, and Immunizations
    • Multilateral Institutions
    • Health and Security
    • Infectious Disease
  • Human Rights
    • Civil Society
    • Transitional Justice
    • Human Security
  • International Development
    • Food and Agriculture
    • Governance and Rule of Law
    • Humanitarian Assistance
    • Private Sector Development
    • U.S. Development Policy

Regions

  • Africa
    • North Africa
    • Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Americas
    • Caribbean
    • North America
    • South America
  • Arctic
  • Asia
    • Afghanistan
    • Australia, New Zealand & Pacific
    • China
    • India
    • Japan
    • Korea
    • Pakistan
    • Southeast Asia
  • Europe
    • European Union
    • NATO
    • Post-Soviet Europe
    • Turkey
  • Middle East
    • The Gulf
    • Egypt and the Levant
    • North Africa
  • Russia and Eurasia
    • The South Caucasus
    • Central Asia
    • Post-Soviet Europe
    • Russia

Sections menu

  • Programs
  • Experts
  • Events
  • Analysis
    • Blogs
    • Books
    • Commentary
    • Congressional Testimony
    • Critical Questions
    • Interactive Reports
    • Journals
    • Newsletter
    • Reports
    • Transcript
  • Podcasts
  • iDeas Lab
  • Transcripts
  • Web Projects

Main menu

  • About Us
  • Support CSIS
    • Securing Our Future
Photo: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images
Report
Share
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • Printfriendly.com

Rethinking Private Capital for Development

December 14, 2017

CSIS
Download the Report



The debate on the role of the private sector in development is not new. The need to crowd-in private investments for global challenges was first discussed in the creation of the UK’s CDC Group in 1948 and the International Finance Corporation (IFC) in 1956. Now, there is broad consensus that the private sector is the engine for economic growth, innovation, and progress, generating 9 out of 10 jobs in developing countries. What is novel in this discourse is the central role that private investment can play in financing development.

For a long time, international development focused on increasing the amount of foreign aid, or official development assistance (ODA), to help solve global challenges. During the last 15 years the centrality of ODA as the major source of development financing has shifted. The role of ODA has been redefined as a “catalyst” to mobilize additional investments; while domestic resources of developing countries (taxes, savings, and other revenues) as well as private-sector investments have been promoted for financing development initiatives. Private financing has now become a central component to fund the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

This recognition is in part due to foreign direct investments (FDI) overtaking the volume of ODA by a factor of 5 to 1. But even the current hundreds of billions of dollars of foreign investment will not be enough to cover the trillions of dollars needed to meet the 17 SDGs in 2030. More resources will be needed.

Two concurrent trends have further elevated the prominence of private capital in development finance: the aid budgets of major donors have stagnated in recent years and private investors are increasing their appetite for new investments in emerging markets, partly driven by more accommodating investment climates and partly as a result of low interest rates in the mature economies. Additionally, the potential of domestic resources as a source of development funding is growing.

The outstanding question is how private capital can help fill the gap in funding levels for the SDGs, to move financial assistance from the “billions” in ODA to “trillions” in development investments. Donor countries, aid agencies, and development finance institutions can be important players and catalysts to channel private capital into developing countries. Aid agencies are being challenged to offer more innovative products and approaches to enhance the reach of private resources. The recent World Bank Group’s “Cascade” approach announced in April 2017 underscores the use of private-sector finance in development activities. Aid agencies are also exploring financing modalities such as blended finance.

Although there are several institutions, instruments, and innovative approaches that have been designed to channel private capital, barriers for scaling investments to align with development remain. This report analyzes some of the issues surrounding private capital in development. It provides a brief description of the development finance landscape and discusses some of the main limitations that exist in channeling those private funds into developing countries. Finally, it offers a set of broad recommendations for donor countries, aid agencies, and development finance institutions to help channel private capital for development.
Downloads
Download PDF file of "Rethinking Private Capital for Development"
Written By
  • LinkedIn
Romina Bandura
Senior Fellow, Project on Prosperity and Development, Project on U.S. Leadership in Development
Media Queries

Contact H. Andrew Schwartz
Chief Communications Officer
Tel: 202.775.3242

Contact Caleb Diamond
Media Relations Manager and Editorial Associate
Tel: 202.775.3173

Related
Development Finance Institutions, International Development, Private Sector Development, Project on Prosperity and Development

Most Recent From Romina Bandura

On Demand Event
Online Report Launch: Sustainable Infrastructure in the Amazon
October 26, 2020
Report
Sustainable Infrastructure in the Amazon: Brazil Country Case Study
By Romina Bandura, Shannon McKeown
October 26, 2020
Report
Sustainable Infrastructure in the Amazon: Colombia Country Case Study
By Romina Bandura, Sundar R. Ramanujam
October 26, 2020
Report
Sustainable Infrastructure in the Amazon: Peru Country Case Study
By Romina Bandura, Owen Murphy
October 26, 2020
Report
Sustainable Infrastructure in the Amazon
By Romina Bandura, Shannon McKeown
October 26, 2020
On Demand Event
Online Event: Should We Preserve the Doing Business Report?
October 20, 2020
Report
How Can the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation Effectively Source Deals?
By Daniel F. Runde, Romina Bandura, Janina Staguhn
October 16, 2020
On Demand Event
Online Event: Government Accountability in the Age of Covid-19
July 1, 2020
View all content by this expert
Footer menu
  • Topics
  • Regions
  • Programs
  • Experts
  • Events
  • Analysis
  • Web Projects
  • Podcasts
  • iDeas Lab
  • Transcripts
  • About Us
  • Support Us
Contact CSIS
Email CSIS
Tel: 202.887.0200
Fax: 202.775.3199
Visit CSIS Headquarters
1616 Rhode Island Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Media Queries

Contact H. Andrew Schwartz
Chief Communications Officer
Tel: 202.775.3242

Contact Caleb Diamond
Media Relations Manager and Editorial Associate
Tel: 202.775.3173

Daily Updates

Sign up to receive The Evening, a daily brief on the news, events, and people shaping the world of international affairs.

Subscribe to CSIS Newsletters

Follow CSIS
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Instagram

All content © 2020. All rights reserved.

Legal menu
  • Credits
  • Privacy Policy
  • Reprint Permissions