Monday, May 6, 2024

World Bank approves $80 million to strengthen financial sector, increase access to financial services

May 6

The World Bank’s Board of Executive Directors today approved an $80 million development policy credit for Nepal to strengthen the stability of the financial sector, diversify financial solutions, and increase access to financial services.

The third Finance for Growth Development Policy Credit aims to improve the functioning of the financial sector to support private sector-led growth. The operation will strengthen the supervision of the banking and insurance sectors in Nepal and foster financial product innovations in capital, insurance, and disaster risk markets, claims a press note issued by the World Bank.

The operation will also increase financial inclusion through digitalisation, enhanced credit infrastructure and improved financial literacy, with a focus on women entrepreneurs, it adds.

“This project supports Nepal’s green, resilient, and inclusive development and will help create an enabling environment for private investment to contribute to Nepal’s economic growth, particularly benefiting the poor and vulnerable,” said World Bank country director for Maldives, Nepal, and Sri Lanka Faris Hadad-Zervos.

The operation also supports Nepal's climate agenda by, for example, enhancing supervision of climate risks by requiring disclosures of climate-related risks and impacts of the banking sector portfolio; introducing risk-informed pricing for insurance products, including climate risks; establishing a framework for the issuance of green bonds; and integrating climate-related mitigation and adaptation commitments into credit guarantee products.

"This operation supports the government’s transformative financial sector reform agenda to promote private sector-led growth," World Bank task team leader for the project Tatsiana Kliatskova said, adding that the reforms in banking, insurance, and capital markets are instrumental for the sector’s resilience and the critical role it plays to enable private capital mobilisation.

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