The joint World Bank-IFC Financial and Private Sector Development Vice Presidency focuses on three core areas:
- Creating the institutional foundations for effective markets (examples: property rights, collateral systems, corporate governance, financial market infrastructure)
- Promoting open and competitive markets (examples: opening up entry, access to finance for promising firms, deeper and more liquid financial markets, and exit for failing firms)
- Supporting social safety nets with market-based instruments (examples: financial market-based instruments and risk management for pensions and insurance systems as well as low income housing)
This work contributes to:
- Job and wealth creation
Productive jobs tend to be created in private markets; competition tends to drive upgrading of skills and productivity growth, especially when backed by deeper and more liquid financial systems; in turn this raises real wages.
- Opportunity for all
Rules-based markets that allow entry of new firms promote success on the basis of rules, not on the basis of personal connections; this stimulates movement from the informal to the formal sector including access to finance for underserved small firms and households.
- Better governance
Better regulation reduces opportunities for corruption; wealth creation and entry of new parties into the market tend to create demand for better governance; corporate governance and anti-money laundering activities directly provide greater transparency and remedies against abuse.
Blog Feeds
The Financial and Private Sector Development Vice Presidency manages three blogs. Here are the most recent postings...