"We Need to Be Good Ancestors": Experts Weigh in on New Incentives to Invest in Global Solutions
World Bank
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Details
- Date Published
- 27 Oct 2025
- Priority Score
- 2
- Australian
- No
- Created
- 30 Oct 2025, 03:07 pm
Description
The World Bank's new Framework for Financial Incentives represents a fundamental shift in how countries can address shared global challenges—be it pandemics, biodiversity loss or regional water crises. That is according to three experts in global development.
Summary
The article explores the World Bank's newly launched Framework for Financial Incentives (FFI), which seeks to provide strategic financial benefits for countries engaging in globally beneficial projects. This framework is significant as it offers more financing, better repayment terms, and lower interest rates for endeavors that address shared global challenges such as pandemics and biodiversity loss. Homi Kharas of the Brookings Institution highlights how the FFI eradicates the traditional trade-off between national development and global responsibility, allowing countries to achieve better outcomes domestically and internationally. Although not narrowly focused on AI safety, the FFI's approach to global cooperation and incentives can inform frameworks addressing global AI risks.
Body
Launched in February 2025, theWorld Bank's Framework for Financial Incentivesoffers countries a powerful package of benefits—more financing, longer repayment periods, and lower interest rates—when their projects deliver benefits that extend beyond their own borders. The FFI rewards middle-income countries for scaling up investments in pandemic preparedness, biodiversity conservation, and cross-border water management while pursuing their national development priorities.Through the FFI’s Livable Planet Fund, middle-income countries—home to 75% of the world's population and holding most of the world's biodiversity hotspots—now have access strategic grants that make ambitious cross-border projects financially viable.For decades, the question has lingered: who pays to protect our shared planet?"Global public goods is now such an interesting concept because it essentially starts to recognize that we are in a single world," explainsHomi Kharas, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. "Development in any country also has implications for how other countries develop."World Bank FFI ProjectsA snapshot of projects approved under the World Bank’s FFI as of October 2025. (View full size.)What makes the World Bank's new Framework for Financial Incentives (FFI) revolutionary, according to Kharas, is how it eliminates this traditional trade-off between national development and global responsibility."The beauty of these kinds of programs is that it takes away this notion of a trade-off," Kharas explains. "For the finance minister the question is never going to be 'either do this or do that.' The question is: if you do this in this way, then you can actually do better for your own country and better for the world."