Donald Kaberuka, president of the
African Development Bank.
Photo by: London Summit
/ CC BY-ND
|
During the African Development Bank’s
annual meeting in May, participants underlined the need to bridge the
continent’s infrastructure
gap to fuel economic growth. The bank’s response: the largest known
infrastructure bond to date.
AfDB’s announcement that it will float
Africa’s first infrastructure bond, worth $22 billion, to its member nations — regional and
otherwise — marks a significant move for the bank to “tap into our own
resources,” its president Donald Kaberuka was quoted as saying.
The funds —aiming to exceed annual
AfDB and World Bank commitments to sub-Saharan Africa by $3 billion —
would support various infrastructure projects, like the construction of roads
and rail lines.
In 2010, the Tunis-based AfDB became
the leading source of multilateral funding for new African
infrastructure.
Although this is the first time it is
floating an infrastructure bond, AfDB has issued various bonds since 2005
through its local currency initiative or linked to the Botswana Pula, Ghana
Cedi, Kenya Shilling, Tanzania Shilling, Uganda Shilling, Zambian Kwacha,
Nigerian Naira and South African rand. In July 2012, the AfDB opened books on a “landmark” 125 billion Uganda shilling bond
program.
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