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    How the World Bank can turn dormant SDRs into billions in new lending

    If the World Bank issued SDR-denominated bonds, it could tap into a massive treasure trove of dormant resources - billions of dollars - sitting in the proverbial basement of high-income countries. Two experts explain how to pull off this financial wizardry by 2024.

    By Shabtai Gold // 03 March 2023

    What if there was a giant, untapped treasure trove that the World Bank could mine for tens of billions of dollars in new, low-cost lending within the next 12 months? It would allow the bank to lend more for climate, health, education, or whatever else is needed in low-income countries struggling with access to money.

    It turns out that such a goldmine already exists, according to Brad Setser, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and a former United States Treasury official, and Stephen Paduano, a Ph.D. candidate at the London School of Economics. The two experts mapped out a plan, and all it will take is a little financial engineering and the willingness of high-income countries and the bank to get creative.

    The pair argue that the key to awakening these dormant funds is for the World Bank to issue a set of bonds denominated in Special Drawing Rights, or SDRs — a “reserve asset” created by the International Monetary Fund. The SDRs are something like the Santa Claus of backup fiscal power, in that they are real as long as everyone involved believes in them — and they’re a boxed present that countries can exchange for cash, especially in challenging times. 

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    More reading:

    ► IMF has allocated SDRs. Now, might they be redistributed?

    ► 6 months after SDR allocation, can the assets work for development?

    ► SDRs and the RST: Explaining the acronyms of the IMF's currency system

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    About the author

    • Shabtai Gold

      Shabtai Gold

      Shabtai Gold is a Senior Reporter based in Washington. He covers multilateral development banks, with a focus on the World Bank, along with trends in development finance. Prior to Devex, he worked for the German Press Agency, dpa, for more than a decade, with stints in Africa, Europe, and the Middle East, before relocating to Washington to cover politics and business.

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