IFC's Asia-Pacific financing rose 15% to record in fiscal 2024

Development institution sees promising prospects for blue bonds in the region

20240809 Riccardo Puliti 3

Riccardo Puliti, the International Finance Corp.'s regional vice president for Asia and the Pacific, speaks to Nikkei Asia in Tokyo on Aug. 9. (Photo by Suzu Takahashi)

AKANE OKUTSU, Nikkei staff writer

TOKYO -- The World Bank Group's private-sector arm, the International Finance Corp., committed record-high Asia-Pacific investments and loans in fiscal 2024, which ended in June, increasing by 10% to 15% from the previous year, its regional vice president for Asia and the Pacific told Nikkei Asia.

"Not only are we growing by giving our money, but we are growing by attracting private-sector money," Riccardo Puliti said in an interview in Tokyo. In the previous fiscal year, the IFC committed $11 billion to 108 projects in the region, including long-term financing from its own account and commitments to financial institutions.

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