World Bank gets massive money boost - see which countries stepped up
World Bank secured $100-billion package to support its poorest member-nations through 2028. Countries worldwide increased their donations despite currency exchange challenges
At a high-profile meeting in Seoul this dec‚ the World Banks fund for low-income countries got a super-sized boost (way bigger than last times $93-billion package)
The International Development Association which helps 78 poor countries secured $100-billion in total funding — this money will be used for climate-related problems debt issues and other stuff that these nations face. Direct donations make up $24-billion of the total while the rest comes from smart-money tricks like bonds
Notable donors stepped up their game: President Biden raised US contribution to $4-billion while other countries made big moves too. South Korea put in 846-billion won ($597-billion); Norway went up 50% to 5024-billion krone. The strong dollar however made some foreign money worth less than expected
- Britain raised its share by 40% to 1.8-billion pounds
- Spain put in 400-million euros
- Several other nations made similar jumps in their donations
Even though they didnt hit the hoped-for $120-billion target‚ its still a win for developing nations. The money will keep flowing until mid-28 helping countries deal with their day-to-day problems; but the dollars strength (thanks to Trumpʼs election win) kinda messed with some of the math
The whole thing shows how global money-giving works nowadays — its not just about throwing cash at problems but using fancy financial tools to make every dollar work harder. The fund helps poor countries by giving them super-cheap loans or sometimes just straight-up cash handouts