International financial institutions


 INTERNATIONAL SOURCES OF FINANCE



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financail institutions

15.2 INTERNATIONAL SOURCES OF FINANCE 
One major source of financing is international non-profit 
agencies. There are several regional development banks such as the 
Asian Development Bank, the African Development Bank and Fund 
and the Caribbean Development Bank. The primary purpose of these 
agencies is to finance productive development projects or to promote 
economic development in a particular region. The Inter-American 
Development Bank, for example, has the principal purpose of 
accelerating the economic development of its Latin American member 
countries. In general, both public and private entities are eligible to 
borrow money from such agencies as long as private funds are not 
available at reasonable rates and terms. Although the interest rate can 
vary from agency to agency, these loan rates are very attractive and 
very much in demand. 
Of all the international financial organisations, the most familiar 
is the World Bank, formally known as the International Bank for 
Reconstruction and Development (IBRD). The World Bank has two 
affiliates that are legally and financially distinct entities, the 
International Development Association (IDA) and the International 
Finance Corporation (IFC). Exhibit 1 provides a comparison among 
IBRD, IDA and IFC in terms of their objectives, member countries, 
lending terms, lending qualifications as well as other details. All three 
organisations have the same central goals: to promote economic and 


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476 
social progress in poor or developing countries by helping raise 
standards of living and productivity to the point at which development 
becomes self-sustaining. 
Toward this common objective, the World Bank, IDA and IFC 
have three interrelated functions and these are to lend funds, to 
provide advice and to serve as a catalyst in order to stimulate 
investments by others. In the process, financial resources are 
channelled from developed countries to the developing world with the 
hope that developing countries, through this assistance, will progress 
to a level that will permit them, in turn, to contribute to the 
development process of other less fortunate countries. Japan is a 
prime example of a country that has come full circle. From being a 
borrower, Japan is now a major lender to these three organisations. 
South Korea is moving in a direction similar to that of Japan nearly a 
quarter of a century ago. 
EXHIBIT 1: THE WORLD BANK AND ITS AFFILIATES 
The World Bank 
International
International 
Bank for 
Development 
Reconstruction Association 
and development 
(IBRD) 
International Finance 
Corporation (IFC) 


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477 
The World Bank 
International
International 
Bank for 
Development 
Reconstruction Association 
and development 
(IBRD) 
International Finance 
Corporation (IFC) 
Objectives of the 
institutions 
To promote economic progress in 
developing countries by providing 
financial and technical assistance, 
mostly for specific projects in both 
public and private sectors 
To promote economic 
progress in developing 
countries by helping to 
mobilise domestic and 
foreign capital to 
stimulate the growth of 
the private sector 
Year established 
1945 
1960 
1956 
Number of 
member countries 
(April 1983) 
144 131 
124 
Types of countries 
assisted 
Developing 
countries 
other than the 
very poorest. 
Some 
countries 
borrow a 
‘blend’ of 
IBRD loans 
and IDA 
credits. 
The poorest: 80% 
of IDA credits go 
to countries with 
annual per capita 
incomes below $ 
480. Many of 
these countries 
are too poor to be 
able to borrow 
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