THE FUTURE OF DEVELOPMENT FINANCE: Modernising Measures and Instruments

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Transcription:

THE FUTURE OF DEVELOPMENT FINANCE: Modernising Measures and Instruments Ms. Suzanne Steensen Manager Development Finance Architecture Unit Statistics and Development Finance Division OECD Development Co-operation Directorate

Outline 1 Context of reform: the post-2015 era 2 Modernisation package: the OECD DAC 2014 High Level Meeting agreement 3 OECD contribution to the third Conference on Financing for Development

1 The SDG era: The financial architecture of sources and instruments is more complex Sustainable development as the main objective Other objectives DAC donor agencies (concessional & concessional bilateral finance) Private philanthropy (foundations & NGOs) Non-DAC sovereign providers (e.g. BRICS & MINT countries, other South-South cooperation providers) Export credit institutions Multilateral agencies incl. regional & Arab organisations (concessional & nonconcessional finance, & investments) DFIs (nonconcessional loans & Investments) Private actors/investors (FDI & other private flows at market terms) The blue area illustrates the cross-border transfers to developing countries.

USD billion 1 Sources of external finance beyond ODA are becoming more prominent 1000 900 800 24% Remittances 700 600 500 4% 17% Private grants Bonds and securities 400 300 20% 1% 14% 28% FDI Export credits 200 100 29 % 2% 11% 23% 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 1% 8% 18% OOF - excl. export credits Total ODA

1 A Statistical Framework that is Fit for Purpose in the Post-2015 Development Finance Context The OECD DAC statistical system should: Promote transparency and accountability of development finance access to statistics is essential for an accountable post-2015 development framework. Carry the right incentive to maximise resources mobilisation, their smart allocation and catalytic use. Promote international standards for measuring & monitoring of development finance.

2 Historical decision to modernise the OECD DAC framework: Outcomes of the 2014 DAC HLM Modernise the ODA measure Increase targeting of resources to countries most in need (LICs, LDCs, LLDCs, SIDS, conflict afflicted and fragile states) Mobilise more private finance for development Develop a statistical measure tailored to the SDG framework: Total Official Support for Sustainable Development (TOSSD)

2 A. Modernising ODA CONCESSIONALITY and REPORTING ON LOANS IN ODA New measurement system where only the grant equivalent of ODA loans (differentiation of discount rates and thresholds by income group): Allows better comparison between loans and grants. A clear, quantifiable measure of concessionality, that is tighter than what existed before. Ensures access to ODA loans on better terms and conditions than ever before as it incentivises concessionality. Safeguards established to ensure ODA debt sustainability.

2 A. Before and after: ODA loans BEFORE: FULL FACE VALUE AFTER: ONLY THE GRANT EQUIVALENT OF A LOAN Grant Element Thresholds 25% 45% for LDCs and other LICs 15% for LMICs 10% for UMICs Discount Rates 10% Used for assessing the concessionality of a loan 5% base (current IMF discount rate) + adjustment factors of o 4% for LDCs and other LICs o 2% for LMICs o 1% for UMICs Used for both assessing the concessionality of a loan (does it meet the threshold?) and for calculating its ODA grant equivalent or the concessional portion of the loan. Measurement System Positive ODA when disbursed, negative ODA when repaid Grant equivalent of loan disbursements (grant element multiplied by amount disbursed). Repayment of past loans is not subtracted from ODA but will continue to be collected and published.

2 B. Better targeting of ODA Reverse declining trends of ODA to LDCs and improve targeting to countries most in need (LDCs, LICs, SIDS, LLDCs and fragile states) Enhance monitoring of members performance individually through DAC peer reviews and collectively at Senior Level Meetings (compendium of measures). Strengthen the empirical and analytical basis for better decisionmaking about smart ODA allocations.

2 C. Valorising the use of private sector instruments Valorise and incentivise official sector use of instruments with a leveraging effect by: Capturing the budgetary effort associated with using market-like instruments (e.g. equity, risk mitigation instruments) in ODA. Setting an international standard to measure the mobilisation effect of official interventions and collecting data on amounts mobilised in DAC statistics.

2 D. Total Official support for Sustainable Development (TOSSD) A new comprehensive statistical measure that captures the diversity of resource flows in support of sustainable development. Complements and does not replace ODA and will include concessional and non-concessional financing and capture all financial instruments Cover activities that promote sustainable development, including contributions to GPG Capture international public finance and public schemes for mobilising private investments Relevant for any provider of development finance, including private actors that take part in blended investment schemes Ultimate features can only be determined once the post-2015 agenda has been agreed and ongoing consultation with stakeholders beyond the DAC.

2 D. Dakar-Diamniadio Toll Highway project (blended finance)

2 D. Solar panel (blended finance)

3 Conference on Financing for Development (13-16 July, Addis Ababa) More and better aid, more and better investments and more and better tax (AIT) ODA is core and should be better targeted and used more catalytically (quality of aid is essential) AID INVESTMENT Need for the right incentives to further unlock private investments (frameworks, private sector instruments, measurement e.g. TOSSD) TAX Record statistics, enhance countries engagement in the international tax agenda (BEPS, AEOI, illicit financial flows) and respond to capacity needs

Thank you! For more information please visit our website at: http://www.oecd.org/dac/financingdevelopment.htm

Additional slides (Recent trends and facts)

A better incentive system for lending to poor countries Maximum interest rates for ODA loans 8% 7% 6% 5% pre-2015 6.11% 6.78% 4% 3% 3.81% 2% 1% Under the new system: maximum interest rates for LDCs and other LICs 2.55% 0% 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 Loan maturity

Spotlight on ODA to LDCs Distribution of Net ODA disbursements incl. imputed multilateral ODA to LDCs (2013) Number of priority partnerships in LDCs

Spotlight on ODA to LDCs: DAC Members Performance DAC countries net ODA to LDCs as % of GNI (1960-2013) DAC countries net ODA to LDCs as % of GNI (2013) * Countries with stars have reached the UN ODA target of 0.7% of GNI.

2012 USD billion Total gross concessional flows to ACP countries and other countries Gross bilateral ODA and multilateral outflows from DAC members and multilaterals 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10-2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 ACP Other countries

2012 USD billion Composition of total gross concessional flows to ACP countries Gross bilateral ODA and multilateral outflows from DAC members and multilaterals 100 100% 90% 80 80% 60 40 20 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% - 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 0% Grants Loans Grant share

USD Billion Gross concessional flows to ACP countries: Top 20 donors 2013 Gross bilateral ODA and multilateral outflows from DAC members and multilaterals 9.0 8.5 8.0 7.5 7.0 6.5 6.0 5.5 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 - Loans Grants

USD Billion Gross concessional flows to ACP countries: Top 20 ACP countries 2013 Gross bilateral ODA and multilateral outflows from DAC members and multilaterals 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 Loans Grants 1.0 0.5 -