A growing field of innovative financial instruments is unlocking funding for green, sustainable, and inclusive development. In the quest to address pressing global challenges and get back on track to meet the Sustainable Development Goals, innovative financial instruments are imperative. Creative options like investing in sustainability, sustainability-linked, and gender bonds can increase access to finance for projects that align with green, social, and sustainability goals in a resource-constrained world.
“The loan has enabled me to progress,” explains Tanzanian entrepreneur, Grace Patrick Kimaro. “I’ve had many achievements and been able to pay for my children’s education thanks to running my own business.”
Sustainability, sustainability-linked, and gender bonds—like the NMB Bank’s Jasiri Bond that helped Grace Patrick Kimaro grow her small business—are a type of financial instrument designed to encourage the issuer to achieve certain social or green objectives. Issuers apply the proceeds from the bond to fund certain types of businesses or projects—improving sustainability outcomes, such as improving women’s access to employment opportunities or reducing GHG emissions.
Despite growing investor appetite, a gap remains in the availability of these financial instruments, especially in new markets. The World Bank Group, through the International Development Association (IDA) and its Private Sector Window (PSW), is helping to establish sustainability, sustainability-linked, and gender bonds in local currency as credible capital market solutions to finance green, sustainable, and inclusive investments.
IDA is the part of the World Bank Group that helps the world’s low-income countries. The PSW is an innovative tool that allows IDA to work closely with the Bank Group’s private sector arms—the International Finance Corporation (IFC) and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA)—to leverage resources and help mobilize sustainable private sector investment in the poorest and most fragile markets. With support from the IDA PSW, IFC is expanding the use of sustainability, sustainability-linked, and gender bonds into some of the most challenging markets—simultaneously reducing the pressure on the scarce public resources available to finance sustainable infrastructure and climate resilience and promoting environmentally friendly, sustainable, and inclusive investments.
Rwanda’s Trailblazing Sustainability-Linked Bond
In September 2023, the Development Bank of Rwanda made history by issuing a sustainability-linked bond—the first of its kind in East Africa and the first issued by a national development bank globally. Supported by IDA, the bond's key performance indicators are aimed at improving the environmental, social, and governance systems of partner financial institutions; increasing financing for women-led small and medium-sized enterprises; and financing more affordable housing. Issuing the bond in local currency further reduces foreign exchange risks and bolsters Rwanda’s local capital markets.
Not only does the Development Bank of Rwanda’s sustainability-linked bond promote sustainable development goals, but it also supports the growth of the local financial market by attracting domestic investment and setting a powerful example for other potential issuers in the region.