The Private Sector Department of the African Development Bank (AfDB) Group organized an exclusive two-day Financing for Development round table this week at the World Economic Forum on
Africa held in Cape Town, South Africa.
The meeting brought together world-class private sector financial institutions that had a fruitful interaction with senior management of
the AfDB Group and the World Economic Forum on Financing for Development Initiative, according to a statement from the Bank received in Accra on
Friday.
It said the meeting discussed ways and means of leveraging Development Finance Institutions (DFIs) capital to catalyze greater private sector investment.
The gathering also enabled participants to discuss the African Financing Partnership, the optimal mix of concessional and non-concessional lending and private sector views on the effective use of development finance institutions' resources to catalyze private sector investment in Africa.
The Financing for Development initiative is aimed at developing a public-private financing partnership between multilateral development banks, bilateral development finance institutions, global investment entities, and commercial financial institutions.
It said, the first day of the meeting highlighted the AfDB's role in catalyzing further Public-Private Partnerships.
The Bank said interactive discussions focused on engaging the private sector in increasing non-sovereign financing and funding at sub-sovereign levels, establishing investment climate capacity building as a central priority, "learning by doing transaction" programmes, using transactions as critical vehicles, strengthening investment project pipelines through project development support and providing advisory services to governments on Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) structuring.
Issues related to financing infrastructure projects in Africa were examined and two AfDB Group projects were showcased, namely, the Mmamabula Energy Project in Botswana, presented by CIC Energy Ltd, and the Lekki Toll Road in Nigeria presented by Lekki Concession Company.
The World Economic Forum brings together many of the people, both from Africa and beyond, who can truly make the difference. We therefore look forward to a positive outcome from this key event."
Participants also had the opportunity on the second day of the meeting to focus on the Bank's initiative on the "African Financing Partnership", a facility developed in partnership with institutions such as the entrepreneurial development bank of the Netherlands (FMO), Proparco, a subsidiary of the French Development Agency (AFD) and the German Private Sector funding agency (DEG).
The Bank said other DFIs had shown interest in participating in this Partnership, whose main purpose is to harmonize procedures and help member institutions to increase their operations without increasing the processing costs, while maintaining the highest quality standards.
The most important issue discussed during the breakfast session was how to seek ways in which the public sector division of labour could better complement and leverage private sector financing."