African Development Bank Group approves Gender Equality Trust Fund and Risk-Sharing Mechanism to improve women’s economic empowerment in Africa
The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank Group
have approved a new Gender Equality Trust Fund (GETF) aimed at pushing forward
gender equality and women’s empowerment across the continent.
Funded by donors, the GETF will support the delivery and
scale-up of the Bank’s Affirmative Finance Action for Women in Africa (AFAWA)
programme and promote gender transformative lending and non-lending operations.
It is the first thematic fund on gender in the Bank Group’s history. The Fund
will be established for an initial period of 10 years.
AFAWA is the Bank’s flagship pan-African initiative which aims
to bridge the $42 billion financing gap facing women in Africa. Through AFAWA,
the Bank is spearheading a major push to unlock women’s entrepreneurial
capacity and economic participation for maximum development impact.
Also on Tuesday 31 March, the Board of Directors of the Bank
approved a Risk-Sharing Mechanism – an innovative financial instrument to
de-risk women-empowered businesses, enhance their profile with banks and
support them to grow and thrive as entrepreneurs.
Anchor investors in the GETF are the governments of France,
the Netherlands and the United Kingdom.
“It’s a great day for us as a Bank. It is a great day for the
continent and the women of Africa as this facility provides innovative ways to
tackle the access to finance challenges for African women business owners,”
said African Development Bank President Akinwumi Adesina.
The African Guarantee Fund (AGF) has been chosen as the first
implementing partner to facilitate access to finance for women-owned small and
medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). AGF is a pan-African entity that provides
financial institutions with guarantees and other financial products to support
SMEs in Africa. AGF has a network spread out over 42 African countries and
150-plus financial institutions, which AFAWA will leverage. This first
transaction is expected to unlock up to $2 billion in credit for
women-empowered businesses across the continent.
Vanessa Moungar, Bank
Director, Gender, Women and Civil Society, described the approval as “the
largest effort ever to bridge the gap in access to finance for women in
Africa’s history” and said the Fund’s resources and the Risk-Sharing Mechanism
would prioritize women’s economic empowerment and high-impact women’s
initiatives.
Moungar said the
partnership with AGF is a starting point for mobilizing other financial
institutions and increasing access to finance for women entrepreneurs on the
continent.Apart from the G7 donors and the Netherlands, other countries are
showing strong interest in contributing to the initiative, including Rwanda and
Sweden. The Bank Group will continue to mobilize resources in order to unlock
$5 billion worth of financing for women-empowered businesses in Africa. AFAWA
is also an implementing partner of the Women Entrepreneurship Finance (We-Fi)
Initiative.
Link
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire