ABSTRACT

Southern-Led Development Finance examines some of the innovative new south-south financial arrangements and institutions that have emerged in recent years, as countries from the Global South seek to transform their economies and to shield themselves from global economic turbulence.

Even before the Covid-19 crisis, it was clear to many that the global economy needed a reset and a massive increase in public investment. In the last decade southern-owned development banks, infrastructure funds, foreign exchange reserve funds and Sovereign Wealth Funds have doubled the amount of long-term finance available to developing countries. Now, as the world considers what a post-Covid-19 future will look like, it is clear that Southern-led institutions will do much of the heavy lifting. 

This book brings together insights from theory and practice, incorporating the voices of bankers, policymakers and practitioners alongside international academics. It covers the most significant new initiatives stemming from Asia, tried and tested examples in Latin America and in Africa, and the contribution of advanced economies. Whilst the book highlights the potential for Southern-led initiatives to change the global financial landscape profoundly, it also shows their varied impacts and concludes that more is needed for development than just the technical availability of funds.

As governments and businesses become frustrated by the traditional North-dominated mechanisms and international financial system, this book argues that southern-led development finance will play an important role in the search for more inclusive, equitable and sustainable patterns of investment, trade and growth in the post-Covid landscape. It will be of interest to practitioners, policy makers, researchers and students working on development and finance everywhere.

part 1|64 pages

Southern-led development finance – rationale, innovations and implications

chapter 1|28 pages

Solidarity and the South

The new landscape of long-term development finance and how to support it

part 2|140 pages

Long-term finance – banks, funds and other sources of private and public investment

chapter 4|14 pages

The neoliberal transformation of development banking

The Indian experience

chapter 6|28 pages

Scaling up finance for the sustainable development goals

Experimenting with South–South models of multilateral development banking

chapter 8|18 pages

Towards a regional financial Architecture

The East Asian experience

part 3|69 pages

Regional transformation and growth in practice – it’s more than money