Press Release

Experts Back Development Impact Bonds

June 06, 2013

Washington, D.C. (June 5, 2013) – An international group of experts is proposing a new way to finance international development, on the eve of a Social Impact Investment summit in London. A high level public and private sector working group has set out a detailed proposal for Development Impact Bonds, a new financing instrument that could bring together investors, governments, the private sector and civil society to provide public services in developing countries.

Development Impact Bonds combine the distinct contributions of these very different stakeholders to improve the coverage and effectiveness of public services and increase the efficiency of foreign aid and investment. Here’s how they work: money from investors is channelled to local public and private service providers. If independently verified evidence shows that intended results have been achieved, the government and donors repay the investors their principal plus a financial return linked to performance.

Media contact:
Catherine An
Media Relations Associate
(202) 416-4040
[email protected]

Development Impact Bonds are an adaptation of Social Impact Bonds, an innovative way of financing public services, with promising experiments underway in America, Australia, Britain, Canada and Ireland. The main additional characteristic of Development Impact Bonds is that in countries whose governments cannot yet afford the full cost of additional public services, donors provide some or all of the repayment to investors when the results are proven.

The Development Impact Bond Working Group was convened by the Center for Global Development (CGD), a non-partisan think tank specialising in international development, and Social Finance, a non-profit company in London which pioneered Social Impact Bonds in the UK, at Peterborough Prison. The Working Group members include thought leaders from the worlds of finance, government, civil society, foundations and official aid. The Omidyar Network and the Rockefeller Foundation are financing the group’s work.

CGD and Social Finance will present in London on 5 June the Working Group’s emerging conclusions on how Development Impact Bonds could be implemented. The event marks the beginning of a public consultation on the report that will run for six weeks until 17 July.

Elizabeth Littlefield, President and CEO of OPIC and a co-chair of the Working Group welcomed the report:

"Development Impact Bonds and other innovative, results-based financing mechanisms have the potential to transform the way we invest in social and economic development in both rich countries and developing countries.”

“Development Impact Bonds are part of a wider movement to explore new financial instruments that better align the incentives of various players to improve outcomes for poor people in developing countries,” said CGD president Nancy Birdsall. “I believe that this has huge potential and that the consultations on the draft report will help to strengthen the proposal and increase the chances of success.”

There are pilot DIBs in various stages of feasibility, development and negotiation, of which six detailed case studies are included in the Working Group report. Specific proposals for Development Impact Bonds are being developed by Social Finance (for reducing sleeping sickness in Uganda), Lion’s Head Global Partners, a London-based merchant bank (for education in Pakistan), Instiglio, a non-profit that designs Social Impact Bonds (for avoiding teen pregnancy in Colombia), the US Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), a US government agency (for investment in clean energy) and Dalberg, a development advisory firm (for fighting malaria in Mozambique).

Toby Eccles, Development Director at Social Finance and a co-chair of the Working Group, said:

“Development Impact Bonds turn social services into investible opportunities. There is huge demand among investors for opportunities to do good while doing well, and Development Impact Bonds will enable investors for the first time to bring their resources, expertise and energy to the world’s most pressing social problems.”

Owen Barder, Senior Fellow at the Center for Global Development and a co-chair of the Working Group, said:

“There are exciting times for development finance. Traditional aid is vanishingly small compared with new sources of finance, such as domestic revenues, private investment, remittances, and money from new donors, foundations and private giving. Development Impact Bonds enable different organisations to work together, each making an important and distinct contribution. The result will be better health, education and other services in developing countries, and more efficient use of scarce development funds.”