The World Bank has announced a series of reforms aimed at easing financial pressures on vulnerable nations, including the removal of several loan fees, to make borrowing more affordable and address pressing global challenges such as climate change, inequality, and economic instability.
In a statement released Thursday, the World Bank detailed measures such as eliminating the prepayment premium on International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) loans, introducing a grace period for commitment fees on undisbursed balances, and extending low-cost pricing for small and vulnerable states.
“The bank is working hard to make it easier for countries to borrow and to pay back their loans more easily by removing some fees on IBRD loans,” the statement said.
These reforms are part of a broader strategy to boost the institution’s lending capacity by $150 billion over the next decade. Adjustments to the IBRD’s equity-to-loans ratio, from 20% to 18%, are expected to unlock $70 billion in additional lending, supplemented by $10 billion from bilateral guarantees and $1 billion from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.
“These measures are designed to make borrowing easier and more affordable for countries facing significant challenges,” the World Bank emphasized, aligning the reforms with its mission to become a “better, more efficient, and bigger” institution.
To safeguard its Triple-A credit rating, the bank highlighted adjustments to its capital framework, which aim to scale up resources while ensuring financial stability.
The institution also introduced its Framework for Financial Incentives (FFI), launched in April 2024, which seeks to promote investments in global priorities such as biodiversity, water security, energy access, and pandemic prevention. The FFI includes innovative initiatives like the Global Solutions Accelerator Platform and the Livable Planet Fund, supported initially by a contribution from Japan.
“The FFI is the first comprehensive framework among multilateral development banks to incentivize financing for projects with global benefits,” the bank noted.
Additionally, the World Bank is leveraging innovative financial tools such as outcome bonds, catastrophe bonds, and climate-resilient debt clauses to attract private sector investments. Notable examples include the Wildlife Conservation Bond, which directed private financing toward Black Rhino conservation in South Africa, and a plastic waste reduction-linked bond funding recycling projects in Ghana and Indonesia.
“We are finding new ways to channel private investment into emerging markets and address barriers to sustainable development,” the bank stated.
The reforms come as the global community faces a multi-trillion-dollar funding gap needed annually to combat climate change, support fragile states, and advance digital inclusion. The World Bank acknowledged that bridging this gap will require collective efforts from governments, multilateral institutions, and private investors.
For over five decades, the institution’s International Debt Report (IDR) has provided critical data and analysis, shaping policies in development finance and fostering best practices in debt management worldwide.






