World Bank to offer $8-10b annually for 5 years to fuel India's growth, jobs | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
MENU
Home
Quick Links

High-quality MCQs and Mains Answer Writing to sharpen skills and reinforce learning every day.

Watch explainer and thematic concept-building videos under initiatives like Deep Dive, Master Classes, etc., on important UPSC topics.

ESC

Daily News Summary

Get concise and efficient summaries of key articles from prominent newspapers. Our daily news digest ensures quick reading and easy understanding, helping you stay informed about important events and developments without spending hours going through full articles. Perfect for focused and timely updates.

News Summary

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat

World Bank to offer $8-10b annually for 5 years to fuel India's growth, jobs

31 Jan 2026
2 min

World Bank's New Country Partnership Framework with India

The World Bank Group has pledged to provide India with $8-10 billion annually over the next five years. This commitment supports India's growth and job creation agenda under a new Country Partnership Framework, which exceeds the previous program's annual funding by $2-3 billion.

Key Objectives and Strategies

  • Alignment with Viksit Bharat Vision: Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman emphasized that the framework aligns with the Viksit Bharat vision and focuses on leveraging public funds with private capital to create jobs and enrich projects with global knowledge.
  • Private Sector-Led Job Creation: With approximately 12 million young people entering the labor market annually, unlocking private investment in job-rich sectors is prioritized.
  • Partnership Approach: Collaboration aims to make the partnership more selective, scalable, and impact-driven. Emphasis on mobilizing private capital alongside public financing.

Focus Areas and Strategic Outcomes

  • Investment Focus:
    • Physical and human infrastructure
    • Business-friendly regulatory environment
    • Risk-management tools for scaling private investment
  • Priority Sectors:
    • Infrastructure and energy
    • Agribusiness, healthcare, tourism, and value-added manufacturing
  • Four Strategic Outcomes:
    • Boost rural prosperity by diversifying incomes beyond agriculture
    • Support urban transformation given the projected doubling of the urban population by 2050
    • Invest in people across health, education, and skills
    • Strengthen energy security, core infrastructure, and climate resilience

Immediate Implementation and Key Projects

  • Immediate implementation through ongoing and new projects.
  • Examples of Key Projects: 
    • $830 million loan for upgrading industrial training institutes
    • $490 million project in Maharashtra for climate-resilient agriculture
    • $280 million Kerala program for strengthening digital health systems
    • $750 million initiative through Credila Financial Services for higher-education financing

World Bank Group's Support and Reforms

  • Support for India's electric mobility transition via a programmatic approach.
  • Reforms since 2023 for a more impactful partnership, many of which advanced during India's G20 presidency.
  • India is the World Bank Group's largest client, with substantial financial commitments across various projects.
  • Under the new framework, a larger share of lending will be used to attract private investment, leveraging the group's private sector instruments and global expertise.

Explore Related Content

Discover more articles, videos, and terms related to this topic

RELATED VIDEOS

3
Circularity in Textile Structure

Circularity in Textile Structure

YouTube HD
The Contribution of Indian Cinema to the Creative Economy

The Contribution of Indian Cinema to the Creative Economy

YouTube HD
Impact Investments

Impact Investments

YouTube HD

RELATED TERMS

3

Credila Financial Services

A non-banking financial company (NBFC) in India that provides education loans, facilitating access to higher education financing.

World Bank Group

A group of five international financial institutions that lend money to the governments of poorer countries for the purpose of reducing poverty and to encourage and protect the economic development of the world's poorest countries.

Viksit Bharat Vision

India's aspiration for a developed nation by 2047, aiming for economic growth, social progress, technological advancement, and enhanced global standing.

Title is required. Maximum 500 characters.

Search Notes

Filter Notes

Loading your notes...
Searching your notes...
Loading more notes...
You've reached the end of your notes

No notes yet

Create your first note to get started.

No notes found

Try adjusting your search criteria or clear the search.

Saving...
Saved

Please select a subject.

Referenced Articles

linked

No references added yet