Ideas & Insights / All Perspectives / Ideas & Insights

The Innovative Finance Revolution: Private Capital for the Public Good

Saadia Madsbjerg — Former Managing Director, The Rockefeller Foundation

Private Capital for the Public Good

Assessments of how governments and international organiza­tions have dealt with global challenges often feature a familiar refrain: when it comes to funding, there was too little, too late. The costs of economic, social, and environmental problems compound over time, whether it’s an Ebola outbreak that escalates to an epidemic, a flood of refugees that tests the strength of the EU, or the rise of social inequalities that reinforce poverty. And yet governments and aid groups rarely prove able to act before such costs explode: according to some estimates, they spend 40 times as much money responding to crises as they do trying to prevent them.

“Innovative finance has the potential to transform the way developing countries manage the costs of natural disasters.”

One reason for this is that complex international problems tend to be dealt with almost exclusively by governments and nonprofits, with the private sector typically relegated to a secondary role—and with the financial sector playing a particularly limited part. Stymied by budgetary constraints and political gridlock, the traditional, primarily public-financed system often breaks down. Government funds fall short of what was promised, they arrive slowly, and the problem festers.

In recent years, a new model’s emerged, as collaborations among the private sector, nonprofits, and governments have resulted in innovative approaches to a variety of global chal­lenges, including public health, disaster response, and poverty reduction. Instead of merely reacting to crises and relying solely on traditional funding, financiers—working closely with governments and NGOs—are merging private capital markets with public systems in ways that promote the common good and make money for investors, too.

Read the Full Article


This article was written for The Council on Foreign Relations

Leave a comment