Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen will propose changes for the World Bank and regional development banks Thursday, pushing them to move beyond country-specific loans to address global threats and speed the flow of private capital to poor and emerging economies.

“The evolution of these banks will require changes to incentives, operating models and uses of the banks’ financial resources,” Yellen plans to say in a speech she’s scheduled to deliver in Washington at the Center for Global Development think tank. Portions of the remarks were seen by Bloomberg News.

The Treasury chief will endorse the notion that multilateral development banks can substantially increase their lending without significantly increasing risk. The additional capacity at the World Bank, however, would be in the tens of billions of dollars, according to a senior Treasury official, not in the hundreds of billions suggested by a recent study commissioned by the Group of 20 largest economies.

Yellen’s comments, while lacking details on how reform goals would be achieved, add a powerful voice to those who believe the World Bank should be doing more -- generally, to support low- and middle-income countries struggling to develop, and, specifically, to confront global challenges like climate change. The changes should represent additional goals and shouldn’t detract from the bank’s traditional poverty-reduction agenda, the official said. 

Her remarks come days before policy makers from across the world gather in the US capital for annual meetings of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.

Yellen in gatherings next week will seek support for her proposals from other key shareholders in the World Bank, according to the official, who asked to not to be identified because the plans were not public. The U.S. is the largest shareholder in the Bretton Woods institutions.
In the speech, Yellen will point out that the World Bank’s traditional approach focuses largely on single-country project finance -- lending money, say, for a large infrastructure project. In such cases the borrowing country bears the costs and accrues the benefits of the project.

But when it comes to closing fossil-fuel-burning power plants in favor of clean energy projects, single countries are still being asked to bear the cost for projects that will confer benefits well beyond their borders. In such cases, the Treasury official said, countries should be offered a lower cost of finance in order to incentivize the project.

Shareholders should also consider allowing the development banks to directly finance supranational institutions, the official said. For example, Covax, the multinational effort to boost the availability of COVID-19 vaccines, might have been a good target for World Bank financing, the official said.

Then there’s private capital, which Yellen has in the past said will be needed to confront global problems.

“There is a huge pool of global savings,” Yellen will say Thursday. “But the flow to developing countries is limited. Why? The obstacles include information asymmetry, a scarcity of bankable projects, and political and regulatory uncertainty.”

Other proposals for drawing private capital include providing loan guarantees and issuing green bonds, the official said

The development banks could do more, the official said, to remove regulatory barriers that scare away private investment in developing countries. The banks might also do more to create so-called blended finance opportunities, where bank lending and private finance combine to back a project.

The Treasury official declined to say whether the reforms Yellen is seeking should be accompanied by a change in leadership at the World Bank.

World Bank President David Malpass has come under fire from climate activists who think he hasn’t done enough to finance clean-energy projects. Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore last month called for an overhaul of the World Bank’s leadership. In responding, the World Bank said it’s “the largest multilateral funder of climate investments in developing countries.”