News
23 April 2018

World Bank releases report on private investment in infrastructure

Region:
Middle East & Africa, Americas, Asia-Pacific, Europe

Multi-billion dollar projects, more target countries, and more government support fuelled a 37% rebound in private sector investment in developing-country infrastructure projects, says the World Bank. But 2017 investment commitment levels remained 15% below the average for the past five years, the World Bank's 2017 Annual Update of the Private Participation in Infrastructure (PPI) Database found.

Fifty-two developing countries received private investment in infrastructure in 2017, up from 37 in 2016. Also, 20 mega-projects - with an average size of $2.4 billion - accounted for 51% of the total investment, contributing to the increase over 2016 levels.

You might also like


Perspective
18 June 2026

Tanzania SGR: Multi-sourced from Mwanza

Tanzania’s latest standard gauge railway financing shows that African transport corridors can access global liquidity. But only when sovereign risk, export credit, MDB...

Perspective
22 June 2026

Uxolo at Global 26: Getting with the programme

Development finance lenders are continuing to innovate, despite a less promising backdrop. But making those innovations stick, as speakers at Uxolo's Global 2026 suggest, will...