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2020 private sector participation in developing-country infrastructure saw huge drop, stabilizing as year ended
Infrastructure - MAY 13, 2021

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2020 private sector participation in developing-country infrastructure saw huge drop, stabilizing as year ended

by Released

New data from the World Bank shows that private participation in infrastructure (PPI) in developing countries, while taking a historic plunge in the first half of 2020 due to COVID-19, saw a very modest uptick in the second half of the year. The 56 percent drop in PPI in the first half from the previous year moderated to 52 percent for the full year. Infrastructure investment commitments in 2020 stood at $45.7 billion across 252 projects in developing countries.

“Hopefully, this data signals that the worst effects of COVID-19 on private sector infrastructure finance are now behind most developing countries,” said Imad Fakhoury, the World Bank’s global director for infrastructure finance, PPPs & guarantees. “While this situation remains in flux as the pandemic’s trajectory changes, we’re keen on scaling up private investment in sustainable and quality infrastructure in these countries going forward — but need more resilient frameworks and enablin

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