April 2019

Blended Finance in the Poorest Countries: the Need for a Better Approach

Blended finance is an increasingly popular notion in discussions on how to finance the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This report examines the actual potential and limitations of blended finance.


Blended finance is an increasingly important feature of SDGs financing strategies. This report highlights lessons on the real impact of blended finance for the poorest countries and provides guidance to governments and development partners for the establishment of appropriate operational frameworks for blended finance to contribute towards the SDGs. 

The need to mobilise private finance is at the heart of international discussions on how to finance the SDGs and move the needle from ‘billions’ of dollars in development aid to ‘trillions’ of dollars in investment.

With an estimated SDG financing gap of $2.5 trillion a year in developing countries alone, the international development community is placing an increasing emphasis on blended finance. This report aims to provide hard evidence to inform the discussion on the role of blended finance in plugging the SDG financing gap in developing countries. We found that:

  • Expectations that blended finance can bridge the SDG financing gap are unrealistic: ‘billions-to-billions’ is more plausible than ‘billions to trillions’.
  • The big push on blended finance risks undermining the poverty eradication agenda in the poorest countries.
  • Policy-makers need a better understanding of the poverty and development impact of blended finance, as well as its true costs, to ensure value for money and effective policy-making and allocation of aid.
  • Multilateral development banks and development finance institutions need to collectively adopt a more distinct and tailored approach to blended finance in low-income countries.