The global credit rating agency Fitch Ratings affirmed the African Development Bank’s long-term credit rating AAA with a stable outlook, a statement seen by APA reveals.
This is a very strong endorsement of the African Development Bank’s financial strength and profile, as well as the extraordinary support of its shareholders.
The importance of the Bank’s public mandate, its governance, and the excellent quality of its risk management was highlighted by Fitch.
in reaction, the AfDB’s Acting Vice President for Finance and CFO, Hassatou N’Sele said “this stellar credit rating allows the African Development Bank to provide financial resources to African countries at favorable levels to develop their economies. This is extremely important in the current environment of rising interest rates and issues around debt sustainability.”
More recognition
The AfDB said its role in shaping the global development landscape received additional recognition this week.
Publish What You Fund, the global campaign for aid and development transparency, has ranked the African Development Bank’s Sovereign Portfolio first out of 50 global development institutions in its 2022 Aid Transparency Index.
Based on its strong financial position, the Bank has launched what it calls game-changing initiatives for Africa, from helping African countries build back from Covid-19 recovery, to tackling the global food insecurity crisis sparked by the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
As the global food crisis bites the continent hard, the AfDB approved a $1.5 billion African Emergency Food Production Facility.
This will provide 20 million smallholder farmers on the continent with certified seeds and access to agricultural fertilizers to enable them to rapidly produce 38 million tonnes of food.
This will see a $12 billion increase in food production in just two years and will build on the success of its flagship Technologies for African Agricultural Transformation (TAAT) program, which has delivered heat-tolerant wheat varieties to 1.8 million farmers in seven countries.
Some 40 countries have already applied for funding from the Facility.
As the continent’s premier development finance institution, the AfDB is made up of three distinct entities namely the African Development Bank (AfDB), the African Development Fund (ADF) and the Nigeria Trust Fund (NTF).
Located in 41 African countries and an external office in Japan, the AfDB has 54 member states.
WN/as/APA