Africa Long Term Finance Initiative (ALTFI)
Objective and approach
The Initiative takes a comprehensive approach to LTF. The ALTFI’s overarching objective is to boost the intermediation of LTF in Africa to close the financing gap for firms, in particular SMEs, as well as for housing and infrastructure projects in Africa. This will be accomplished through a two-pronged approach aiming to improve market intelligence across Africa and providing impetus for effective reforms at the national level:
- LTF Database and Scoreboard
The purpose of the database and scoreboard is to enhance transparency about LTF in Africa and inform policy makers, the private sector and donors about the availability of LTF across Africa. The database and scoreboard will be hosted at the AfDB and will be used to benchmark specific indicators to provide insight as to the comparative level of development of markets for long-term finance across Africa.
- In-Country Diagnostics
Going beyond comparative data, the in-country diagnostics will provide in-depth analysis of LTF markets in individual jurisdictions. The diagnostics will compass enterprise finance with a focus on SMEs, housing finance and infrastructure finance. The intention is to reveal strengths and weaknesses in the specific country context and develop policy recommendations to improve the intermediation of LTF. The diagnostics will follow a transaction-focused, bottom-up approach working closely with private sector stakeholders to reflect their experience in servicing the market, and leverage international good practice from other developing and emerging countries in using innovative financing techniques relevant to the African context.
Highlights of activities
During the first year of operation, 2018, the LTF partners established a database and dashboard in collaboration with the AfDB's Financial Sector, Research and Statistics Departments. A first country diagnosis was carried out in Côte d'Ivoire in the second quarter of 2018. Other diagnoses are already envisaged in three African countries of the G20 Pact with Africa (CWA), including Ghana and Tunisia.
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