A Call to Youth to Contribute Ideas on Financing the Post-2015 Agenda

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Ideas 4 Action Competition

​The World Bank Group and the Wharton School of Business are co-sponsoring “Ideas for Action,” a competition to mobilize youth across the development community to invent, foster, and inspire innovative solutions to financing development post-2015.

Nearly half the world’s population is under 25 – 2.9 billion people. Today’s youth will be responsible for delivering the post-2015 development agenda, also known as the Sustainable Development Goals, which will replace the Millennium Development Goals when they expire at the end of 2015. The new goals will be more ambitious, covering a broad range of interconnected issues, from sustainable economic growth to social issues to global public goods. To realize this vision, an equally ambitious plan for financing and implementation is needed.

Teams are self-selected and made up of three to five members, ages ranging from 18 to 35 years old. The deadline for submissions is Jan. 31, 2015. Finalists will be announced on April 5, 2015, and the winners on March 30, 2015. Winners will be given an opportunity to influence the post-2015 financing discussions and its implementation.

Solution Areas

Teams are invited to focus on one of the issues below and develop a creative yet realistic and implementable solution that will increase the financing available and/or improve the efficiency and effectiveness of existing funds. Another possibility is to select more than one issue, and develop a solution that is based on blended sources of finance.

Domestic Resource Mobilization: improving the ability of countries to collect and direct public resources generated from taxes and/or improve efficiency of public spending. Areas of particular relevance are (i) tax policy and collection; (ii) harnessing sustainable streams of revenue from natural resources; (iii) subsidy reform; and (iv) improving public sector procurement practices.

  • Examples of submission topics: “Restructuring mineral extraction contracts in Sub-Saharan Africa to provide more sustainable social benefit and financial return;” “Subsidizing crops of the future: how a change in agricultural subsidies in one South American country can be a lesson to others.” 
Better and Smarter Aid: improving how aid is structured and disbursed in light of a rapidly changing donor environment. Areas of particular relevance are (i) improving aid disbursement models; (ii) improving aid transparency and accountability; and (iii) integrating private philanthropy and global funds into the greater aid agenda.
  • Examples of submission topics: “A new model for recipient-centric accountability mechanisms in ODA loan programs;” “Using different results metrics to improve aid project outcomes.”
International Private Finance: improving business environments to attract investment. Areas of particular relevance are: (i) creating policies that encourage investment, particularly in long time infrastructure; and (ii) mainstreaming the use of guarantees and risk insurance.
  • Examples of submission topics: “Co-financing arrangements as a means to increased roadway investment in Sub-Saharan Africa”; “Taxes, construction regulation, and urban sewage reform in Southeast Asia”; “improving project cycle and investment environment to attract institutional investors including sovereign wealth funds”; “Implementing policies and mechanisms to direct remittances towards development.” 
Domestic Private Sector:  mobilizing domestic private capital. Areas of particular relevance are (i) creating an enabling environment for business creation and growth; (ii) increasing access to finance, greater financial inclusion for households and SMEs; and (iii) developing domestic capital markets.
  • Example of submission topics: “A new type of aid: improving small and medium-sized enterprise access to financing via novel national-scale loan instruments.”
Business and Development Innovations: improving business environments in developing economies via innovative private/public partnership models. Areas of particular relevance are: (i) grafting and implementing business-led collective action initiatives; and (ii) innovative models of delivering aid using private sector capabilities and public sector resources.
  • Examples of submission topics: “A novel model for new-country investment: using public funds to limit fixed costs of electronic equipment manufacturing;” “Limiting private-public corruption with new public awareness tools in Central Asia.”
For more information about the first four options, see the World Bank Paper on Finance for Development Post-2015. For more information about the fifth option, see the Wharton Zicklin Center Business Development & Innovation site.

To submit your proposal for financing the post-2015 agenda, please visit: http://www.zicklincenter.org/#!ideascompetition/ccl3

Authors

Farida Wael Aboulmagd

Research Analyst, Office of the Senior Vice President

Demet Cabbar

Financial Officer, Office of the President’s Special Envoy