MENA Newswire, NEW DELHI: The World Bank Group has committed to provide India with USD 8 billion to USD 10 billion in financing each year over the next five years under a new Country Partnership Framework, expanding support for economic growth and job creation with a focus on private sector led employment. The commitment covers the World Bank Group’s full set of instruments and is designed to pair public financing with efforts to mobilize private capital alongside policy and implementation support.

India’s Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman welcomed the new framework after meeting World Bank Group President Ajay Banga and his team, according to a government statement. Sitharaman said the partnership is aligned with India’s long term development vision, including the “Viksit Bharat” agenda, and stressed that development cooperation should extend beyond financing to include knowledge sharing, technical assistance, and the exchange of global best practices.
The World Bank Group said the partnership aims to accelerate job rich, private sector led growth while supporting inclusivity and sustainability. The new framework is intended to apply the Bank Group’s jobs focused approach in India, with an emphasis on enabling conditions for private investment and stronger market outcomes across states, cities, and rural areas. The financing range represents an increase from the prior partnership period, which media reports put at roughly USD 6 billion to USD 7 billion annually.
The framework sets priorities across both urban and rural India, linking growth and employment goals with investments and reforms that improve productivity and competitiveness. The World Bank Group’s India program includes support for infrastructure development, more efficient resource use, and improvements in public systems that underpin private sector activity. The Bank has also indicated that knowledge and advisory work will be used to complement financing and help replicate scalable solutions.
Resource efficient growth and human capital priorities
Within the framework, the World Bank Group has outlined work streams that connect climate and resource objectives with growth, including rural resource efficient development, city livability and sustainability, and management systems that reduce air pollution. The partnership also highlights human capital as a central pillar, reflecting the need for stronger outcomes in areas such as health, skills, and service delivery that shape workforce participation and productivity.
The World Bank Group approach for India brings together the World Bank, the International Finance Corporation, and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency, allowing the partnership to combine sovereign lending, private investment, and risk mitigation tools. The Bank Group has said it will use joint engagement plans across priority areas to help -unlock private investment that supports the framework’s outcomes, including through project preparation, policy support, and investment mobilization.
The commitment arrives as India seeks to sustain high growth while expanding employment opportunities, particularly in sectors where private investment can scale quickly. The World Bank Group has framed the new partnership around enabling job creation at speed and scale by leveraging public resources with private capital, and by applying global expertise to India’s development programs. The Bank’s plan also emphasizes working with India’s federal structure, including deeper engagement with states.
Five year framework and financing scale
The new Country Partnership Framework covers a five year period and sets the strategic direction for World Bank Group support, including a planned annual financing envelope of USD 8 billion to USD 10 billion. The Bank Group has said the approach combines what it supports, including competitiveness, job creation, and human capital, with how it engages, including private sector leverage, stronger public institutions, and knowledge exchange. The framework is intended to guide program selection and implementation across the period.
