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IFC, UNHCR to jointly boost private sector engagement for refugees, host communities

  • The initiative aims to mobilize private sector projects over the next five years to demonstrate the viability of investments in forced displacement contexts.
  • Forced displacement is a growing crisis that is too large and complex for governments and humanitarian agencies to solve alone.

GENEVA, SWITZERLAND – The International Finance Corporation (IFC) and UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, Friday announced a joint initiative to create inclusive economic opportunities that will benefit refugees and their host communities.

The initiative aims to mobilize private sector projects over the next five years to demonstrate the viability of investments in forced displacement contexts.

Forced displacement is a growing crisis that is too large and complex for governments and humanitarian agencies to solve alone.

By mid-2022, over 103 million people were forcibly displaced worldwide, with 74 percent of them hosted in low- and middle-income countries, according to Joint IFC/UNHCR press release.

The Joint Initiative will promote knowledge sharing to facilitate the engagement of private sector stakeholders in refugee-hosting areas.

The initiative will tap into private sector expertise, financing and innovation to improve the quality of life for those forcibly displaced and their hosts, through job creation, better and affordable services, financing infrastructure and much-needed capital for small and medium enterprises.

“The private sector has much to give and much to gain in frontier markets,” said IFC Managing Director Makhtar Diop.

“Businesses create jobs and provide sustainable access to goods and essential services that benefit refugees and their hosts,” he said.

“The launch of this new IFC-UNHCR Joint Initiative represents our commitment to scale up our support and create sustainable private sector solutions for some of the most vulnerable communities on the planet,” he added.

“This is an important step towards greater responsibility-sharing and finding practical solutions for those forced to flee,” said UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi.

“In the face of multiple crises globally, we must work even closer with the private sector to leverage their strengths and desire to help,” he said.

“I thank IFC for its leadership and commitment to a brighter future for the displaced and their hosts,” he added.

IFC and UNHCR have been working together since 2016 to improve the lives of those forcibly displaced and their hosts, implementing projects in Brazil, Colombia, Ethiopia, Jordan, Kenya, Uganda, Iraq and Lebanon.

Friday’s announcement will allow IFC and UNHCR to harness their global resources and scale their efforts to help people who are forcibly displaced to live more dignified lives.

The two organizations will also contribute to the development of local economies and markets, in alignment with the spirit of the Global Compact on Refugees.