Trust Funds and Partner Programs (2024)

The complexity and urgency of the world’s challenges require meaningful collaboration amongmembers of the development community and other stakeholders if the goal of ending poverty on a livable planet is to be realized. With overlapping crises threatening global development and a growing global demand for a bold and coordinated response to these crises, the World Bank is working to strengthen partnerships and utilize every resource available to maximize development impact.

The Bank works with a growing array of development partners, both traditional and non-traditional, formal, and informal, to help meet our shared goals. From the ongoing partnership with our sovereign donors, through engagement with foundations and civil society, to an increased focus on leveraging private capital, the Bank recognizes how transformative partnerships can be when new ideas, perspectives, and experiences are combined with the necessary financial resources.

Development partners work with the Bank through trust funds, financial intermediary funds, and co-financing arrangements:

  • to align and pool funding support with other development partners within agreed strategic frameworks.
  • tobenefit from the Bank’s convening power, at both the international and country level, to maximize coordinated action and achieve impact at scale.
  • tobenefit from the Bank's extensive technical expertise, country experience and supervision capacity, its financial control framework, and its ability to monitor and report on results.
  • to provide grant funding in fragile, conflict-affected, and other complex situations enabling the Bank to engage and provide critical assistance in circ*mstances where traditional instruments are not well-suited.
  • to support innovative or emerging policy areas, which the Bank and Partners view as a priority.

Trust Funds

The World Bank uses trust funds, a financing arrangement set up with contributions from one or more development partners, to complement core funding from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), and the International Development Association (IDA) to help attain its institutional goals. Trust funds support the achievement of these goals by providing financial resources, contributing to the knowledge agenda, and leveraging the Bank’s convening power and global and local presence to contribute to country, regional, and global development. Trust funds allow the Bank to mobilize and direct concessional resources to strategic development priorities and to mobilize the resources and capabilities of other development actors through partnership programs.

Financial Intermediary Funds

Financial Intermediary Funds (FIFs) are financial arrangements that leverage a variety of public and private resources in support of international initiatives, enabling the international community to provide a direct and coordinated response to global priorities. FIFs are a key financing arrangement for the World Bank, where the Bank acts as a trustee of large multilateral financial mechanism to support global development initiatives and partnerships. As a FIF trustee, the World Bank provides financial services, including receiving, holding, and investing contributed funds, and transferring them when instructed by the FIF governing body.

Co-Financing

Co-financing is an important financing mechanism of the World Bank. The World Bank works with Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs), bilateral agencies, and other development partners to allow funds to flow directly from co-financers to the recipient client country and finance activities within the scope of a World Bank operation.Under these arrangements, World Bank resources and third-party resources are deployed in a coordinated manner to World Bank operations that are led by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) or the International Development Association (IDA).

Trust Funds and Partner Programs (2024)

FAQs

Trust Funds and Partner Programs? ›

Trust funds allow the Bank to mobilize and direct concessional resources to strategic development priorities and to mobilize the resources and capabilities of other development actors through partnership programs.

What are trust funds and how do they work? ›

How Do Trust Funds Work? Trust funds are legal entities that provide financial, tax, and legal protections for individuals. They require a grantor, who sets it up, one or more beneficiaries, who receive the assets when the grantor dies, and the trustee, who manages it and distributes the assets at a later date.

What is the average amount of a trust fund? ›

While some may hold millions of dollars, based on data from the Federal Reserve, the median size of a trust fund is around $285,000. That's certainly not “set for life” money, but it can play a large role in helping families of all means transfer and protect wealth.

What is the difference between a trust and a trust fund? ›

A Trust is an agreement used to specify how certain assets will be managed and distributed. A Trust Fund is the legal entity those assets are placed into when the Trust is created. The creation of a Trust and Trust Fund go hand in hand, which is why you may hear these words used interchangeably at times.

What are the bad things about trust funds? ›

The major disadvantages that are associated with trusts are their perceived irrevocability, the loss of control over assets that are put into trust and their costs. In fact trusts can be made revocable, but this generally has negative consequences in respect of tax, estate duty, asset protection and stamp duty.

What is the trust fund syndrome? ›

What Is A Trust Fund Baby? A trust fund baby refers to someone whose parents created a trust account, which they benefit from. The term “trust fund baby” has a negative connotation, as it's associated with the stereotype of a spoiled individual who doesn't have to work.

Can you live off a trust fund? ›

It's all too easy to live exclusively on your trust income. As alluring as it might seem to spend it all, doing so makes you vulnerable to eventually running short of money or worse yet, falling into debt. The smart move is to establish a budget that includes using your income to build secondary income sources.

Do trust funds get taxed? ›

A trust is subject to tax in California “if the fiduciary or beneficiary (other than a beneficiary whose interest in such trust is contingent) is a resident, regardless of the residence of the settlor.” See Cal. Rev. & Tax 1774(a).

How do trust funds pay out? ›

The trust can pay out a lump sum or percentage of the funds, make incremental payments throughout the years, or even make distributions based on the trustee's assessments. Whatever the grantor decides, their distribution method must be included in the trust agreement drawn up when they first set up the trust.

What is the major disadvantage of a trust? ›

Your Assets Might Not Be Protected: Another crucial point to note is that not all trusts offer protection from creditors. For instance, in revocable trusts, the assets are not protected from creditors as the grantor retains control of the assets. Potential Tax Burdens: Finally, trusts can carry potential tax burdens.

Is a trust safer than a bank? ›

If your assets are held in safe custody by a trust company, and that company were to go out of business, your funds are held away from creditors, and fully redeemable at any time. Understanding this basic difference between banks and trusts can change one's perception of the volatility of digital assets.

What type of trust is best? ›

An irrevocable trust provides you with more protection. While you can't modify it, creditors can't easily make claims against it, and assets held within it can generally be passed on to beneficiaries without being subject to estate tax.

What is the downside of a family trust? ›

What Are the Disadvantages of a Trust in California? Trusts are costly to create. Creating a trust without an attorney may be less expensive, but doing so leaves the trust much more vulnerable to trust contests and other legal litigation. It is also more time-consuming to properly set up a trust than to create a will.

What would be the disadvantage of naming a trust? ›

The primary disadvantage of naming a trust as beneficiary is that the retirement plan's assets will be subjected to required minimum distribution payouts, which are calculated based on the life expectancy of the oldest beneficiary.

What would cause a trust to fail? ›

Based on our experience of more than thirty years in practicing Trust law, the most common reason Trusts fail is that they are not funded. The purpose of a Trust is to manage the assets held in it. In order for the Trust to do it's job, the assets need to be in the Trust.

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