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    Home » World Bank Bets Big: $9 Billion Annual Pledge to Turn Small Farms into a Global Job Engine
    October 15, 2025

    World Bank Bets Big: $9 Billion Annual Pledge to Turn Small Farms into a Global Job Engine

    October 15, 2025Updated:November 5, 2025
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    The World Bank Group (WBG) has executed a major strategic pivot, dramatically increasing its annual agriculture financing to $9 billion by 2030 to transform the global food system into a high-tech engine for job creation and poverty alleviation. WBG President Ajay Banga, at the recent AgriConnect Flagship Event, declared the initiative—dubbed ‘Mission AgriConnect’—a high-stakes bid to bridge the looming global jobs deficit, particularly in developing nations.

    The New North Star: Jobs, Not Just Food

    The core of the new strategy is a radical reframing of agriculture’s role. While it has always been central to food security, the World Bank is now positioning agribusiness as a primary solution to the global job crisis. Banga highlighted the “delta” between the 1.2 billion young people expected to enter the developing world’s workforce over the next 10-15 years and the projected 400 million jobs currently available. Unlocking potential in the food system is key to bridging this gap.

    Factual research strongly supports this focus: growth in agriculture is 2 to 4 times more effective at reducing poverty than equivalent growth in other sectors. By doubling its financial commitment and setting a goal to mobilize an additional $5 billion in co-financing, the World Bank is signalling that a robust agricultural sector is the fastest path to shared prosperity.

    The $9 Billion Ecosystem for Smallholders

    The new financial architecture is explicitly designed around the world’s 500 million smallholder farmers, who currently produce an estimated 80% of the global food supply. Despite this monumental contribution, many remain trapped in subsistence farming due to a chronic lack of access to markets, finance, and modern tools.

    Mission AgriConnect’s strategy moves “beyond fragmented efforts” to create a complete ecosystem focused on three core pillars:

    1. Connecting to Value Chains: Building vital infrastructure like rural roads, storage, and cold chain facilities to link smallholders directly to local and export markets, ensuring they capture more value from their produce.
    2. Climate Resilience: Mandating investments in climate-smart agriculture, including heat-tolerant seeds, efficient irrigation, and strong insurance/financing backstops so that a single bad season doesn’t trigger a permanent cycle of debt and despair.
    3. De-Risking Private Capital: Using WBG tools, such as guarantees and first-loss facilities from MIGA and IFC, to make agriculture a commercially viable investment. The goal is to lower the cost of capital and crowd in the private investment necessary to achieve scale.

    The Tech & Finance Revolution

    A critical, modern component of the plan is the integration of digital tools. For millions of farmers who have never held a bank account, a basic mobile phone with access to simple AI tools can be a game-changer. These digital platforms can diagnose crop diseases from a photograph, offer hyper-local weather alerts, inform optimal fertilizer choices, and securely process payments. This data trail effectively builds a digital credit history, which is essential for accessing the new financial products and insurance being brought to the sector.

    Furthermore, with Africa holding 60% of the world’s uncultivated arable land, the push for high-yield, sustainable farming practices, underpinned by technology, is set to make the continent a powerhouse in the future of food and job creation.

    The World Bank’s move is a definitive commitment to transform a historically vulnerable sector into a dynamic, job-creating machine, signalling that the future of global employment may very well be rooted in the fields.

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