South and Southeast Asia are at a critical juncture, facing the complex challenge of sustaining rapid and inclusive economic growth while advancing human development and addressing widening financing gaps. These gaps are particularly evident in infrastructure, climate action, and social development, all within a context of constrained public budgets and increasing economic and environmental risks. Although several countries in the region continue to show strong growth potential and relatively stable sovereign fundamentals, the scale of investment required—especially for climate mitigation and adaptation, urban services, and human development—far exceeds what public resources and existing financial systems can deliver on their own. As a result, mobilizing private capital at scale has become essential, yet progress remains limited due to structural risks, market inefficiencies, and underdeveloped enabling environments.
Blended finance has emerged as a critical tool across the investment continuum, helping to bridge this gap. It plays a particularly important role in supporting early-stage innovation and system-building efforts, such as developing climate adaptation and resilience solutions before viable markets are fully established. At the same time, it contributes to the creation of investable project pipelines and enables financial de-risking by using concessional public or philanthropic funds to improve risk–return profiles. This, in turn, helps attract commercial investors who might otherwise remain hesitant. Despite its potential, however, blended finance efforts remain fragmented and limited in scale. These limitations are not only due to challenges at the transaction level but also reflect deeper weaknesses across policy, regulatory, institutional, and market systems.
In response to these challenges, the report introduces the Strategic Framework for Blended Finance, a country-level approach designed to help governments systematically strengthen the enabling environment for blended finance. The Framework aims to shift the current model away from isolated, one-off transactions toward a more consistent, scalable, and market-driven mechanism. While it draws on the diversity, climate vulnerability, and growing economic significance of South and Southeast Asia, its principles are broadly applicable to other regions as well. At its core, the Framework recognizes that achieving long-term, sustainable impact requires systemic reform rather than short-term, deal-focused interventions.
Recent analysis highlights that blended concessional finance has often been overly focused on individual transactions, with insufficient emphasis on transforming markets. In a time when official development assistance is increasingly constrained, the goal is not simply to maximize the number of deals, but to ensure lasting development impact while strengthening market systems. Central to the Framework is the understanding that governments must play dual and complementary roles. As facilitators, they are responsible for setting national priorities, establishing stable regulatory environments, improving coordination among stakeholders, and addressing information gaps. As active participants, they deploy concessional capital, absorb risk, support project preparation, and help establish early-stage market structures where private sector solutions are not yet viable. The effectiveness of blended finance ecosystems depends on how well governments balance and adapt these roles based on their specific national context, market maturity, and institutional capacity.
The Framework is structured around six interconnected pillars that collectively address the key dimensions of a supportive enabling environment. It emphasizes the importance of aligning blended finance strategies with national development priorities while improving coordination and clarifying institutional responsibilities. It also focuses on strengthening the supply and effective deployment of concessional capital to catalyze private investment and drive market development. Another key dimension involves developing strong pipelines of investment-ready projects, supported by standardized approaches and robust governance systems. Equally important is the establishment of a supportive policy and regulatory environment, including financial, legal, fiscal, and climate-related frameworks that enable blended finance to operate at scale. The Framework further highlights the need to foster market development by building partnerships, attracting commercial capital, and strengthening investor confidence. Finally, it underscores the role of strong information systems in improving market intelligence and enhancing transparency around environmental, social, governance, and impact metrics.
Together, these pillars provide governments with a structured and practical approach to identifying constraints, prioritizing reforms, and sequencing actions in line with national conditions. Rather than prescribing a one-size-fits-all model, the Framework serves as a flexible starting point for developing tailored, country-level strategies that combine policy reform with investment planning. One way to put this into practice is through the development of National Blended Finance Roadmaps—government-endorsed, time-bound plans that translate the Framework’s principles into concrete actions aligned with specific national priorities, market conditions, and institutional capacities.
By embedding blended finance within broader national development strategies and reform agendas, these roadmaps can help ensure that efforts go beyond short-term capital mobilization. Instead, they contribute to long-term market development by strengthening domestic financial ecosystems, gradually reducing reliance on concessional funding, and fostering more resilient, self-sustaining markets. Ultimately, this approach supports inclusive and sustainable growth, positioning blended finance as a key driver of development in the region and beyond.







