XNY.IO - BANK.ORG: 108 Highlights to The U.S. International Development
Finance Corporation (DFC) Congressional Budget Justification - Fiscal Year
2025:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1gNz-SmoUpZdG9XxXlJ2ZUk_npxYK5Nkb/view?usp=drivesdk

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FY 2025 DFC Request

Executive Summary

Program Budget and Policy Objectives
The FY 2025 program budget request of $1,008 million will enable DFC to
grow its portfolio by addressing the significant unmet financing needs in
priority sectors and regions that align with U.S. development and foreign
policy objectives. DFC leverages its resources to unlock private sector
growth and contribute to bridging the $40+ trillion infrastructure need in
the developing world.

Congress created DFC through the BUILD Act in part to offer a better and
more sustainable alternative to China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). DFC
catalyzes investment from the private sector and empowers developing
countries, helping them leverage their own resources—including human
capital and commodities—to tackle poverty, accelerate sustainable economic
growth for underserved populations, and become stable U.S. trading
partners. Unlike the development
approach of the People’s Republic of China (PRC), which often burdens
countries with
unsustainable sovereign debt and projects that are unsuitable for local
conditions, DFC’s efforts are directed toward supporting private entities,
mobilizing private capital, and building resilient
market economies. DFC emphasizes partnership with the private sector and
looks for opportunities to support small businesses and underserved
communities, with the goal of sustainable growth.
DFC’s financing is a cost-effective way to make significant development and
strategic impact around the world because DFC’s private investment model
allows each dollar of appropriations to go further. In FY 2023, the agency
leveraged $622.6 million in program funding to mobilize more
than $9.28 billion in support of 132 projects. In three short years since
DFC’s inception in FY 2020, the Corporation has achieved 92 percent growth
in annual commitments by dollar value and
65 percent growth in the number of projects committed.

To remain a competitive alternative to the PRC and other authoritarian
governments, DFC will continue to need robust funding in FY 2025 and beyond
to counter the aggressive posture that the PRC has taken in emerging
markets. The $1,008 million budget request will support a long-term
strategy that DFC has developed to focus on five key sectors that help
promote vibrant economies, healthy populations, and stable societies.

Administrative Expenses

DFC requests $245 million for administrative expenses. This level will
support necessary staffing and other support costs to advance U.S.
development and strategic foreign policy goals. DFC will
use the administrative budget to foster an effective and efficient
organization, maintain a fiscally responsible agency, and strengthen its
portfolio management capacity.

Among other priorities, DFC’s FY 2025 funding will support the expansion of
DFC’s overseas presence to continue sourcing quality and impactful projects
in local markets, increase underwriting capacity to grow DFC’s portfolio,
improve monitoring and evaluation of our developmental impact, and scale
mission support functions to meet staff growth and the demands of the
program.

DFC will use administrative resources to attract and retain the skilled and
professional workforce
needed to achieve its development and foreign policy objectives. DFC will
also direct administrative resources toward expanding stakeholder
engagement and improving business development. In addition, administrative
resources will enable the Corporation to strengthen
management and oversight structures, especially for complex and higher
value, higher impact transactions, ensuring DFC can manage risks and
monitor results in a manner that maximizes the
foreign policy and developmental value of its portfolio.

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