The World Bank doubled its financial commitment to Ivory Coast to $5
billion compared to the previous four-year development plan, it said.
A cotton ginning factory is seen in M'bemgue, Korhogo in the north of Ivory Coast, April 25, 2016.
Ivory Coast secured more than $15 billion in financial pledges at a donor meeting in Paris
on Tuesday, nearly double the amount it was seeking to help fund an
ambitious five-year development programme, according to a government
statement.
It had been seeking nearly 4.5 trillion
CFA francs ($7.9 billion) from bilateral donors and multilateral
institutions to fill an expected funding gap.
Ivory
Coast has recovered from a 2011 civil war to boast one of Africa's
fastest growing economies and is aiming to invest a total of about 30
trillion CFA francs in the next four years to foster economic
development and reduce poverty.
"The declared
amount of contributions has reached ... $15.4 billion ... demonstrating
the full adhesion of the international community (to the development
programme)," the statement from Prime Minister Daniel Kablan Duncan said.
The
World Bank doubled its financial commitment to Ivory Coast to $5
billion compared to the previous four-year development plan, it said.
Since
emerging from a decade of political turmoil following the 2011
conflict, Ivory Coast, the world's top cocoa grower, is increasingly
attracting foreign investors.
Under the stewardship of President Alassane Ouattara,
who won re-election in a landslide victory in October, its economy has
expanded by an average of about 9 percent in each of the past three
years.
But the former senior International Monetary Fund official is under pressure to spread more of the wealth that has created in his second, and final, five-year term.
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