World Bank Launches Six-Year Pacific Partnership to Boost Jobs, Climate Resilience, and Economic Stability
“This partnership is about delivering real impacts for people across the Pacific,” said Stephen N. Ndegwa, World Bank Director for the North and South Pacific.
- Country:
- Fiji
The World Bank Group has unveiled a sweeping new six-year partnership with nine Pacific Island nations aimed at accelerating job creation, strengthening public services, and protecting vulnerable economies from escalating climate and economic shocks.
The newly released Regional Partnership Framework (RPF), covering fiscal years 2026 to 2031, will guide World Bank support for Kiribati, the Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, Samoa, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu as the region confronts mounting pressures from climate change, global market volatility, and structural economic fragility.
The initiative represents one of the most comprehensive regional development strategies in the Pacific in recent years and reflects growing international concern over the vulnerability of small island economies facing increasingly complex global challenges.
"This partnership is about delivering real impacts for people across the Pacific," said Stephen N. Ndegwa, World Bank Director for the North and South Pacific.
"By focusing on jobs, skills, and resilience, and by using regional solutions where they add scale, we are supporting practical reforms and investments that help communities thrive, enable businesses to grow, and strengthen the foundations for long-term growth."
The framework was developed in close collaboration with Pacific governments and is designed to align with national priorities focused on employment, resilience, economic sustainability, and long-term development.
Pacific Island countries face some of the world's most difficult development conditions, including geographic isolation, limited domestic markets, heavy dependence on imports, high transportation costs, and extreme exposure to climate-related disasters.
Many of the region's economies are also highly vulnerable to global economic disruptions, including inflation, supply chain instability, energy market fluctuations, and tourism downturns.
The World Bank says the new strategy is specifically designed to help Pacific nations manage these overlapping risks while building stronger economic foundations capable of supporting future growth.
A central priority of the framework is job creation, particularly for young people and women, as many Pacific nations face rapidly growing populations and limited employment opportunities.
"Turning growth into employment, particularly for young people and women, is central to sustaining long-term prosperity and stability," the World Bank said.
The organization warned that while economic growth remains essential, translating that growth into broad-based employment opportunities remains one of the region's most urgent challenges.
Under the new partnership, the World Bank plans to support investments across infrastructure, education, healthcare, fiscal management, and digital connectivity in an effort to strengthen both economic resilience and labour market participation.
Infrastructure development is expected to play a particularly important role in the strategy.
Investments in transport systems, energy infrastructure, and digital networks are intended not only to generate employment directly but also to improve connectivity between communities, businesses, and international markets.
For many Pacific Island nations, limited transportation and digital infrastructure continue to constrain economic diversification, trade access, and private sector development.
The framework also places strong emphasis on strengthening health and education systems to improve workforce skills and long-term human capital development.
Officials say building more capable and adaptable labour forces will be critical as Pacific economies attempt to compete in increasingly digital and globally interconnected markets.
The World Bank also stressed the importance of sound fiscal and macroeconomic management in helping governments absorb external shocks and create stable conditions for private investment.
"Strong macroeconomic management will help countries manage shocks and create a more stable environment for investment and jobs," the framework states.
Climate resilience remains another central pillar of the partnership.
Pacific Island countries are among the most climate-vulnerable nations in the world, facing rising sea levels, increasingly severe storms, coastal erosion, flooding, droughts, and threats to food and water security.
For low-lying island nations such as Tuvalu, Kiribati, and the Marshall Islands, climate change represents not only an economic threat but also a long-term existential challenge.
The framework therefore includes crisis preparedness mechanisms and rapid-response tools designed to help countries respond more effectively to natural disasters, external economic disruptions, and future emergencies.
The World Bank said the partnership would make greater use of regional platforms and shared solutions to overcome the structural limitations associated with small populations and geographic remoteness.
This regional approach aligns with the institution's broader Small States Strategy, which focuses on tailoring development support to the unique realities facing smaller and isolated economies.
Development experts note that Pacific regional cooperation is increasingly viewed as essential for achieving economies of scale in areas such as digital infrastructure, healthcare delivery, climate adaptation, disaster response, education, and labour mobility.
The framework also reflects growing global recognition that climate resilience, economic stability, and social development are deeply interconnected in vulnerable island regions.
International financial institutions have increasingly warned that without sustained investment and coordinated international support, many Pacific economies could face escalating fiscal stress and worsening climate impacts in coming decades.
The World Bank says the new partnership aims to ensure that development gains are protected while helping Pacific communities build stronger, more inclusive, and more resilient economies for the future.
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