Who We Are
Coalition Member
Member benefits, responsibilities, and the standards that bind the coalition.
- 130+
- Coalition members
- 20+
- Member economies
- 1
- Code of conduct
- 3
- Membership classes
What it means to be a member of the coalition — the rights, the responsibilities, and the standards that make capital move across borders without losing its assurance.
Three classes of membership
The coalition admits three classes, each with a defined role:
- Member economies — represented by their central bank or finance authority; a seat and a vote on the Governing Council
- Institutional members — regulators, development banks, and private-sector institutions that co-govern standards and co-finance commitments
- Observers — institutions participating ahead of full membership, with voice but not vote
Rights of membership
Membership opens the full platform:
- Access to the coalition’s capital and every financing instrument
- Capacity-development programmes for national institutions
- The data platform, results framework, and research desk
- A vote on the mandate, the programme, and the leadership
Responsibilities of membership
What membership grants, it also asks. Every member — economy or institution — commits to the same standards: the code of conduct, the anti-corruption policy, proactive disclosure, and independent evaluation of shared commitments. Standards are common across every member so a commitment in one economy carries the same assurance as in any other.
How standards are enforced
Standards without enforcement are decoration. Compliance is overseen independently of operations: the Risk & Compliance office reviews transactions, the integrity function investigates alleged breaches through confidential channels, and sanctions — from remediation plans to suspension — are decided by the Governing Council, not by management.
Joining, step by step
Accession is deliberate, not bureaucratic:
- Dialogue — a prospective member opens discussions through its central bank or finance ministry
- Review — the membership committee assesses governance, integrity, and disclosure readiness
- Observer period — where useful, participation precedes full membership
- Admission — confirmed by vote of the Governing Council
Leaving, honestly
Membership is voluntary, and so is exit. A member may withdraw with notice; commitments in flight are wound down on their original terms, and obligations survive until discharged. The rule protects everyone: capital committed under coalition standards stays governed by them.
Common standards are what let capital move across borders without losing its assurance.
Engagement