Who We Are
Stakeholders
The central bankers, regulators, public officials, and private leaders who make up the coalition.
- 130+
- Coalition members
- 20+
- Member economies
- 4
- Standing committees
- 3
- Regional secretariats
The coalition brings together the people and institutions that shape the global financial system — and the communities its capital is meant to serve.
Who is at the table
Central-bank governors, finance ministries, regulators, and public- and private-sector leaders from member economies sit on the Governing Council and its committees, setting the mandate and approving the programme. Co-financiers and observer institutions join the standing committees where their expertise bears.
The five constituencies
Every decision the coalition takes touches five distinct groups, and the governance design gives each a defined seat, voice, or recourse:
- Member economies — the owners: they set the mandate and vote the programme
- Institutional members — central banks, regulators, and development banks that co-govern standards
- Co-financiers — private and multilateral capital that invests alongside on common terms
- Delivery partners — the ministries, agencies, and firms that execute commitments
- Communities — the people whose lives the capital is meant to change
Who we answer to
Ultimately the coalition answers to the communities its capital reaches. Independent evaluation reports outcomes above management, and results are published so beneficiaries, members, and partners can hold the coalition to the same standard.
How stakeholders shape the programme
Influence is structured, not informal. Each constituency has a defined route into the coalition’s decisions:
- Member economies — a seat and a vote on the Governing Council
- Co-financiers and development partners — common terms and joint governance on shared commitments
- Communities and civil society — an independent complaints and accountability mechanism
- Researchers and the public — open data and a presumption of disclosure
Managing conflicting interests
A coalition of central banks, private capital, and communities will disagree — by design. Conflicts are surfaced in committee rather than settled in corridors: interests are declared on the record, recusal rules apply to any member with a stake in a commitment, and the Risk & Compliance office reviews every transaction for conflicts before it reaches approval.
What stakeholders receive
Participation is reciprocal. Members gain access to capital, capacity programmes, and the data platform; co-financiers gain an originated, de-risked pipeline; communities gain infrastructure that outlasts the financing and a mechanism to hold the coalition to account when it falls short.
A coalition is only as legitimate as the seat it gives the people its decisions affect.
Engagement