When the COVID-19 pandemic swept across the world in 2020 and 2021, the consequences for children were devastating. Schools closed. Health systems buckled. Access to critical basic services was lost. The scale of the crisis demanded an urgent, creative response — and the World Bank and UNICEF found one in an unlikely place: the capital markets.
In March 2021, the World Bank issued a $100 million, five-year bond that was a first for both institutions. Issued under the World Bank's "Capital at Risk" bond issuance program, it was the World Bank's inaugural outcome bond—a new type of financial instrument that links investor returns directly to real-world development results—and the first time UNICEF had accessed financing through the international capital markets.
An amount equivalent to half of the bond proceeds, $50 million, was channeled directly to UNICEF to support fundraising efforts across 23 countries, generating flexible funding for children at a time when it was needed most. The remaining $50 million supported the World Bank's broader sustainable development activities.
In March 2026, that bond reached maturity. And it delivered.