AIIB a key financing platform for Global South

As the development trajectories of the Global South are increasingly shaped by climate shocks, digital disruption and tightening fiscal space, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank stands out as a vital conduit for transformation.
In just under a decade, the AIIB has evolved into a credible global platform for financing sustainable development. For the countries of Africa, Latin America, Southeast Asia and the Pacific, where infrastructure gaps remain and traditional financial flows are constrained, the AIIB represents not only a source of capital, but a test case for reimagining multilateral finance from a Global South perspective.
The urgency could not be greater. Droughts in the Sahel, floods in Pakistan and Brazil, and relentless heat waves across South Asia are becoming more frequent and destructive. These climate events are both humanitarian disasters and development reversals. At the same time, economies across the Global South are facing a liquidity squeeze. External debt repayments are consuming critical public resources. Private investment often bypasses fragile or low-income states. The green transition, while necessary, is being priced out of reach for many, particularly for those with limited fiscal headroom or dependence on extractive sectors.
Against this backdrop, the AIIB has positioned itself as a pragmatic alternative to both legacy institutions and ad hoc development deals.
Its emphasis on infrastructure from traditional roads and ports to digital backbones and renewable energy grids — aligns with the evolving priorities of emerging economies. In an era when concessional funding is scarce and geopolitical trust is thin, the AIIB's approach — lean, rules-based and collaborative — has earned broad credibility.
This is clearly apparent in the bank's growing emphasis on climate finance. Already, over half of its lending portfolio is aligned with climate objectives. But the Global South is not asking for generic climate financing; it is demanding a just transition. That means designing projects that are not only low-carbon but socially inclusive and economically viable as well. It means investing in green jobs, retraining fossil fuel-dependent communities and integrating local knowledge systems into adaptation strategies.
Digital infrastructure is another frontier where the AIIB is poised to lead. The COVID-19 pandemic laid bare the digital fault lines that separate countries, communities and classrooms. From health systems to financial inclusion, digital connectivity is now central to development. For many countries, however, building secure, inclusive digital ecosystems requires up-front investments that are neither commercially attractive nor domestically affordable. The AIIB's capacity to mobilize both public and private finance, while safeguarding equity and data governance, is a vital advantage.
Importantly, AIIB is increasingly engaged in discussions around sovereign debt sustainability, a conversation that is central to any credible development strategy. As more countries in the Global South face debt distress, new models must emerge. The AIIB's ability to offer local-currency financing, structure blended finance deals or facilitate debt-for-climate swaps could unlock new fiscal space without exacerbating vulnerabilities.
It can also catalyze partnerships with national development banks, philanthropic capital and regional institutions like the African Development Bank. These partnerships are key to scaling impact while maintaining country ownership.
Gender, often overlooked in infrastructure planning, is also rising on the AIIB's agenda. Infrastructure that is not gender-responsive risks entrenching inequality, from public transport systems that ignore the safety of women and girls, to energy projects that neglect the disproportionate burden of unpaid care work. Under its new leadership, the AIIB is positioned to entrench gender equity as a design principle. This shift can have far-reaching implications, not only for the projects, but for how infrastructure is conceived, financed and evaluated.
What makes the AIIB's current trajectory remarkable is not just its scale, but its ethos. Unlike many development institutions shaped by postwar paradigms, the AIIB emerged in a multipolar world with a Southern foundation. That gives it a distinct orientation, one that is less about top-down aid and more about peer-based cooperation.
As the AIIB begins its second decade, its relevance will be measured critically by its ability to help reshape the global financial architecture in ways that genuinely reflect the voices, needs and aspirations of the Global South. The challenges ahead are complex and layered. But if the bank remains committed to bridging the infrastructure gap, financing just transitions, building digital futures and respecting sovereignty, it will definitely become the model for what inclusive, 21st-century multilateralism looks like.
The author is executive director of South-South Dialogues, a Nairobi-based communications development think tank.