Integrated National Financing Frameworks (INFFs) provide a framework for financing national sustainable development priorities and the SDGs at the country level.
Integrated National Financing Frameworks (INFF) Mobilizing resources, both domestic and global, to support sustainable development remains a key challenge for many developing countries.
In 2015, world leaders met in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia to agree upon a new global framework for financing the 2030 Agenda and the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). At the heart of the Addis Ababa Action Agenda are national sustainable development plans and strategies supported by integrated national financing frameworks — or INFFs.
A country’s sustainable development strategy lays out what needs to be financed. INFFs spell out how the national strategy will be financed and implemented, relying on the full range of public and private financing sources. INFFs are a planning and delivery tool to help countries strengthen planning processes and overcome obstacles to financing sustainable development and the SDGs at the national level. https://inff.org.
These reports have been developed by UNCDF within the framework of the UN SDG Funded Project “Integrated National Financing Framework (INFF) to Catalyse Blended Finance for Transformative CSDG Achievement”.
The project brings together UNDP and UNCDF to support the Royal Government of Cambodia to develop their Integrated National Financing Framework (INFF) that will be used to support the countries CSDG
commitments.
INFFs provide a framework for financing national sustainable development priorities and the SDGs at the country level.
Report number 3 , as the initial phase of a deep-dive study related to capital markets and debt financing, identifies critical bottlenecks that is restricting expansion of the Cambodian Securities Exchange (CSX).
The work adds to the large body of work undertaken in the sphere of development financing undertaken the RGC, the IFIs, Development Partners and the external finance sector and rating agencies.
Report number 4 provides an overview of market appetites for the future
issuance of Cambodian sovereign debt. The findings will support the Royal Government of Cambodia (RGC) The work adds to the large body of work undertaken in the sphere of development financing undertaken the
RGC, the IFIs, Development Partners and the external finance sector and rating agencies.