WORLD BANK GROUP SCORECARD FY24 WORLD BANK GROUP SCORECARD VISION: Our vision is a world free of poverty on a livable planet This document presents THREE DIFFERENT VIEWS of the WBG Scorecard: This view presents all data at the WBG level for a set of 50 indicators (8 Vision indicators, 22 Client Context indicators, and 20 WBG Results indicators). It provides an overview of the WBG's performance and progress towards its goals. The Scorecard is released at the Annual Meetings of the World Bank Group and the International Monetary Fund in October, 2024. This view breaks down the WBG Results indicators by WBG institutions, focusing on gender, youth and FCS disaggregated results.* This view provides a breakdown of data based on select criteria such as regions, income groups, Small States, SIDS, LDCs, and disability-inclusiveness. These disaggregation criteria allow for a more detailed analysis of the WBG’s results. The data presented in this document are as of end-FY2024. *Disaggregation of the client context indicators will be released on the online platform subject to data availability. 2 VISION: Our vision is a world free of poverty on a livable planet Latest POVERTY value VISION INDICATORS ⟩ Percentage of global population living in poverty (at $2.15/day and $6.85/day) 9%, 46% PROSPERITY ⟩ Global average income shortfall from a prosperity standard of $25/day 5 ⟩ Number of countries/economies with high inequality 49 PLANET ⟩ Global greenhouse gas emissions (Gigatons of CO2 equivalent) 54 ⟩ Percentage of people at high risk from climate-related hazards globally 18% ⟩ Millions of hectares of key ecosystems globally 7,860 ⟩ Percentage of people facing food and nutrition insecurity globally 28% ⟩ Percentage of people with access to basic drinking water, sanitation services, or hygiene globally 91%, 81%, 72% Stock Cumulative Achieved Expected Achieved CLIENT CONTEXT INDICATORS Latest data WBG RESULTS INDICATORS FY24 Jul’23-Jun’24 PEOPLE Protection for the poorest Percentage of people covered by social protection and labor 58%, ⟩ Millions of beneficiaries of social safety net programs † 222 263 58 programs in the total population and in the poorest quintile 65% No learning poverty Percentage of children who cannot read by end-of-primary- 57% ⟩ Millions of students supported with better education 305 352 33 school age Healthier lives ⟩ Millions of people receiving quality health, nutrition, Percentage of children under five stunted 24% 381 576 73 and population services ⟩ Countries benefitting from strengthened capacity to Universal health coverage service coverage index (0 – 100) 64 42 51 NA prevent, detect, and respond to health emergencies PROSPERITY Effective macroeconomic and fiscal management ⟩ Countries in or at high risk of debt distress that Countries/economies at high risk of or in debt distress 59 59% 59% NA implemented reforms towards debt sustainability (%) † ⟩ Countries with tax revenues-to-GDP ratios at or below Countries/economies with tax revenue-to-GDP ratios 57 15% that have increased collections, considering 17 32 NA (including social security contributions) below or equal to 15% equity † PLANET Green and blue planet and resilient populations Percentage of people exposed to hazardous air quality 59% Countries/economies with increasing renewable natural ⟩ Net GHG Emissions (Millions tonnes of CO2e/year) MTR -306 NA 24 capital per capita ⟩ Millions of beneficiaries with enhanced resilience to Percentage of terrestrial and aquatic areas that are protected 14% 123 327 36 climate risks ⟩ Millions of hectares of terrestrial and aquatic areas Proportion of fish stocks within biologically sustainable levels 62% 45 110 11 under enhanced conservation/management Inclusive and equitable water and sanitation services 90%, Percentage of people with access to basic drinking water, ⟩ Millions of people provided with water, sanitation, 67 156 20 77%, sanitation services, or hygiene and/or hygiene, of which (%) is safely managed (4%) (17%) (1%) 72% Sustainable food systems ⟩ Millions of people with strengthened food and nutrition Percentage of people facing food and nutrition insecurity 28% 201 327 58 security INFRASTRUCTURE Connected communities Percentage of people with access to reliable transport ⟩ Millions of people that benefit from improved access 37%1 142 427 25 solutions all year-round to sustainable transport infrastructure and services Affordable, reliable, and sustainable energy for all ⟩ Millions of people provided with access to electricity 171 482 14 Percentage of population with access to electricity 90% ⟩ GW of renewable energy capacity enabled 20 117 3 DIGITAL Digital connectivity Percentage of population using the internet 63% ⟩ Millions of people using broadband internet 114 415 12 Digital services State of online e-government service provision 0.5 ⟩ Millions of people using digitally enabled services 174 300 37 CROSS-CUTTING THEMES Gender equality (measured through gender-disaggregated outcomes across themes) ⟩ Millions of people benefitting from actions to advance 198 372 71 gender equality, of which (%) from actions that expand Population that own a financial account, total (% population 69%, (48%) (62%) (49%) and enable economic opportunities ages 15+) and female (% female population ages 15+) 66% ⟩ Millions of people and businesses using financial 73 189 0.78 services, of which (%) are women (48%) (50%) More and better jobs Wage and salaried workers, total (% total employment) and 45%, ⟩ Millions of new or better jobs, female (% female employment) 45% - of which (%) for women TBD TBD TBD Youth not in education, employment, or training, total (% 23%, - of which (%) for youth youth population) and female (% female youth population) 32% Better lives for people in fragility, conflict and violence (measured through FCS-disaggregated outcomes across themes) Percentage of population in FCS countries living in extreme 31% ⟩ Millions of displaced people and people in host poverty (at $2.15/day) 12 57 8 communities provided with services and livelihoods Millions of displaced people in need of protection 31 More private investment ⟩ $ billions in total private capital enabled TBD TBD TBD Private investment as a percentage of GDP 29% ⟩ $ billions in total private capital mobilized MTR 197 NA TBD: To be disclosed. MTR: to be disclosed by mid-term review. N/A: not applicable. † IBRD and IDA only indicator. Results achieved: the stock of results that have occurred. Expected results: the anticipated results over the projects’ results horizon. Active portfolio: results achieved and expected results are reported for the active portfolio as of end of June 2024. Note: Figures are rounded to nearest whole number (when applicable). Cumulative achieved: The starting point of the baseline is the stock of results achieved as of 01.07.2023 (start of the WBG Scorecard FY24-FY30 reporting cycle) and presents cumulative results that have occurred since. In this case it includes only the incremental of results reported between 01.07.2023 and 30.06.2024 (FY24). Note: Cumulative is shown only for World Bank results. 1 The data for the Transport indicator falls below the minimum data requirement on aggregation (50% of country or population coverage), covering only 17 client countries. However, is included for reference purposes. 3 WBG (FY24) WB IFC MIGA Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected ⟩ Millions of beneficiaries of social safety net programs † Overall 222 263 222 263 N/A N/A N/A N/A Female 122 135 122 135 N/A N/A N/A N/A Youth 41 55 41 55 N/A N/A N/A N/A FCS 75 114 75 114 N/A N/A N/A N/A ⟩ Millions of students supported with better education Overall 305 352 305 351 0.65 0.81 0 >0 PEOPLE Female 146 176 146 175 0.33 0.38 0 >0 Youth 65 76 65 76 TBD TBD 0 >0 FCS 30 58 30 57 ND ND 0 0 ⟩ Millions of people receiving quality health, nutrition, and population services Overall 381 576 268 336 113 238 0.06 1 Female 224 339 168 221 56 118 0 0 Youth 39 48 39 48 TBD TBD 0 0 FCS 136 157 136 157 ND ND 0 0 ⟩ Countries benefitting from strengthened capacity to prevent, detect, and respond to health emergencies Overall 42 51 30 39 20 24 0 0 FCS 11 13 9 12 4 4 0 0 ⟩ Countries in or at high risk of debt distress that implemented reforms towards debt sustainability (%) † PROSPERITY Overall 59% 59% 59% 59% N/A N/A N/A N/A FCS 60% 60% 60% 60% N/A N/A N/A N/A ⟩ Countries with tax revenue-to-GDP ratios at or below 15% that have increased collections, considering equity † Overall 17 32 17 32 N/A N/A N/A N/A FCS 4 12 4 12 N/A N/A N/A N/A ⟩ Net GHG Emissions (Millions tonnes of CO2 equivalent/year) Overall MTR –306 MTR –226 MTR –69 MTR –11 FCS MTR –58 MTR –44 MTR –11 MTR –3 ⟩ Millions of beneficiaries with enhanced resilience to climate risks Overall 123 327 98 268 25 59 0 0 Female 62 163 50 133 13 30 0 0 Youth 19 52 19 52 TBD TBD 0 0 FCS 47 126 47 123 ND ND 0 0 PLANET ⟩ Millions of hectares of terrestrial and aquatic areas under enhanced conservation/management Overall 45 110 45 110 0.07 0.35 0 0 FCS 11 27 11 27 0 0 0 0 ⟩ Millions of people provided with water, sanitation, and/or hygiene, of which (%) is safely managed [Number (millions)/ safely managed (percent]] Overall 67 (4%) 156 (17%) 61 (5%) 141 (19%) 6 (TBD) 15 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) Female 33 (4%) 78 (17%) 30 (5%) 70 (19%) 3 (TBD) 8 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) Youth 11 (5%) 26 (19%) 11 (5%) 26 (19%) TBD TBD 0 (0%) 0 (0%) FCS 10 (8%) 36 (12%) 10 (8%) 36 (12%) 0 (TBD) 0 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) WORLD BANK GROUP RESULTS INDICATORS ⟩ Millions of people with strengthened food and nutrition security Overall 201 327 181 251 20 52 0.01 23 Female 97 157 87 119 10 26 0.01 12 Youth 35 50 35 46 TBD TBD >0 3 FCS 97 109 95 97 3 11 0.01 1 ⟩ Millions of people that benefit from improved access to sustainable transport infrastructure and services Overall 142 427 98 347 43 71 0.47 9 INFRASTRUCTURE Female 71 214 49 174 22 35 0.24 5 Youth 17 67 17 65 TBD TBD 0.10 2 FCS 21 80 21 80 ND ND 0 0 ⟩ Millions of people provided with access to electricity Overall 171 482 100 283 57 164 14 36 Female 85 241 50 141 28 82 7 18 Youth 20 55 20 55 TBD TBD 0 0 FCS 40 136 32 105 3 17 5 13 ⟩ GW of renewable energy capacity enabled Overall 20 117 9 92 8 23 2 3 FCS 1 6 1 5 0.12 0.72 0.28 0.76 ⟩ Millions of people using broadband internet Overall 114 415 48 149 64 245 2 21 Female 47 185 16 66 30 111 0.75 8 Youth 10 37 9 29 TBD TBD 0.53 7 FCS 56 188 23 84 33 89 0.26 15 DIGITAL ⟩ Millions of people using digitally enabled services Overall 174 300 92 97 82 174 0 29 Female 83 145 47 55 36 78 0 12 Youth 15 24 15 14 TBD TBD 0 10 FCS 35 49 33 44 2 0.35 0 4 ⟩ Millions of people benefitting from actions to advance gender equality, of which (%) from actions that expand and enable economic opportunities Overall 198 (48%) 372 (62%) 191 (46%) 343 (59%) 7 (100%) 28 (100%) >0 (100%) 1 (100%) Female 185 (51%) 362 (64%) 178 (49%) 333 (60%) 7 (100%) 28 (100%) >0 (100%) 1 (100%) Youth 34 (48%) 71 (53%) 34 (48%) 71 (53%) TBD TBD 0 (0%) 0 (0%) FCS 93 (41%) 174 (55%) 93 (41%) 173 (55%) 0 (100%) 0.14 (100%) 0 (0%) >0 (0%) ⟩ Millions of people and businesses using financial services, of which (%) are women CROSS-CUTTING THEMES Overall 73 (48%) 189 (50%) 7 (45%) 9 (48%) 67 (48%) 152 (52%) 0.07 (39%) 28 (44%) Female 35 (100%) 95 (100%) 3 (100%) 4 (100%) 32 (100%) 79 (100%) 0.03 (100%) 12 (100%) Youth N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A FCS 3 (35%) 7 (45%) 3 (36%) 2 (44%) 0.03 (10%) 0.14 (36%) 0 (0%) 5 (46%) ⟩ Millions of new or better jobs, of which (%) for women and of which (%) for youth Overall TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Female TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Youth TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD FCS TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD ⟩ Millions of displaced people and people in host communities provided with services and livelihoods Overall 12 57 12 57 0.20 0.09 0 0 Female 6 28 6 28 0.10 0.04 0 0 Youth 3 13 3 13 TBD TBD 0 0 FCS 5 20 5 20 ND ND 0 0 ⟩ $ billions in total private capital enabled Overall TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD FCS TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD ⟩ $ billions in total private capital mobilized Overall MTR 197 MTR 41 MTR 122 MTR 34 FCS MTR 21 MTR 6 MTR ND MTR 5 TBD: To be disclosed. MTR: to be disclosed by mid-term review. N/A: not applicable. † IBRD and IDA only indicator. ND: Not disclosed. In alignment with IFC and MIGA Access to Information Policies, project-level data is available in an aggregated format on the WBG Scorecard, provided the minimum threshold to secure individual clients’ data is satisfied. Results achieved: the stock of results that have occurred. Expected results: the anticipated results over the projects’ results horizon. Results achieved and expected are reported for the active portfolio as of June 2024. Figures are rounded to the nearest whole number when applicable. Values less than 1 but greater than or equal to 0.005 are shown with two decimal points (e.g., 0.98, 0.03). Values less than 0.005 but greater than 0 are represented as >0. 4 WBG (FY24) WB IFC MIGA Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected ⟩ Millions of beneficiaries of social safety net programs † Overall 222 263 222 263 N/A N/A N/A N/A World Bank Small States/SIDS PEOPLE Small States 1 1 1 1 N/A N/A N/A N/A SIDS 2 2 2 2 N/A N/A N/A N/A LDCs LDCs 81 96 81 96 N/A N/A N/A N/A Income groups High income >0 >0 >0 >0 N/A N/A N/A N/A Upper middle income 21 24 21 24 N/A N/A N/A N/A Lower middle income 153 180 153 180 N/A N/A N/A N/A Low income 48 60 48 60 N/A N/A N/A N/A Regions groups AFE 45 50 45 50 N/A N/A N/A N/A AFW 56 91 56 91 N/A N/A N/A N/A EAP 18 21 18 21 N/A N/A N/A N/A ECA 7 3 7 3 N/A N/A N/A N/A LCR 2 5 2 5 N/A N/A N/A N/A MNA 43 35 43 35 N/A N/A N/A N/A SAR 51 58 51 58 N/A N/A N/A N/A Institution IDA 153 201 153 201 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 69 62 69 62 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A MIGA N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Disability-inclusion Overall 23 32 23 32 N/A N/A N/A N/A ⟩ Millions of students supported with better education Overall 305 352 305 351 0.65 0.81 0 >0 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 0.12 0.58 0.12 0.58 0 0 0 0 SIDS 1 0.98 1 0.98 0 0 0 0 LDCs LDCs 49 66 49 66 0 0 0 0 Income groups High income 1 1 1 1 ND ND 0 0 Upper middle income 38 40 37 40 0.65 0.36 0 0 Lower middle income 239 268 239 268 ND ND 0 >0 Low income 27 42 27 42 0 0 0 0 Regions groups WORLD BANK GROUP RESULTS INDICATORS AFE 23 39 23 39 0 0 0 0 AFW 30 56 30 56 0 0 0 0 EAP 17 17 17 17 ND ND 0 0 ECA 24 25 24 24 ND ND 0 0 LCR 5 8 5 8 0.33 0.23 0 0 MNA 5 6 5 6 ND ND 0 >0 SAR 202 202 202 202 ND ND 0 0 Institution IDA 87 127 87 127 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 218 224 218 224 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 0.65 0.81 N/A N/A 0.65 0.81 N/A N/A MIGA 0 >0 N/A N/A N/A N/A 0 >0 Disability-inclusion Overall 291 343 291 343 TBD TBD TBD TBD ⟩ Millions of people receiving quality health, nutrition, and population services Overall 381 576 268 336 113 238 0.06 1 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 0.53 1 0.52 1 ND ND 0 0 SIDS 3 2 3 2 ND ND 0 0 LDCs LDCs 153 197 153 197 ND ND 0 0 Income groups High income 0.10 0.02 0.10 0.02 0 0 0 0 Upper middle income 132 167 28 26 104 140 0.06 1 Lower middle income 145 269 136 180 9 88 0 0 Low income 104 130 104 130 ND ND 0 0 Regions groups AFE 92 123 81 91 11 32 0 0 AFW 81 106 81 95 0.11 11 0 0 EAP 142 179 50 58 93 121 0 0 ECA 9 13 9 12 ND ND 0.06 1 LCR 4 5 4 3 0.44 2 0 0 MNA 16 24 16 23 ND ND 0 0 SAR 36 117 28 47 8 71 0 0 Institution IDA 218 280 218 280 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 49 56 49 56 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 113 238 N/A N/A 113 238 N/A N/A MIGA 0.06 1 N/A N/A N/A N/A 0.06 1 ⟩ Countries benefitting from strengthened capacity to prevent, detect and respond to health emergencies Overall 42 51 30 39 20 24 0 0 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 5 7 4 6 1 1 0 0 SIDS 5 7 5 7 0 0 0 0 LDCs LDCs 22 25 20 23 6 7 0 0 Income groups High income 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Upper middle income 11 15 6 10 6 8 0 0 Lower middle income 16 20 11 14 10 12 0 0 Low income 15 16 13 15 4 4 0 0 Regions groups AFE 16 18 9 13 11 11 0 0 AFW 16 17 14 15 4 4 0 0 EAP 1 3 0 2 1 2 0 0 TBD: To be disclosed. MTR: to be disclosed by mid-term review. N/A: not applicable. † IBRD and IDA only indicator. ND: Not disclosed. In alignment with IFC and MIGA Access to Information Policies, project-level data is available in an aggregated format on the WBG Scorecard, provided the minimum threshold to secure individual clients’ data is satisfied. Results achieved: the stock of results that have occurred. Expected results: the anticipated results over the projects’ results horizon. Results achieved and expected are reported for the active portfolio as of June 2024. Figures are rounded to the nearest whole number when applicable. Values less than 1 but greater than or equal to 0.005 are shown with two decimal points (e.g., 0.98, 0.03). Values less than 0.005 but greater than 0 are represented as >0. 5 WBG (FY24) WB IFC MIGA Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected ⟩ Number of countries benefitting from strengthened capacity to prevent, detect and respond to health emergencies Overall 42 51 30 39 20 24 0 0 Regions groups PEOPLE ECA 1 2 1 1 0 1 0 0 LCR 6 8 5 7 2 3 0 0 MNA 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 SAR 1 2 1 1 1 2 0 0 Institution IDA 26 31 26 31 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 4 8 4 8 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 20 24 N/A N/A 20 24 N/A N/A MIGA 0 0 N/A N/A N/A N/A 0 0 ⟩ Countries in or at high risk of debt distress that implemented reforms towards debt sustainability (%) † Overall 59% 59% 59% 59% N/A N/A N/A N/A World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 61% 61% 61% 61% N/A N/A N/A N/A SIDS 68% 68% 68% 68% N/A N/A N/A N/A LDCs LDCs 75% 71% 75% 71% N/A N/A N/A N/A PROSPERITY Income groups High income 0% 0% 0% 0% N/A N/A N/A N/A Upper middle income 40% 40% 40% 40% N/A N/A N/A N/A Lower middle income 69% 69% 69% 69% N/A N/A N/A N/A Low income 69% 69% 69% 69% N/A N/A N/A N/A Regions groups AFE 53% 53% 53% 53% N/A N/A N/A N/A AFW 92% 92% 92% 92% N/A N/A N/A N/A EAP 75% 88% 75% 88% N/A N/A N/A N/A ECA 67% 67% 67% 67% N/A N/A N/A N/A LCR 45% 36% 45% 36% N/A N/A N/A N/A MNA 17% 17% 17% 17% N/A N/A N/A N/A SAR 50% 50% 50% 50% N/A N/A N/A N/A Institution IDA 76% 76% 76% 76% N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 18% 18% 18% 18% N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A MIGA N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A ⟩ Countries with tax revenue-to-GDP ratios at or below 15% that have increased collections, considering equity † Overall 17 32 17 32 N/A N/A N/A N/A World Bank Small States/SIDS WORLD BANK GROUP RESULTS INDICATORS Small States 3 5 3 5 N/A N/A N/A N/A SIDS 1 5 1 5 N/A N/A N/A N/A LDCs LDCs 10 18 10 18 N/A N/A N/A N/A Income groups High income 0 0 0 0 N/A N/A N/A N/A Upper middle income 2 6 2 6 N/A N/A N/A N/A Lower middle income 8 14 8 14 N/A N/A N/A N/A Low income 7 12 7 12 N/A N/A N/A N/A Regions groups AFE 5 9 5 9 N/A N/A N/A N/A AFW 7 12 7 12 N/A N/A N/A N/A EAP 2 5 2 5 N/A N/A N/A N/A ECA 0 0 0 0 N/A N/A N/A N/A LCR 1 4 1 4 N/A N/A N/A N/A MNA 1 1 1 1 N/A N/A N/A N/A SAR 1 1 1 1 N/A N/A N/A N/A Institution IDA 14 26 14 26 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 3 6 3 6 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A MIGA N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A ⟩ Net GHG Emissions (Millions tonnes of CO2 equivalent/year) Overall MTR –306 MTR –226 MTR –69 MTR –11 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States MTR –3 MTR –1 MTR 0 MTR –1 SIDS MTR –3 MTR –2 MTR –0.09 MTR –1 LDCs PLANET LDCs MTR –66 MTR –60 MTR –1 MTR –5 Income groups High income MTR –5 MTR –0.26 MTR –4 MTR –0.65 Upper middle income MTR –129 MTR –91 MTR –34 MTR –3 Lower middle income MTR –125 MTR –92 MTR –29 MTR –4 Low income MTR –45 MTR –43 MTR –0.16 MTR –2 Regions groups AFE MTR –40 MTR –35 MTR –5 MTR –1 AFW MTR –51 MTR –43 MTR –3 MTR –5 EAP MTR –93 MTR –82 MTR –11 MTR –0.33 ECA MTR –15 MTR –8 MTR –6 MTR –2 LCR MTR –19 MTR –7 MTR –10 MTR –2 MNA MTR –22 MTR –6 MTR –15 MTR –0.49 SAR MTR –54 MTR –45 MTR –9 MTR –0.28 Institution IDA MTR –87 MTR –87 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD MTR –139 MTR –139 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC MTR –69 N/A N/A MTR –69 N/A N/A MIGA MTR –11 N/A N/A N/A N/A MTR –11 ⟩ Millions of beneficiaries with enhanced resilience to climate risks Overall 123 327 98 268 25 59 0 0 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 0.52 2 0.52 2 0 0 0 0 SIDS 0.96 7 0.96 7 0 0 0 0 LDCs LDCs 64 161 64 155 0 6 0 0 TBD: To be disclosed. MTR: to be disclosed by mid-term review. N/A: not applicable. † IBRD and IDA only indicator. ND: Not disclosed. In alignment with IFC and MIGA Access to Information Policies, project-level data is available in an aggregated format on the WBG Scorecard, provided the minimum threshold to secure individual clients’ data is satisfied. Results achieved: the stock of results that have occurred. Expected results: the anticipated results over the projects’ results horizon. Results achieved and expected are reported for the active portfolio as of June 2024. Figures are rounded to the nearest whole number when applicable. Values less than 1 but greater than or equal to 0.005 are shown with two decimal points (e.g., 0.98, 0.03). Values less than 0.005 but greater than 0 are represented as >0. 6 WBG (FY24) WB IFC MIGA Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected ⟩ Millions of beneficiaries with enhanced resilience to climate risks Overall 123 327 98 268 25 59 0 0 Income groups PLANET High income 0.01 1 0.01 0.36 >0 1 0 0 Upper middle income 36 81 11 36 25 45 0 0 Lower middle income 38 125 38 117 0.01 8 0 0 Low income 50 120 50 114 0 6 0 0 Regions groups AFE 41 86 41 79 0.01 8 0 0 AFW 14 70 14 67 0 3 0 0 EAP 13 31 13 29 0.12 2 0 0 ECA 5 16 4 13 1 2 0 0 LCR 24 52 1 11 23 41 0 0 MNA 5 13 5 13 ND ND 0 0 SAR 21 59 21 56 ND ND 0 0 Institution IDA 85 208 85 208 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 14 60 14 60 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 25 59 N/A N/A 25 59 N/A N/A MIGA 0 0 N/A N/A N/A N/A 0 0 ⟩ Millions of hectares of terrestrial and aquatic areas under enhanced conservation/management Overall 45 110 45 110 0.07 0.35 0 0 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States >0 5 >0 5 0 0 0 0 SIDS >0 6 >0 6 0 0 0 0 LDCs LDCs 15 38 15 38 0 0 0 0 Income groups High income 1 7 1 7 0 0 0 0 Upper middle income 26 57 26 57 0.07 0.35 0 0 Lower middle income 5 17 5 17 0 0 0 0 Low income 12 29 12 29 0 0 0 0 Regions groups AFE 6 20 6 20 0 0 0 0 AFW 10 27 10 27 0 0 0 0 EAP 2 11 2 11 0 0 0 0 ECA 0.16 8 0.16 8 0 0 0 0 LCR 26 44 26 43 0.07 0.35 0 0 MNA 0.01 0.11 0.01 0.11 0 0 0 0 SAR 0.86 0.99 0.86 0.99 0 0 0 0 WORLD BANK GROUP RESULTS INDICATORS Institution IDA 17 45 17 45 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 28 65 28 65 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 0.07 0.35 N/A N/A 0.07 0.35 N/A N/A MIGA 0 0 N/A N/A N/A N/A 0 0 ⟩ Millions of people provided with water, sanitation, and/or hygiene, of which (%) is safely managed [Number (millions)/ safely managed (percent)] Overall 67 (4%) 156 (17%) 61 (5%) 141 (19%) 6 (TBD) 15 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 0.05 (0%) 0.41 (6%) 0.05 (0%) 0.41 (6%) 0 (TBD) 0 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) SIDS 0.73 (0%) 2 (22%) 0.73 (0%) 2 (22%) 0 (TBD) 0 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) LDCs LDCs 19 (4%) 57 (10%) 19 (4%) 57 (10%) 0 (TBD) 0 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) Income groups High income 0 (0%) 0.10 (100%) 0 (0%) 0.10 (100%) 0 (TBD) 0 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) Upper middle income 17 (0%) 27 (16%) 14 (1%) 18 (23%) 3 (TBD) 9 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) Lower middle income 42 (5%) 97 (19%) 39 (6%) 91 (20%) ND (TBD) ND (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) Low income 8 (10%) 32 (14%) 8 (10%) 32 (14%) 0 (TBD) 0 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) Regions groups AFE 13 (6%) 46 (7%) 13 (6%) 46 (7%) ND (TBD) ND (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) AFW 13 (0%) 22 (7%) 13 (0%) 22 (7%) 0 (TBD) 0 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) EAP 15 (0%) 20 (1%) 12 (0%) 12 (2%) ND (TBD) ND (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) ECA 2 (3%) 8 (44%) 1 (5%) 7 (50%) ND (TBD) ND (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) LCR 4 (0%) 10 (7%) 2 (1%) 4 (17%) ND (TBD) ND (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) MNA 3 (0%) 8 (0%) 3 (0%) 8 (0%) 0 (TBD) 0 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) SAR 17 (13%) 41 (42%) 17 (3%) 41 (42%) 0 (TBD) 0 (TBD) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) Institution IDA 30 (3%) 85 (12%) 30 (3%) 85 (12%) N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 31 (7%) 55 (31%) 31 (7%) 55 (31%) N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 6 (TBD) 15 (TBD) N/A N/A 6 (TBD) 15 (TBD) N/A N/A MIGA 0 (0%) 0 (0%) N/A N/A N/A N/A 0 (0%) 0 (0%) ⟩ Millions of people with strengthened food and nutrition security Overall 201 327 181 251 20 52 0.01 23 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 0.52 0.99 0.52 0.99 0 0 0 0 SIDS 2 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 LDCs LDCs 104 172 102 138 2 10 0 23 Income groups High income >0 2 0 0.05 ND ND 0 0 Upper middle income 21 30 9 11 12 20 0 >0 Lower middle income 98 190 91 141 7 27 0 22 Low income 82 105 81 100 0.87 4 0 1 Regions groups AFE 59 66 59 58 0.08 7 0 1 AFW 56 64 55 62 0.91 1 0 0 EAP 21 31 16 23 5 8 0 0 ECA 3 12 2 3 1 9 0 >0 LCR 14 17 6 3 8 14 0 0 MNA 13 51 12 45 0.74 5 0.01 0 SAR 35 86 31 57 4 7 0 22 Institution IDA 160 181 160 181 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 21 71 21 71 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 20 52 N/A N/A 20 52 N/A N/A MIGA 0.01 23 N/A N/A N/A N/A 0.01 23 TBD: To be disclosed. MTR: to be disclosed by mid-term review. N/A: not applicable. † IBRD and IDA only indicator. ND: Not disclosed. In alignment with IFC and MIGA Access to Information Policies, project-level data is available in an aggregated format on the WBG Scorecard, provided the minimum threshold to secure individual clients’ data is satisfied. Results achieved: the stock of results that have occurred. Expected results: the anticipated results over the projects’ results horizon. Results achieved and expected are reported for the active portfolio as of June 2024. Figures are rounded to the nearest whole number when applicable. Values less than 1 but greater than or equal to 0.005 are shown with two decimal points (e.g., 0.98, 0.03). Values less than 0.005 but greater than 0 are represented as >0. 7 WBG (FY24) WB IFC MIGA Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected ⟩ Millions of people that benefit from improved access to sustainable transport infrastructure and services Overall 142 427 98 347 43 71 0.47 9 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 1 7 1 3 ND ND 0 0 INFRASTRUCTURE SIDS 1 13 1 9 ND ND 0 0 LDCs LDCs 35 179 35 177 0 0 0.21 2 Income groups High income 0 0.39 0 0 ND ND 0 0 Upper middle income 37 92 15 48 22 43 0.06 0.26 Lower middle income 85 253 63 217 22 27 0.21 9 Low income 21 81 21 81 0 0 0.21 0.05 Regions groups AFE 21 78 20 77 ND ND 0.41 0.05 AFW 12 73 12 68 ND ND 0.06 2 EAP 40 58 24 42 ND ND 0 0 ECA 20 36 14 22 6 14 0 0 LCR 23 59 7 30 15 29 0 0 MNA 3 17 3 15 ND ND 0 0 SAR 23 106 18 92 ND ND 0 7 Institution IDA 67 246 67 246 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 30 90 30 90 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 43 71 N/A N/A 43 71 N/A N/A MIGA 0.47 9 N/A N/A N/A N/A 0.47 9 Disability-inclusion Overall 0.32 67 0.32 67 TBD TBD TBD TBD ⟩ Millions of people provided with access to electricity Overall 171 482 100 283 57 164 14 36 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 0.12 0.64 0.12 0.43 0 0 0 0.20 SIDS 0.46 2 0.35 2 ND ND 0 0.05 LDCs LDCs 73 193 59 141 7 37 7 16 Income groups High income 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Upper middle income 13 34 0.93 8 11 24 0.61 2 Lower middle income 125 326 71 168 41 127 13 30 Low income 32 114 27 98 5 13 0.01 3 Regions groups WORLD BANK GROUP RESULTS INDICATORS AFE 48 124 37 104 11 17 0.23 4 AFW 32 93 13 56 13 25 6 12 EAP 13 25 0.56 7 7 10 5 8 ECA 2 18 0.72 4 1 10 0 3 LCR 8 20 0.47 1 8 19 0 0 MNA 11 38 4 8 5 24 2 5 SAR 55 165 43 102 12 59 0 3 Institution IDA 75 187 75 187 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 24 96 24 96 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 57 164 N/A N/A 57 164 N/A N/A MIGA 14 36 N/A N/A N/A N/A 14 36 ⟩ GW of renewable energy capacity enabled Overall 20 117 9 92 8 23 2 3 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 0.09 0.35 0.03 0.23 ND ND 0.06 0.11 SIDS 0.10 1 0.03 0.93 ND ND 0.02 0.02 LDCs LDCs 2 5 0.47 3 0.41 0.93 0.78 0.81 Income groups High income 0.41 3 0 2 0.41 2 0 0 Upper middle income 6 26 3 17 3 8 0.86 1 Lower middle income 12 86 6 71 5 13 1 2 Low income 0.33 2 0.19 2 0.08 0.23 0.06 0.08 Regions groups AFE 1 5 0.35 2 0.43 3 0.61 0.63 AFW 2 5 2 4 0.22 0.91 0.28 0.76 EAP 3 20 0.29 16 2 3 0.23 0.24 ECA 4 21 3 18 0.69 3 0.25 0.25 LCR 2 8 0.01 4 2 4 0 0.11 MNA 2 10 0.54 5 1 4 0.70 0.70 SAR 6 49 4 44 2 5 0.22 0.22 Institution IDA 3 28 3 28 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 6 63 6 63 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 8 23 N/A N/A 8 23 N/A N/A MIGA 2 3 N/A N/A N/A N/A 2 3 ⟩ Millions of people using broadband internet Overall 114 415 48 149 64 245 2 21 DIGITAL World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 1 3 0.73 0.86 ND ND 0 0 SIDS 0.79 6 0.16 4 ND ND 0 0 LDCs LDCs 73 210 44 126 28 62 2 21 Income groups High income 0 3 0 0 ND ND 0 0 Upper middle income 10 101 0.16 1 10 100 0 0 Lower middle income 57 143 16 52 42 89 0 2 Low income 47 169 32 95 13 55 2 19 Regions groups AFE 61 213 40 107 21 91 0.26 15 AFW 31 91 8 37 22 48 1 6 EAP 1 57 0.09 0.15 1 57 0 0 ECA 0.21 1 0.12 0.43 ND ND 0 0 LCR 3 24 0.03 3 3 21 0 0 TBD: To be disclosed. MTR: to be disclosed by mid-term review. N/A: not applicable. † IBRD and IDA only indicator. ND: Not disclosed. In alignment with IFC and MIGA Access to Information Policies, project-level data is available in an aggregated format on the WBG Scorecard, provided the minimum threshold to secure individual clients’ data is satisfied. Results achieved: the stock of results that have occurred. Expected results: the anticipated results over the projects’ results horizon. Results achieved and expected are reported for the active portfolio as of June 2024. Figures are rounded to the nearest whole number when applicable. Values less than 1 but greater than or equal to 0.005 are shown with two decimal points (e.g., 0.98, 0.03). Values less than 0.005 but greater than 0 are represented as >0. 8 WBG (FY24) WB IFC MIGA Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected ⟩ Millions of people using broadband internet Overall 114 415 48 149 64 245 2 21 Regions groups MNA 3 6 0.57 0.20 ND ND 0 0 SAR 15 23 0 0.25 ND ND 0 0 Institution DIGITAL IDA 48 146 48 146 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 0 2 0 2 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 64 245 N/A N/A 64 245 N/A N/A MIGA 2 21 N/A N/A N/A N/A 2 21 Disability-inclusion Overall 13 37 13 37 TBD TBD TBD TBD ⟩ Millions of people using digitally enabled services Overall 174 300 92 97 82 174 0 29 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 0.22 0.52 0.22 0.52 0 0 0 >0 SIDS 0.59 2 0.59 2 0 0 0 >0 LDCs LDCs 29 47 28 22 0.78 0.25 0 25 Income groups High income 1 4 0 0.01 1 4 0 >0 Upper middle income 59 81 20 27 38 54 0 0.28 Lower middle income 104 167 66 63 38 90 0 14 Low income 10 48 6 7 4 27 0 14 Regions groups AFE 23 76 17 16 5 37 0 22 AFW 36 79 31 45 5 28 0 6 EAP 54 58 15 25 39 33 0 0 ECA 4 9 0.01 0.10 4 9 0 0 LCR 14 16 8 5 6 11 0 0 MNA 2 6 1 1 1 5 0 0 SAR 35 26 20 5 15 22 0 0 Institution IDA 57 61 57 61 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 35 36 35 36 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 82 174 N/A N/A 82 174 N/A N/A MIGA 0 29 N/A N/A N/A N/A 0 29 Disability-inclusion Overall 9 6 9 6 TBD TBD TBD TBD ⟩ Millions of people benefitting from actions to advance gender equality, of which (%) from actions that expand and enable economic opportunities WORLD BANK GROUP RESULTS INDICATORS Overall 198 (48%) 372 (62%) 191 (46%) 343 (59%) 7 (100%) 28 (100%) >0 (100%) 1 (100%) CROSS-CUTTING THEMES World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 0.38 (16%) 0.61 (42%) 0.38 (16%) 0.60 (41%) ND ND 0 (0%) 0 (0%) SIDS 1 (32%) 2 (32%) 1 (32%) 2 (32%) >0 (100%) 0.02 (100%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) LDCs LDCs 72 (23%) 134 (30%) 72 (23%) 132 (29%) 0.07 (100%) 0.33 (100%) 0 (0%) 1 (100%) Income groups High income 0.36 (13%) 0.46 (51%) 0.32 (1%) 0.23 (3%) 0.04 (100%) 0.23 (100%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) Upper middle income 11 (66%) 34 (96%) 9 (59%) 29 (96%) 2 (100%) 5 (100%) >0 (100%) 0.04 (100%) Lower middle income 148 (55%) 255 (69%) 144 (53%) 233 (66%) 5 (100%) 21 (100%) 0 (0%) 0.72 (100%) Low income 38 (14%) 81 (25%) 38 (14%) 79 (24%) >0 (100%) 1 (100%) 0 (0%) 0.42 (100%) Regions groups AFE 32 (37%) 73 (48%) 32 (37%) 71 (47%) 0.01 (100%) 2 (100%) 0 (0%) >0 (100%) AFW 91 (43%) 148 (65%) 91 (43%) 145 (64%) 0.01 (100%) 1 (100%) 0 (0%) 1 (100%) EAP 19 (65%) 50 (77%) 17 (61%) 46 (75%) 2 (100%) 4 (100%) 0 (0%) 0.01 (100%) ECA 3 (13%) 7 (61%) 3 (10%) 7 (59%) 0.07 (100%) 0.20 (100%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) LCR 6 (17%) 5 (59%) 5 (11%) 4 (46%) 0.38 (100%) 1 (100%) >0 (100%) 0.04 (100%) MNA 22 (65%) 26 (39%) 22 (65%) 26 (37%) >0 (100%) 0.67 (100%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) SAR 26 (58%) 63 (68%) 22 (50%) 44 (55%) 4 (100%) 18 (100%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) Institution IDA 159 (38%) 261 (49%) 159 (38%) 261 (49%) N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 32 (84%) 82 (88%) 32 (84%) 82 (88%) N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 7 (100%) 28 (100%) N/A N/A 7 (100%) 28 (100%) N/A N/A MIGA >0 (100%) 1 (100%) N/A N/A N/A N/A >0 (100%) 1 (100%) ⟩ Millions of people and businesses using financial services, of which (%) are women Overall 73 (48%) 189 (50%) 7 (45%) 9 (48%) 67 (48%) 152 (52%) 0.07 (39%) 28 (44%) World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 0.07 (40%) 0.13 (24%) 0.07 (42%) 0.08 (28%) ND ND 0 (0%) 0.03 (1%) SIDS 0.06 (37%) 0.05 (41%) 0.04 (50%) 0.01 (50%) 0.02 (14%) 0.04 (40%) 0 (0%) >0 (22%) LDCs LDCs 2 (38%) 26 (47%) 2 (36%) 2 (47%) 0.19 (50%) 0.91 (35%) 0 (0%) 24 (47%) Income groups High income 0.30 (57%) 0.87 (58%) >0 (40%) >0 (84%) 0.30 (57%) 0.87 (58%) 0 (0%) 0.01 (7%) Upper middle income 26 (52%) 42 (51%) 0.02 (42%) 0.53 (97%) 26 (52%) 41 (50%) 0.07 (39%) 0.48 (41%) Lower middle income 40 (46%) 112 (51%) 5 (46%) 6 (43%) 36 (46%) 92 (54%) 0 (0%) 14 (34%) Low income 5 (43%) 34 (49%) 2 (40%) 2 (50%) 3 (44%) 19 (44%) 0 (0%) 13 (55%) Regions groups AFE 4 (45%) 36 (46%) 2 (45%) 3 (52%) 1 (44%) 12 (43%) 0 (0%) 21 (47%) AFW 6 (45%) 31 (42%) 1 (45%) 1 (47%) 5 (45%) 23 (44%) 0 (0%) 7 (34%) EAP 36 (50%) 51 (50%) 0.01 (21%) 0 (26%) 36 (50%) 51 (50%) 0 (0%) 0.01 (90%) ECA 2 (24%) 3 (32%) 0.07 (41%) 0.05 (34%) 2 (23%) 3 (32%) 0 (0%) 0.05 (0%) LCR 3 (48%) 8 (52%) 0.01 (57%) 0.52 (98%) 3 (48%) 7 (49%) 0.07 (39%) 0.15 (39%) MNA 3 (36%) 8 (39%) 2 (36%) 3 (31%) 0.55 (37%) 5 (44%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) SAR 19 (48%) 50 (62%) 0.86 (67%) 0.85 (62%) 19 (48%) 49 (62%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) Institution IDA 5 (49%) 5 (52%) 5 (49%) 5 (52%) N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 2 (36%) 3 (27%) 2 (36%) 3 (42%) N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 67 (48%) 152 (52%) N/A N/A 67 (48%) 152 (52%) N/A N/A MIGA 0.07 (39%) 28 (44%) N/A N/A N/A N/A 0.07 (39%) 28 (44%) TBD: To be disclosed. MTR: to be disclosed by mid-term review. N/A: not applicable. † IBRD and IDA only indicator. ND: Not disclosed. In alignment with IFC and MIGA Access to Information Policies, project-level data is available in an aggregated format on the WBG Scorecard, provided the minimum threshold to secure individual clients’ data is satisfied. Results achieved: the stock of results that have occurred. Expected results: the anticipated results over the projects’ results horizon. Results achieved and expected are reported for the active portfolio as of June 2024. Figures are rounded to the nearest whole number when applicable. Values less than 1 but greater than or equal to 0.005 are shown with two decimal points (e.g., 0.98, 0.03). Values less than 0.005 but greater than 0 are represented as >0. 9 WBG (FY24) WB IFC MIGA Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected ⟩ Millions of new or better jobs, of which (%) for women and of which (%) for youth Overall TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Small States/SIDS Small States TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD SIDS TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD LDCs LDCs Income groups High income TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Upper middle income TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Lower middle income TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Low income TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Regions groups AFE TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD AFW TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD EAP TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD ECA TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD LCR TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD CROSS-CUTTING THEMES MNA TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD SAR TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Institution IDA TBD TBD TBD TBD N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD TBD TBD TBD TBD N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC TBD TBD N/A N/A TBD TBD N/A N/A MIGA TBD TBD N/A N/A N/A N/A TBD TBD ⟩ Millions of displaced people and people in host communities provided with services and livelihoods Overall 12 57 12 57 0.20 0.09 0 0 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States 0.03 0.30 0.03 0.30 0 0 0 0 SIDS 0 0.15 0 0.15 0 0 0 0 LDCs LDCs 11 32 11 32 0 0 0 0 Income groups High income 0 >0 0 0 ND ND 0 0 Upper middle income 0.07 5 0.07 5 ND ND 0 0 Lower middle income 3 22 2 22 ND ND 0 0 Low income 10 30 10 30 0 0 0 0 Regions groups AFE 7 39 7 39 ND ND 0 0 AFW 3 8 3 8 0 0 0 0 WORLD BANK GROUP RESULTS INDICATORS EAP 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ECA 0.07 3 0.07 3 ND ND 0 0 LCR 0 3 0 2 ND ND 0 0 MNA 2 3 2 3 ND ND 0 0 SAR 1 0.99 1 0.99 0 0 0 0 Institution IDA 12 50 12 50 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD 0.69 6 0.69 6 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC 0.20 0.09 N/A N/A 0.20 0.09 N/A N/A MIGA 0 0 N/A N/A N/A N/A 0 0 ⟩ $ billions in total private capital enabled Overall TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD SIDS TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD LDCs LDCs TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Income groups High income TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Upper middle income TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Lower middle income TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Low income TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Regions groups AFE TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD AFW TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD EAP TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD ECA TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD LCR TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD MNA TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD SAR TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Institution IDA TBD TBD TBD TBD N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD TBD TBD TBD TBD N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC TBD TBD N/A N/A TBD TBD N/A N/A MIGA TBD TBD N/A N/A N/A N/A TBD TBD ⟩ $ billions in total private capital mobilized Overall MTR 197 MTR 41 MTR 122 MTR 34 World Bank Small States/SIDS Small States MTR 2 MTR 0.59 MTR ND MTR 0.72 SIDS MTR 3 MTR 2 MTR ND MTR 0.52 LDCs LDCs MTR 29 MTR 8 MTR ND MTR 8 Income groups High income MTR 24 MTR 5 MTR ND MTR 2 Upper middle income MTR 85 MTR 13 MTR ND MTR 16 Lower middle income MTR 67 MTR 19 MTR ND MTR 10 Low income MTR 20 MTR 4 MTR ND MTR 4 TBD: To be disclosed. MTR: to be disclosed by mid-term review. N/A: not applicable. † IBRD and IDA only indicator. ND: Not disclosed. In alignment with IFC and MIGA Access to Information Policies, project-level data is available in an aggregated format on the WBG Scorecard, provided the minimum threshold to secure individual clients’ data is satisfied. Results achieved: the stock of results that have occurred. Expected results: the anticipated results over the projects’ results horizon. Results achieved and expected are reported for the active portfolio as of June 2024. Figures are rounded to the nearest whole number when applicable. Values less than 1 but greater than or equal to 0.005 are shown with two decimal points (e.g., 0.98, 0.03). Values less than 0.005 but greater than 0 are represented as >0. 10 WBG (FY24) WB IFC MIGA Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected Achieved Expected ⟩ $ billions in total private capital mobilized CROSS-CUTTING THEMES Overall MTR 197 MTR 41 MTR 122 MTR 34 Regions groups AFE MTR 20 MTR 4 MTR ND MTR 6 AFW MTR 13 MTR 3 MTR ND MTR 3 EAP MTR 19 MTR 2 MTR ND MTR 2 ECA MTR 41 MTR 8 MTR ND MTR 8 LCR MTR 52 MTR 10 MTR ND MTR 10 MNA MTR 11 MTR 4 MTR ND MTR 1 SAR MTR 25 MTR 10 MTR ND MTR 2 Institution IDA MTR 11 MTR 11 N/A N/A N/A N/A IBRD MTR 30 MTR 30 N/A N/A N/A N/A IFC MTR 122 N/A N/A MTR 122 N/A N/A MIGA MTR 34 N/A N/A N/A N/A MTR 34 WORLD BANK GROUP RESULTS INDICATORS Note 1: The World Bank allocates results from Blend financing projects to IDA and IBRD proportionally based on their contribution to the project's total net financial commitment. IFC and MIGA results are not allocated into IDA and IBRD institution disaggregation level. Note 2: For stock of active operations IBRD, IDA, IFC and MIGA used harmonized definitions, anchored in the respective results architectures of the World Bank, IFC, and MIGA. Note 3: The values shown in this edition will become more comprehensive over time as the WBG integrates new enhanced methods for measuring results across its portfolio. Note 4: The data values presented for client context indicators are for World Bank Group client countries. If the data value for World Bank Group client countries is not available, the world aggregate data value is reported instead. Note 5: Scorecard results for situations affected by fragility, conflict, and/or violence are based on countries listed annually on the WBG’s list of Fragile and Conflict-affected Situations (FCS), which is a subset of the broader group of countries affected by FCV. Note 6: For the purposes of Scorecard data disaggregation, 'youth' is defined according to the UN standard, which includes individuals aged 15 to 24. TBD: To be disclosed. MTR: to be disclosed by mid-term review. N/A: not applicable. † IBRD and IDA only indicator. ND: Not disclosed. In alignment with IFC and MIGA Access to Information Policies, project-level data is available in an aggregated format on the WBG Scorecard, provided the minimum threshold to secure individual clients’ data is satisfied. Results achieved: the stock of results that have occurred. Expected results: the anticipated results over the projects’ results horizon. Results achieved and expected are reported for the active portfolio as of June 2024. Figures are rounded to the nearest whole number when applicable. Values less than 1 but greater than or equal to 0.005 are shown with two decimal points (e.g., 0.98, 0.03). Values less than 0.005 but greater than 0 are represented as >0. 11 Please note the following caveats regarding new methodologies, indicators, and reporting practices, which may affect the interpretation and comparability of the data provided: 1. Partial portfolio results reporting due to ongoing 7. Exclusion in cumulative progress calculations. retrofitting of new WBG Results indicators – The results Cumulative Achieved includes only the incremental of reporting for the Annual Meetings release is only from a results reported between 01.07.2023 and 30.06.2024 and share of the portfolio as retrofitting of new indicators in the is calculated only for beneficiaries’ indicators. active portfolio is in progress. As more projects incorporate Beneficiaries of indirect, improved, or enhanced access the new WBG Results indicators, the figures are expected to —such as those that are part of the methodologies for the capture a broader spectrum of the WBG’s support to clients. transport, electricity, and internet indicators— are not included in cumulative calculations. If the indicator was 2. Ongoing harmonization and adoption of methodologies – missing or unavailable prior to 01.07.2023, the progress The harmonization and adoption of new methodologies in has been assumed to be zero before 01.07.2023. previously adopted projects or investment level metrics across the active portfolio of the World Bank (WB), the 8. Concentration of indicator influence in a few countries International Finance Corporation (IFC) and the – For many indicators, a high share of results reported are Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) is primarily influenced by a few countries with high currently in progress. Over time, the methodologies will be population density (for example, India, Brazil, Nigeria, adopted as clients implement the corresponding data Bangladesh, Ethiopia, or Pakistan). However, the collection mechanisms and start reporting under the new unprecedented levels of disaggregation and release of methodologies. For example, the low share of people backend files of the WBG Results indicators allows users provided with safely managed water and sanitation is due to to overcome potential demographic bias by creating their the ongoing mainstreaming of the "safely managed" own tailor-made analysis. dimension into projects’ results frameworks or low share of countries shown on the health emergencies indicator is due to a conservative evaluation of Health Emergency, 9. Female and youth breakdown – In instances where Preparedness, Prevention, and Response interventions that results data with percentage of female/youth was excluded COVID-19 projects from calculations presented. unavailable, the country-specific female/youth population share were used as a proxy for the overall share, assuming 3. Variations in the definition of active portfolio among WB, that the project is benefiting that proportion of the IFC, and MIGA – For the WB, active portfolio includes female/youth population. Depending on project projects active by the reporting fiscal year (FY), along with specificities, however, percentage of female/youth reached projects closed that have not submitted yet an could be different. Metrics on percentage of beneficiaries Implementation Completion and Results Report. For IFC, who are female/youth based on actuals will be expanded expected results include committed investments reporting over time, reducing use of proxies for deriving female/youth estimated future results. Achieved results are sourced from beneficiaries. In this cycle of reporting, on average, for WB projects that have reached Early Operating Maturity and the female breakdown on actuals is available for 45% of have yet to complete their Anticipated Impact Measurement projects reporting on results, while for youth breakdown is and Monitoring (AIMM) target year. For MIGA, it includes for 9% of projects reporting on results. projects that have active guarantee contracts as of the reporting fiscal year, but which have not yet reached the 10. Double counting – From this new WBG Scorecard cycle assessment for development results. FY24-FY30, for the first time new principles to limit 4. Pending finalization of methodological notes for WBG potential double counting (within projects and between Results indicators – Methodological notes for the WBG projects) involving assessment of the geospatial and Results indicators are living documents and subject to being temporal distribution of projects have been implemented. updated over time based on experience and lessons However, the adoption of these new principles is ongoing learned. Updates of the methodological notes will be non- and is expected to expand across institutions, and results substantial to deter breaks in time series reported during the figures reported will be updated over time as more spatial WBG Scorecard cycle FY24-FY30. data becomes available. 5. New results reporting framework – The WBG has adopted 11. Delays in end target adjustments – For some indicators, a new results reporting framework as approved by the Board aggregated results achieved align closely with expected on December 19th, 2023. This involves reporting on stock of results. This can be attributed to some projects exceeding results achieved and stock of expected results as described initial targets; where the targets have not yet been revised previously. Due to this methodological shift, the figures to reflect exceptional performance. New measures to reported in the new WBG Scorecard cycle FY24-FY30 cannot improve robustness of outcome data calculations were be compared with previous cycles (measuring flow). introduced in this reporting cycle. For example, projects However, backend data on results indicators will be overshooting targets were removed from the cohort released allowing stakeholders to derive previously used reported if they were biasing the overall figure, thus approaches as needed. resulting in a decline in the reported figures for a few 6. Disaggregated figures may not equal the total – When indicators compared to the transitional calculations figures are disaggregated by region or income level, they released in June. This conservative approach was taken to may not aggregate to the overall total because some avoid misinterpretation of the overall WBG Scorecard data. operations span countries from multiple regions or income Furthermore, it is important to note that while both groups, and the results cannot be proportionately allocated. methods (stock of results achieved and stock of expected Furthermore, Regional projects were not categorized into results) measure the same stock of interventions, they income groups due to the involvement of multiple countries consider different time horizons and provide in each regional project, and because countries within the complementary information to assess the full scale of project may have varying income classifications. WBG results delivery. 12 Definitions of indicators I. VISION INDICATORS (Page 1 of 1) Indicator name Definition Unit Percentage of The percentage of people living on less than $2.15 and $6.85 a day in 2017 purchasing power adjusted Percentage global population prices. Measures based on international poverty lines hold the real value of the poverty line constant living in poverty across countries when making national and temporal comparisons. The current extreme poverty line (at $2.15/day and ($2.15 a day, 2017 PPP) represents the median of the poverty lines found in 28 of the poorest countries $6.85/day) ranked by per capita consumption. The threshold at $6.85 corresponds to the median poverty line for upper-middle income countries. Statistics reported are based on consumption data or, when unavailable, on income surveys. Source: World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform Global average The average income shortfall from a prosperity standard of $25 per day (adjusted for differences in Income income shortfall purchasing power parity across countries). It is measured as the average factor by which incomes shortfall from a prosperity need to increase to reach the prosperity standard. As a distribution-sensitive measure, the gap (2017 $PPP) standard of narrows when incomes increase anywhere in the world and falls fastest when incomes of the very $25/day poorest increase: growth in income of a person earning $2.50 per day gets ten times more weight than growth in income of a person earning $25/day. Improvements (i.e., reductions) in the Prosperity Gap reflect increases in average income and reductions in inequality between and within countries. Source: World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform Number of The number of countries/economies facing high inequality, where high inequality is defined as those Number of countries/ with a Gini index greater than 40. This is based on the most recent household survey. The indicator is countries economies with reported for all countries/economies with a harmonized consumption or income aggregates in the /economies high inequality World Bank’s Poverty and Inequality Platform (PIP). Source: World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform Global A measure of annual emissions of greenhouse gasses (GHG) disaggregated at the global level by four GtCO2eq greenhouse gas gas categories—carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), and F-gasses—and 13 emissions subsectors within the energy, industry, waste, agriculture, and land use, land use change, and forestry (Gigatons of CO2 sectors, standardized to carbon dioxide equivalent values. At the country level, data are further equivalent) disaggregated by the six greenhouse gases covered by the Kyoto Protocol—CO2, CH4, N2O, hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), perfluorocarbons (PFCs), and Sulphur hexafluoride (SF6)—plus hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) and nitrogen trifluoride (NF3) and 15 subsectors that further disaggregate the agriculture and the waste sector. Source: Emissions Database for Global Atmospheric Emissions (EDGAR) Percentage of The percentage of people globally who are both exposed to a set of key climate-related hazards Percentage people at high (floods, droughts, cyclones, and heatwaves) and are also highly vulnerable (i.e., have a propensity to risk from climate- be adversely affected or unable to cope with the impacts), as a share of global population. Specifically, related hazards people are counted as at high risk from climate-related hazards if they are exposed to at least one globally hazard and are identified as highly vulnerable on at least one dimension of vulnerability. Source: Global Human Settlement Layer (GHSL) produced by the Joint Research Centre, European Union, FAO ASI, Fathom Global 2.0, flood hazard dataset, World Bank Climate Change Knowledge Portal, World Development Indicators, World Bank PIP, World Bank Rural Access Index. Millions of The area of selected key ecosystems on the planet including forests, grasslands, shrublands, Millions hectares of key mangroves, and corals that provide an indication of the health of the planet. Source: European Space (Hectares) ecosystems Agency WorldCover, Global Mangrove Watch,Allan Coral AtlasReef Habitat v2.0. globally Percentage of The percentage of people worldwide who live in moderately or severely food insecure households with Percentage people facing food at least one adult exposed to low-quality diets or forced to reduce the quantity of normal consumption and nutrition during a year due to a lack of money or other resources. Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of insecurity globally the United Nations (FAO). Percentage of The percentage of people with access to water, sanitation, and hygiene, as tracked in three separate Percentage people with access sub-indicators. Basic water refers to water from an improved source within collection time of 30 to basic drinking minutes for a roundtrip including queuing. Basic sanitation refers to the use of improved facilities water, sanitation which are not shared with other households. Basic hygiene refers to the availability of a handwashing services, or facility with soap and water at home. Source: UNICEF-WHO Joint Monitoring Program (JMP). hygiene globally 13 Definitions of indicators II. CLIENT CONTEXT INDICATORS (Page 1 of 2) Indicator name Definition Unit Protection for the poorest Percentage of people The percentage of the population that is participating in social protection and labor programs, Percentage covered by social including Social Assistance, Social Insurance, and Labor Market policies, of which those in the protection and labor bottom 20% of income/consumption (ASPIRE classification). This will be measured at the country programs in the total level based on quintiles calculated country-by-country. Source: Atlas of Social Protection population and in the Indicators of Resilience and Equity (ASPIRE) poorest quintile No learning poverty Percentage of children The percentage of end-of-primary-school-age children who are not able to read and understand a Percentage who cannot read by short story of age-appropriate material. Source: Learning Poverty Report, joint publication of the end-of-primary-school World Bank, UNICEF, FCDO, USAID, The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and in partnership with age UNESCO Healthier lives Percentage of children The percentage of children under age five whose height for age is more than two standard Percentage under five stunted deviations below the median for the international reference population ages 0–59 months. Source: UNICEF-WHO-WB Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates Universal health Coverage of essential health services including reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health, Index: 0-100 coverage service infectious diseases, and non-communicable diseases and service capacity and access. Source: coverage index (0 – 100) WB-WHO UHC service coverage index Effective macroeconomic and fiscal management Countries The number of countries/economies that are either at high risk of or directly in debt distress using Number of /economies at high LIC DSA rating or the sovereign credit rating by a major credit rating agency (S&P, Moody’s, or countries risk of or in debt Fitch). Source: LIC DSA database and Bloomberg /economies distress Countries /economies The number of countries/economies with unweighted average change in tax revenue to GDP ratio Number of with tax revenue-to- below or equal to 15% for three consecutive years. Source: IMF WEO database, Government countries GDP ratios (including Finance Statistics, National Statistics Offices /economies social security contributions) below or equal to 15% Green and blue planet and resilient populations Percentage of people The percentage of population living in areas with hazardous ambient air quality. “Hazardous” air Percentage exposed to hazardous quality is defined as annual average concentrations of PM2.5(Particulate Matter less than 2.5 air quality micrometers in diameter that are responsible for significant health impacts) that exceed 35 µg/m3. Source: Aerosol Optical Depth retrievals from NASA MODIS, MISR, SeaWIFS, and VIIRS instruments, chemical transport modelling (GEOS-Chem), and ground monitor-based calibration (with a Geographically Weighted Regression) Countries/economies The number of countries/economies with positive changes in renewable natural capital per capita, Number of with increasing based on a subset of assets in the renewable natural capital data series currently produced as countries renewable natural part of the Changing Wealth of Nations publication and published on the World Development /economies capital per capita Indicators data-base. Source: Changing Wealth of Nations Dataset Percentage of The percentage of area of geographical space, recognized, dedicated, and managed, through legal Percentage terrestrial and aquatic or other effective means, to achieve the long-term conservation of nature with associated areas that are ecosystem services and cultural values. Source: UNEP-WCMC, IUCN, and Bird Life International protected (methodology to be finalized by the Convention for Biological Diversity) Proportion of fish The percentage of fish stocks classified as "within biologically sustainable levels" as part of the Percentage stocks within total number of stocks within the maximum sustainable yield for fishing. Source: Food and biologically sustainable Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) levels Inclusive and equitable water and sanitation services The percentage of people with access to water, sanitation, and hygiene, as tracked in three Percentage Percentage of people separate sub-indicators. Basic water refers to water from an improved source within collection with access to basic time of 30 minutes for a roundtrip including queuing. Basic sanitation refers to the use of improved drinking water, facilities which are not shared with other households. Basic hygiene refers to the availability of a sanitation services, or handwashing facility with soap and water at home. Source: UNICEF-WHO Joint Monitoring hygiene Program (JMP). 14 Definitions of indicators II. CLIENT CONTEXT INDICATORS (Page 2 of 2) Indicator name Definition Unit Sustainable food systems Percentage of people The percentage of people worldwide who live in moderately or severely food insecure households Percentage facing food and with at least one adult exposed to low-quality diets or forced to reduce the quantity of normal nutrition insecurity consumption during a year due to a lack of money or other resources. Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). Connected communities Percentage of people The percentage of the population that has safe and dependable transportation options throughout Percentage with access to reliable the year. In urban areas this measures the estimated share of urban population who can access a transport solutions all public transport stop within a walking distance of 500 meters (low-capacity public transport) year-round and/or 1,000 meters (high-capacity public transport) along the street network. In rural areas this measures the proportion of the rural population living within 2 km of an all-season road. Source: World Bank Rural Access Index, UN Population Division, WorldPop, Global Urban Rural Mapping Project (GRUMP) v1 Urban Extent Polygons, OpenStreetMap, Global Road Inventory Dataset (GRIP) Affordable, reliable, and sustainable energy for all Percentage of The percentage of population with access to electricity with electrification data collected from Percentage population with access industry, national surveys, and international sources. Source: Energy Sector Management to electricity Assistance Program (ESMAP), World Development Indicators Digital connectivity Percentage of The percentage of people who have used the Internet in the last 3 months. Source: International Percentage population using the Telecommunications Union (ITU) internet Digital services State of online e- The scope and quality of online services available according to the Online Service Index (OSI) from Index: 0 -1 government service the United Nation’s’ E-Government Development Index (EGDI). Source: United Nation’s’ e- provision government development index (EGDI) Gender equality Population that own a The percentage of adults who report having an account at a bank or other regulated financial Percentage financial account, total institution such as a credit union, microfinance institution, or post office; having a debit card in (% population ages 15+) their own name; receiving wages, government transfers, or payments for agricultural products into and female (% female an account or through a mobile phone at a financial institution in the past 12 months; paying utility population ages 15+) bills or school fees from an account at a financial institution in the past 12 months; receiving wages or government transfers into a card in the past 12 months. Source: World Bank Global Findex database, Gallup World Poll More and better jobs Wage and salaried The percentage of the total employed who are wage and salaried workers. The total employed Percentage workers, total (% total comprises two categories by status in employment: (a) wage and salaried workers (also known as employment) and employees); and (b) self-employed workers. Wage and salaried workers are those workers who female (% female hold the type of jobs defined as paid employment jobs remunerated according to an employment employment) contract. Source: ILOSTAT Youth not in education, The percentage of youth who are not in education, employment, or training (NEET) relative to the Percentage employment, or total population of the corresponding age group. Source: World Development Indicators, ILOSTAT training, total (% youth population) and female (% female youth population) Better lives for people in fragility, conflict and violence Percentage of The percentage of people living under extreme poverty ($2.15 per day based on 2017 PPPs) that Percentage population in FCS live in fragile and conflict-affected situations. Source: World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform countries living in extreme poverty (at $2.15/day) Millions of displaced Number of internally displaced population (IDPs), refugees, and asylum-seekers forced to flee Millions of people in need of their homes in a given year. Source: The Global Trend Report, UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency people protection More private investment Private investment as a The gross outlays by the private sector (including private nonprofit agencies in addition to its fixed Percentage percentage of GDP domestic assets) as percentage of GDP. Source: World Bank’s Macro-Fiscal Model (MFMOD) database and OECD National Accounts data files 15 Definitions of indicators III. WBG RESULTS INDICATORS (Page 1 of 5) Indicator name Definition Unit Protection for the poorest Beneficiaries of The number of individuals benefiting from safety net programs supported by World Bank operations. Beneficiaries social safety net Social safety nets are non-contributory programs that are pro-poor and aim to reach the poorest and (millions) programs† most vulnerable populations. These measures include cash-based interventions, public works and workfare programs, fee waivers for services, and in-kind assistance to address critical needs (such as food, medicine, shelter, and social services). Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database. No learning poverty Students The number of students benefiting from activities supported by IBRD, IDA, IFC, and MIGA that change Beneficiaries supported with education in ways that increase participation, improve learning, or improve labor market outcomes. To (millions) better education increase learning for all, more children, youth, and adults must be enrolled in education institutions for longer and attending frequently, and the quality of the education services they receive must be more effective at improving learning and building skills (cognitive, non-cognitive, and job-specific), ultimately leading to better labor market outcomes. It includes beneficiaries of any age in formal or non-formal settings, in the public or private sectors, at any level namely early childhood, primary, secondary (general and vocational), and post-secondary (including technical, vocational, and tertiary). The indicator builds on and enhances existing methodologies. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. Healthier lives People receiving The number of people benefiting directly from the utilization and quality improvements of health Beneficiaries quality health, prevention, promotion, diagnostic, curative, rehabilitative, and palliative care due to IBRD, IDA, IFC, (millions) nutrition, and and MIGA activities during the intervention period. WBG support includes a mix of inputs, skills, and population processes that are directly used to deliver care to beneficiaries by health care workers in a facility, services through outreach, campaigns, or via telemedicine visits. The interventions must promote quality services, given that quality care is essential for improving the health of the population. Interventions may also include more indirect interventions, such as health system strengthening initiatives, including training of health care workers, infrastructure development, or upgrades to health facilities, supply chain interventions in the public and private sectors, and the production of pharmaceuticals and health care products. Any of these interventions (direct and indirect) may be included if they are directly supported by WBG financing, and if the impact can be demonstrated through 1) availability of actual utilization data at sites where the WBG receives support; OR 2) a robust modelling approach, (which is adopted through a rigorous peer-reviewed process) to estimate the expected link between the intervention and number of people using services. A list of examples that would be included/excluded is included in the methods and will be updated regularly. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. Countries The number of countries benefitting from IBRD, IDA, IFC and MIGA support to strengthen health Number of benefitting from emergency prevention, preparedness and response (HEPPR) capacities and performance during the countries strengthened intervention period. These interventions must be aligned with the International Health Regulations capacity to and/or other internationally recognized frameworks and recommendations and/or must be part of a prevent, detect and recommended set of WBG interventions that can be carried out through WBG support to increase respond to health resilience of health systems and availability of emergency-ready health services, for example, through emergencies pre-arranged agreements, platforms, and contracts for service delivery or governance arrangements during a health emergency. The indicator also includes interventions to strengthen equitable access to medical countermeasures (MCMs); interventions to enable rapid disbursement of surge financing (including contingency financing and financing for medical countermeasures); and social protection interventions that protect individuals during a crisis. Examples of eligible activities are defined in this note, but criteria will be updated periodically. A health emergency is defined as any event that may have negative consequences for human health, impacts the lives and well-being of a large number of people or a significant percentage of a population, and requires substantial multisectoral assistance (World Health Organization, WHO,2005). This definition covers events occurring irrespective of their origin or sources, including natural disasters, climate-related disasters, war, conflict, and epidemics or pandemics (WHO, 2017). Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. Effective macroeconomic and fiscal management Countries in or at The realized result indicator is ratio of the number of countries in, or at high risk of, debt distress in year Percentage of high risk of debt T that have implemented reforms toward debt sustainability in the same and previous year (i.e., T and countries distress that T-1) to the total number of countries in or at high risk of debt distress in year T, expressed as a implemented percentage. The expected result indicator is the ratio of the number of countries in, or at high risk of reforms towards debt distress in year T that are expected to implement reforms in year T and T+1, to the total number of debt sustainability countries in high risk of debt distress or in debt distress in year T, expressed as a percentage. Countries (%)† in debt distress or at high risk of debt distress are defined as in the World Bank Group Client Context Indicators. “Reforms towards debt sustainability” include policy actions related to a) fiscal sustainability; b) debt management; and c) debt transparency and reporting. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database, Debt Management Monitors, PPAs implementation reports, DSA database † IBRD and IDA only indicator. 16 Definitions of indicators III. WBG RESULTS INDICATORS (Page 2 of 5) Indicator name Definition Unit Effective macroeconomic and fiscal management Countries with tax The indicator will assess the extent to which countries with tax-to-GDP ratios equal to or below the 15 Number of revenues-to-GDP percent threshold are able to improve their revenue collection in real terms, considering equity. The countries ratio at or below indicator encompasses client countries whose tax revenues equaled or were less than 15% of GDP 15% that have during the baseline year. Countries will be included in the indicator if they demonstrate an increased improvement in tax revenues in real terms compared to the previous year, with support from World collections, Bank operations and analytical work, taking into consideration the equity aspects of tax and broader considering equity† fiscal reforms. Reforms will be identified in the Prior Actions of DPOs, project components of PforRs and IPFs operations, core diagnostics (such as Public Finance Reviews), and technical assistance projects where the implications of these reforms for equity are assessed. DRM results data cover the calendar year (CY) instead of the fiscal year (FY). Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database, fiscal portfolio Green and blue planet and resilient populations Net GHG Annualized estimations of net greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are typically calculated as the MtCO2eq Emissions difference between project emissions (aggregated over the economic lifetime of the project), and the /year emissions of a baseline scenario (aggregated over the same time horizon) for eligible IBRD, IDA, IFC, and MIGA projects. Emissions values are estimated ex-ante (i.e., during project preparation) at the project-level using approved GHG accounting methodologies. The indicator value is negative if the project is reducing emissions compared with the baseline scenario, and positive if the project is increasing emissions compared with the baseline scenario. Net GHG emissions per fiscal year (FY) are the sum of net emissions of projects approved (IBRD/IDA)/signed (MIGA)/committed (IFC) in the reported fiscal year. WBG institutions follow the IFI Guideline for a Harmonized Approach to Greenhouse Gas Accounting, which defines various terminologies relevant to GHG Accounting, including but not limited to Scope 1, Scope 2, Scope 3 emissions. Source: WB Operations Portal; Project Appraisal Documents; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. Beneficiaries This indicator is defined as the number of people directly benefiting from improved climate risk Beneficiaries with enhanced management and increased climate resilience due to eligible investments, including through financial (millions) resilience to intermediaries, and activities by the World Bank, IFC, and MIGA during the intervention period, where climate risks data and methodologies exist. This considers how interventions enhance resilience of their beneficiaries by including structural investments, non-structural or capacity development elements, and improvements to the enabling environments and institutional frameworks for climate resilience. These interventions could include, for example: access to climate resilient infrastructure, climate- smart agriculture, food, and water, early warning systems, enhanced climate disaster response, and support to livelihoods, education, financial mechanisms, and social safety nets. People captured as beneficiaries with increased climate resilience may be all or a sub-set of targeted project or component beneficiaries, and/or could be a broader population depending on the activity type and reach. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. Hectares of The indicator measures the terrestrial and inland/marine aquatic areas (in millions of hectares) that Hectares terrestrial and are under enhanced protection, conservation, restoration, and/or sustainable management through (millions) aquatic areas operations supported by IBRD, IDA, IFC, and MIGA. This will include the results of work on diverse under enhanced Landscapes (e.g., forests, grass/shrub lands, woodlands, wetlands, water bodies, watersheds, oases, conservation and urban green and blue spaces) and Seascapes (e.g., ocean and coastal zones, including wetlands, /management deltas, mangroves, and reefs) that have been improved from a nature perspective. These are expected to improve the extent or condition of these areas relating to biodiversity or other ecosystem services and address drivers of nature loss. Relevant activities may reduce and reverse natural resource degradation, protect and enhance natural habitats and their ecosystem services, and thus provide nature benefits to dependent communities. This indicator does not include terrestrial or aquatic areas managed as offsets for project-related biodiversity impacts (public or private sector). Production landscapes or seascapes (e.g., plantations, agriculture, and aquaculture areas) may be included where practices are applied that result in demonstratable benefits to nature, while not involving conversation of natural habitats. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database. IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. † IBRD and IDA only indicator. 17 Definitions of indicators III. WBG RESULTS INDICATORS (Page 3 of 5) Indicator name Definition Unit Inclusive and equitable water and sanitation services People provided The number of people who benefited from water, sanitation, and/or hygiene services enabled by IBRD, Beneficiaries with water, IDA, IFC, and MIGA interventions, as well as people benefiting from improvements in their water, (millions) sanitation, and/or sanitation and/or hygiene facilities and services through rehabilitation works (people that already had hygiene, of which access to WASH services but at lower levels of the drinking, sanitation, and handwashing ladders), (%) is safely with the corresponding breakdown for safely managed. Improvements in service (water source, water managed quality, continuity, reduction in NRW, etc.) will capture beneficiaries that: (i) remain within their level of service provision but experience improvement in service dimensions such as hours of supply, quality of water, continuity or other quantifiable service metric, or (ii) move from lower-level service to basic or above or move from basic to safely managed. The indicator will also capture results from projects delivering services in contexts where only limited service is possible (e.g., public markets, refugee camps, etc.). Definitions of limited, at least basic and safely managed water, sanitation and hygiene are those established by the UNICEF-WHO Joint Monitoring Program (JMP). Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. Sustainable food systems People with The number of people benefiting from interventions by IBRD, IDA, IFC, and MIGA across multiple Beneficiaries strengthened food sectors that strengthen food and nutrition security. These interventions may span the universally (millions) and nutrition accepted dimensions of food and nutrition security, including the availability of food, access to food, security utilization of food and stability of food systems. Examples of such interventions could include operations from a diverse set of thematic areas, such as climate resilient agriculture and food systems, social protection/social safety nets, nutrition services, supply chains, financial and trade finance operations that support food inputs, imports, and distribution of food, improved irrigation and drainage services, agricultural services, improved practices and technologies to enhance agricultural production and integration of farmers to markets. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. Connected communities People that benefit Beneficiaries of improved transport conditions in urban and rural contexts enabled by IBRD, IDA, IFC, Beneficiaries from improved and MIGA operations. It assesses the number of people that experience improved access to (millions) access to sustainable transport infrastructure or services that have been built or rehabilitated through financed sustainable or guaranteed interventions (e.g., climate-resilient highways, rural roads, urban and interurban roads, transport non-motorized transport facilities, public transport, railways, ports, and airports). It will build on SDG infrastructure and 11.2 to systematically measure improvements in sustainable transport in countries that are financed services or guaranteed through IBRD, IDA, IFC, and MIGA interventions. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. Affordable, reliable, and sustainable energy for all People provided The number of people who have received new or improved electricity service through operations Beneficiaries with access to supported by IBRD, IDA, IFC, and MIGA. This includes estimates of direct access, inferred access, and (millions) electricity improved service, covering affordability, reliability, availability, and other attributes as defined under the Multi-Tier Framework for Energy Access.11 Affordability is considered as the cost of a standard consumption package per year relative to household income and is aligned with SDG7. Source: Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. Renewable energy The number of gigawatts (GW) of the generation capacity of renewable energy enabled with direct GW capacity enabled support, indirect support, and/or enabling policy support through operations supported by IBRD, IDA, IFC, and MIGA. This includes direct investments in physical infrastructure (both greenfield and brownfield), enabling infrastructure (transmission and distribution, grid integration, and energy storage), support to private sector investment in renewable energy markets (project and corporate financing, guarantees, and transaction advisory), and the development of government policies, laws, or regulations that are expected to accelerate the expansion of renewable energy capacity. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. Digital connectivity People using The number of people, public sector facilities, businesses who use new or enhanced internet Beneficiaries broadband internet broadband facilitated by WBG interventions. It includes people who were previously unconnected and (millions) are new users of broadband internet (new use and inferred use) and people who have benefitted from improved broadband internet service during the project implementation period. Use is measured as the number of subscribers to broadband internet. Subscribers who pay for internet services are typically frequent users and data on mobile subscribers tracks active users (GSMA). New or enhanced use at a business or public facility, or via a public access point, will be converted into an estimated number of people beneficiaries for the purpose of aggregation and mentions of people below will include people benefitting through businesses or public sector facilities. The indicator builds on and enhances existing methodologies. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. 18 Definitions of indicators III. WBG RESULTS INDICATORS (Page 4 of 5) Indicator name Definition Unit Digital services People using The number of people using new or enhanced digitally enabled services supported by IBRD, IDA, IFC Beneficiaries digitally enabled and MIGA activities. This includes new digitally enabled services (i.e., previously-manual/analog (millions) services services that are now digitalized) as well as enhancements to existing digitally enabled services (i.e., improvements in areas such as coverage, affordability, efficiency), provided by the public or private sector. The indicator includes two aspects: • New services are those services that were entirely manual in the past but are now digitalized (e.g., cash payment converted from manual to digital, or parts of antenatal care for pregnant women now including tele-visits with specialized obstetricians for high-risk pregnancies). • Enhanced services are those that might have been digitalized partially or fully in the past but have now improved or deepened the digitalization to make those services more affordable, efficient, transparent, inclusive, and accessible, more privacy-protecting, among others. This indicator will be digital disaggregation of a number of corporate scorecard indicators where services have been digitally enabled, such as: millions of beneficiaries of social safety net programs; millions of people receiving quality health, nutrition and population services; millions of people and businesses using financial services. This will also include those delivered by sector specific digitally enabled services not featured in the corporate scorecard. Two types of users will be counted under this indicator. “Active Users” of digitally enabled services refers to those individuals, businesses, households, or other institutions (schools, health facilities, etc.) who actively use a digitally enabled service. That is receiving goods or services through the technology (typically a digital platform) with or without payment. “Covered users” refers to those covered by services that might be activated only in times of emergency. For example, receiving alerts on incoming natural disaster. For push services such as emergency alerts, teams should only count those users who have access to devices that services are being pushed to. Another type of user which will not be counted is a “Registered user”, who is any individual or business that is registered on a technology (e.g., a digital platform), giving them the option to use the technology-enabled product. Such “registered users” will not count as having used services under this indicator. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. Gender equality People benefitting The indicator will measure number of people directly benefitting from operations supported by the Beneficiaries from actions to IBRD, IDA, IFC, and MIGA that include actions designed to advance gender equality. “Actions to (millions) advance gender advance gender equality” refers to specific interventions within WBG operations. The indicator uses equality, of which the existing Gender Tag/Flag focus on actions to advance gender equality to capture the number of (%) from actions people benefitting from those actions. Operations with these actions are validated by the gender that expand and departments in the Bank, IFC, and MIGA, and are indicated via the Gender Tag (for Bank operations) or enable economic Gender Flag (for IFC and MIGA operations). The aggregate value is the summation of beneficiaries from opportunities a wide variety of such actions across the WBG portfolio. The indicator will also report on a subset of beneficiaries of specific actions to expand and enable economic opportunities. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. People and The number of people, microenterprises, Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), and large businesses Beneficiaries businesses using reached with and actively using financial services supported by IBRD, IDA, IFC, and MIGA. Financial (millions) financial services, services include transaction accounts10 and payments, credit products - including factoring, leasing - of which (%) are and equity, savings, pensions, investment products, and insurance (including disaster risk insurance). women The indicator intends to measure active use, beyond access/ownership, with a view to capturing the number of people and businesses expected to benefit from financial services. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. Better lives for people in fragility, conflict and violence Displaced people The number of refugees, IDPs, and people in host communities deliberately supported with accessing Beneficiaries and people in host and utilizing services and livelihoods. This indicator includes, but is not limited to, policy reforms (millions) communities allowing refugees to access the labor force and services, improved access to and quality of education provided with and health services; jobs programs, entrepreneurship development, agriculture, trade, and financial services and services; access to urban and community services and utilities; access to rural and urban livelihoods infrastructure; civil registries and legal aid. This indicator will measure support provided through IDA and IBRD operations, as well as results delivered through IFC Investments, Advisory Services, and Upstream, and through projects supported by MIGA guarantees to clients, in locations where forcibly displaced persons (i.e., refugees and IDPs) and their hosting communities reside. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. 19 Definitions of indicators III. WBG RESULTS INDICATORS (Page 5 of 5) Indicator name Definition Unit More private investment Total private Financing contributed by private entities alongside a commitment, including financing or guarantees, US$ capital mobilized or technical assistance delivery made by the World Bank, IFC, and MIGA.8 A private entity is any legal (billions) entity, whether privately or publicly owned, or natural person: (i) which is carrying out or is established for a business purpose and is operating on a commercial basis; (ii) which is financially and managerially autonomous; and (iii) whose day-to-day management is not controlled by the government. Some public entities organized with financial and managerial autonomy are counted as private entities. Other examples include registered commercial banks, insurance companies, sovereign wealth funds and other institutional investors investing primarily on commercial basis. PCM includes sponsor financing if the sponsor qualifies as a private entity. Source: WB Operations Portal; ISR/ICR database; IFC Results Measurement System; MIGA Results Measurement System. 20 WORLD BANK GROUP SCORECARD