Baroness Chapman, World Bank IMF Spring Meeting Remarks
Summary
UK Minister for Development Baroness Chapman delivered remarks at the World Bank Group and IMF 2026 Spring Meetings Development Committee plenary in Washington DC on 17 April 2026. The speech addressed multilateral institution governance reform, climate finance targets (45% and extension of climate strategy), and called for greater representation of sub-Saharan Africa in decision-making. No new binding obligations or compliance requirements were announced.
What changed
Baroness Chapman delivered a policy speech at the Development Committee plenary covering two main themes: the need for multilateral institutions to respond to current crises (including conflict impacts and Strait of Hormuz navigation) while maintaining long-term climate and jobs goals; and governance reform to better reflect the world the World Bank serves, particularly increased representation for sub-Saharan Africa. The speech references existing climate finance targets (45% and extension of the Bank's climate strategy) but does not announce new binding obligations.
For affected parties, the speech signals continued UK support for multilateral development institutions and governance reform priorities. Multilateral development banks and their shareholders should note the emphasis on representation of developing nations in decision-making processes. No immediate compliance deadlines or penalties arise from this speech.
Scheduled event
- Date
- 2026-04-17
- Location
- Washington DC
Archived snapshot
Apr 22, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Speech
World Bank Group and International Monetary Fund 2026 Spring Meetings, Development Committee plenary: Baroness Chapman's remarks
Minister for Development Baroness Chapman gave remarks at the Development Committee plenary during the World Bank Group and IMF 2026 Spring Meetings.
From: Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office and The Rt Hon Baroness Chapman of Darlington Published 21 April 2026 Location: Development Committee in Washington DC. Delivered on:
17 April 2026
(Transcript of the speech, exactly as it was delivered)
Thank you, Chair, Ajay, and everyone at the Bank.
I set out my priorities in my written statement. So I want to focus here on 2 things.
First, we all know that war is development in reverse. So we need to see an end to all conflict, including Russia’s continued aggression against Ukraine. And I have heard clearly here, that the war in the Middle East will impact us all.
We have been in crises before. We have better tools now. Let’s use them. While still focusing on our long-term goals of jobs and tackling climate change. We need an extension to the Bank’s climate strategy, and the 45% finance target.
As the crisis continues, we must stand ready to do more if needed. We also must rapidly ensure freedom of navigation and trade through the Strait of Hormuz.
This crisis – and previous ones – have shown us that in these moments, countries turn to the IMF and World Bank for support.
Which leads me to my second point. These institutions are the apex of our multilateral economic and development system: their legitimacy underpins their ability to act.
At our last meeting, I set out my view that this Bank must better reflect the world it serves, that those which rely most on this Bank should have a greater stake in decisions that affect them and I asked for concrete progress by these meetings.
I am pleased that today we have more Ministers from sub-Saharan Africa in this room. I hope soon we can have them, not just in the room, but at the table.
These are important incremental steps. But they are not enough to safeguard this institution. They must be a stepping stone on a longer journey.
That journey must start with us. As Ministers, setting out our common vision for how the governance of the World Bank can better reflect the world of today and tomorrow. Not the world of yesterday.
So I hope we can agree that our ambition does not end here. We must build on this in the months and years ahead.
Thank you.
Published 21 April 2026
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