Enhancing Connectivity through Transport Infrastructure
The Role of Official Development Finance and Private Investment

Transport infrastructure is crucial to connect developing countries and help them to boost trade, growth and regional integration. This is because cross-border or long-distance roads and railways as well as international ports and airports are needed to move products and people around in a globalised world.
What can bilateral and multilateral development partners do to help connect developing countries through transport infrastructure? This report takes stock of continental and regional transport plans in Africa, Asia, Latin America and parts of Europe to place development co-operation in context. It then examines the strategies and activities of development partners for transport connectivity. It also takes a hard look at the allocation of official development finance for transport connectivity, particularly in relation to the distribution of private investment for the same types of infrastructure.
How large is the financing gap for transport connectivity to meet the Sustainable Development Goals? What can development partners do to fill this gap? How can they create an environment that can help mobilise more private resources? The report provides a comprehensive picture of the current state of play as well as food for thought on what can be done to move forward. It also features 16 profiles of development partners and their activities for improving transport connectivity.
Foreword
Development partners carry out development co-operation so that developing countries can eventually drive them out of business. In other words, the objective of development co-operation is to help these countries achieve sustainable development that will no longer require aid. For this to happen though, developing countries need a thriving private sector that invests, trades, creates jobs, produces outputs, generates income, pays taxes, reduces poverty, and enhances the well-being of their citizens.