Business
5:56 18 June 2026
Post by: WBJ

World Bank Unveils New Strategy for Poland

World Bank Unveils New Strategy for Poland
Photo: Press Material

The World Bank Group's Board of Executive Directors has discussed a new Country Partnership Framework (CPF) for Poland covering 2026 to 2031, designed to help the country build a more innovative, competitive economy, mobilise private investment, create better jobs and navigate its next stage of economic development.

Over the past three decades Poland has moved from a planned economy to a dynamic market economy, steadily closing the income gap with the rest of the EU. The challenge now, the Bank says, is sustaining that success: future growth will hinge on raising productivity, innovation and private investment, while managing a shifting labour market, strengthening energy security and building broader resilience.

"The World Bank Group's 2026-2031 partnership strategy supports Poland in building a more competitive, resilient and sustainable economy," said Andrzej Domański, Poland's Minister of Finance and Economy. "It focuses on three priorities: stimulating investment, innovation and job creation; strengthening energy security and the transition to clean energy; and increasing resilience to droughts and floods." Domański said the programme reflects Poland's status as a high-income economy and charts a path toward ending its use of financing from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development after 2031, while expanding the role of private-sector financing. The World Bank Group, he added, will continue supporting Poland on its remaining structural challenges to underpin long-term growth and prosperity.

In a high-income economy like Poland's, the Bank's role is evolving and increasingly selective, concentrating on areas where it and Poland can jointly drive innovation, mobilise private capital and generate knowledge transferable to other countries. Poland is now on a path toward eventually phasing out World Bank financing altogether — itself, the Bank says, a marker of the country's remarkable progress.

"Few countries have achieved as much as Poland," said Anna Bjerde, the World Bank Group's Managing Director of Operations. "The goal of our evolving partnership is to make sure Poland's success endures — through better jobs, greater energy security and higher resilience for future generations. Private capital will be central to the country's next stage of development. We will help mobilise capital, support innovative firms, and strengthen capital markets, helping Polish companies grow, create jobs and seize new opportunities. Just as importantly, we will work with Poland to share the lessons of its remarkable transformation with countries that share similar ambitions."

The framework's priority areas are: supporting innovation and job-creating investment; strengthening energy security and backing sustainable energy; and building resilience to droughts and floods. It draws on the full range of the World Bank Group's tools — private investment, guarantees and policy advisory — to support Poland's long-term development goals.

The World Bank Group has supported Poland since 1990, providing roughly $16.5 billion in loans, investments and advisory work over that period. Going forward, the partnership will concentrate on a smaller set of carefully chosen areas where the Bank's investment and expertise can add the most value to Poland's development agenda.



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