All videos

Explainer: What Does the World Bank Do?

The World Bank is an international financial institution with two main aims to end extreme poverty around the world and to increase the incomes of the world’s poorest. The World Bank was established to help rebuild Europe after World War II. But its mission soon broadened. In 1948, Chile became the Bank’s first non-European beneficiary. Today, it funds projects in more than 170 countries. Which might otherwise struggle to attract financing. The World Bank has provided loans and grants worth $49.5 billion since 1944 and funded more than 12,000 projects around the world. Watch the video to learn more about what does the World Bank do and how it works.

Topics:
Financial and Monetary SystemsTrade and Investment
Share:
World Economic Forum logo

Forum Stories newsletter

Bringing you weekly curated insights and analysis on the global issues that matter.

Subscribe today

More on Financial and Monetary Systems
See all

The clean energy fast lane: how clusters speed up the industrial transformation

Nadia Mondini and Emilie Kaern

January 13, 2026

Insurance and asset managers can trigger a virtuous cycle for climate action

2:51

About us

Engage with us

Quick links

Language editions

Privacy Policy & Terms of Service

Sitemap

© 2026 World Economic Forum