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World Bank says to lend India up to $5 billion a year
Reuters
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A man collects empty plastic bottles to be recycled at a factory in a slum in Mumbai March 15, 2013.  Credit: Reuters
A man collects empty plastic bottles to be recycled at a factory in a slum in Mumbai March 15, 2013. Credit: Reuters

The World Bank said on Thursday it would lend between $3 billion to $5 billion annually to India under a new four-year plan that focuses development projects on the country's poorest states.

The World Bank said in a statement that 60 percent of the financing will go to government-backed development projects and half of this, or 30 percent, will go to the country's poorer states. Under the previous strategy, about 18 percent of lending went to these states.

Earlier this month World Bank President Jim Yong Kim urged the international community to eradicate global poverty by 2030. He said the strategy for India would be the first by the bank to hone in on areas where developing financing would have the biggest impact on India's poorest.

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The Bank said the plan aims to cut poverty in India to 5.5 percent of the population by 2030 from an estimated 29.8 percent in 2010.

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(Published 12 April 2013, 08:37 IST)