Washington, DC: Following Hurricane Melissa and at the request of Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness, CAF
–Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean, the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB), the Inter-American
Development Bank Group (IDB Group), the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the World Bank Group (WBG) have jointly
assembled a comprehensive package of up to US$6.7 billion over three years to strengthen Jamaica’s recovery and
This coordinated effort reflects a unified commitment to help Jamaica pursue a fiscally responsible, long-term recovery
through a combination of emergency preparedness financing, sovereign financing, grant support and private sector
investments. The announcement comes ahead of the call Prime Minister Holness will hold with representatives from the
international financial institutions to discuss implementation plans.
Rapid Early Response Enabled by Jamaica’s Planning
Jamaica’s robust disaster risk financing framework enabled a rapid flow of funds to meet urgent response needs. This
framework facilitated an immediate inflow of critical liquidity to supplement the Government’s own contingency
resources, for a total of US$662 million as follows:
US$37 million from the Government of Jamaica’s Contingency Fund and National Natural Disaster Reserve Fund.
US$91 million from the Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance Facility (CCRIF). US$150 million from the WBG Catastrophe
US$300 million available from the IDB’s Contingent Credit Facility (CCF).
US$42 million (scalable to US$84 million) available upon request under the World Bank Group’s Catastrophe Deferred
Drawdown Option (Cat DDO).
Recovery Needs and Institutional Support
With damages estimated at US$8.8 billion, recovery will require significant resources and long-term investments.
Comprehensive recovery planning is already underway, focusing on critical priorities and reinforcing Jamaica’s
resilience. CAF, CDB, IDB Group, IMF and WBG are working closely with the Government of Jamaica and other partners to
To that end, a new financial support package of up to US$3.6 billion could be made available to finance the Government’s
recovery and reconstruction program over the next three years, comprising:
CAF: up to US$1 billion for priority areas identified by the Government of Jamaica.
CDB: up to US$200 million in financing in priority areas identified by the Government, including resilient national and
community infrastructure, and small business support.
IDB: up to US$1 billion in sovereign financing in priority areas where its technical expertise and long-standing
engagement can have sustained impact. IMF: Jamaica has requested access under the large natural disaster window of the
Rapid Financing Instrument (RFI) which could amount to a loan of up to US$415 million.
World Bank: up to US$1 billion in sovereign financing, including budget support, partial risk guarantees and investment
projects in critical sectors.
Technical Assistance and Grant Support
To ensure Jamaica’s recovery is effective, resilient, and informed by global best practices, the five institutions are
also providing technical assistance and policy advisory services —funded by grants—that draw on global experience and
best practices in disaster response. So far, US$12 million in grants has already been mobilized from the IDB, the WBG
and CAF, with more to come.
Mobilizing Private Investment for Resilience
Engaging private capital will be essential not only to scale up recovery efforts, but also to preserve fiscal space. The
IDB Group’s and World Bank Group’s regional platforms are designed to blend public and private solutions from the
outset. Together, IDB Invest and the World Bank Group’s International Finance Corporation (IFC) and Multilateral
Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) are actively working to attract and mobilize an initial estimate of US$2.4 billion in
private investment to support Jamaica’s recovery and reconstruction—split equally between the IDB Group and the World
A Shared Commitment to Build Forward Better
The World Bank Group, CAF, CDB, IDB Group, and IMF remain committed to ensuring that Jamaica's recovery is grounded in a
comprehensive and collaborative approach that leverages both international partnership and private sector engagement. By
combining robust financial instruments, technical guidance, and a shared commitment to building forward better, Jamaica
is well-positioned not only to restore what was lost but also to strengthen its resilience to future disasters.
Continued partnership and innovation will remain central as Jamaica charts a stronger, more resilient future for all its
CAF: Khamal Georges, kgeorges@caf.com
CDB: Cassie Ann James, cassieann.james@caribank.org
IDB: Rafael Mathus, rmathusruiz@iadb.org
IMF: Fernando Puchol, fpuchol@imf.org