“The message we are sending today to the entire Pacific family is clear: you can bank on us,” he said.
“Australian banks like Westpac and ANZ provide vital ... services to the region and have been in the Pacific for more than a century.”
The region, which Washington has long considered its maritime neighbourhood, is caught in a superpower battle for influence as China makes steady advances.
Nauru, Solomon Islands and Kiribati switched diplomatic recognition from Taiwan to Beijing in recent years, and the Solomon Islands has struck security and policing pacts with China that sparked alarm in the US and Australia.
Banking curbs after the 2008 financial crisis have made Western lenders cautious about ties to the Pacific, where banks and regulators often lack the resources to find and prosecute financial crimes, raising the risk that banks get embroiled in embarrassing and expensive scandals.
There is also little prospect of profit from the region’s tiny, remote populations to entice banks to bear the cost of helping raise compliance standards.
“The proposed World Bank project is a creative way of addressing the challenge of de-risking and small scale in Pacific island countries,” said Lalita Moorty, the World Bank’s East Asia and Pacific director for prosperity.
Without access to overseas banks, Pacific countries would struggle to receive remittances – a key component of their economies – welcome holidaymakers or trade with the wider world.
Already as competition wanes, the cost of remittances has increased to some of the highest globally.
“It can create instability for the financial system,” said Denton Rarawa, senior economics adviser at the Pacific Islands Forum.
Pacific region lost 60% of correspondent banking relationships
Between 2011 and 2022, the region lost 60% of its correspondent banking relationships, where Western banks partner with local ones to enable transactions in international currencies.
ANZ Bank has sold assets in Papua New Guinea, Westpac tried to sell its Pacific business and Nauru’s only lender, Australia’s Bendigo Bank, announced plans to leave in 2025.
China may be seeking to fill that gap.
Bank of China has opened an office in Papua New Guinea and signed a memorandum of understanding with Nauru to look at how it could step in if Bendigo Bank leaves.
Vanuatu last week asked Bank of China to set up a branch.
“We’re well aware of the geo-strategic interest of our region between US, China and Australia,” said Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown, the current chair of the Pacific Islands Forum.
“What we’re saying is that if you’re not going to address concerns and issues we have, Pacific countries will start looking elsewhere for support.”
The US and Australia were spurred to act against the festering problem in the past two years by planned exits like Bendigo’s and concern that China could step in, said three officials who asked not to be identified because they were not authorised to speak to media.
Under the plan, the World Bank will also study ways to make the Pacific Islands more attractive to global banks, including a mechanism to aggregate payments from various countries to help achieve economies of scale, it said in a statement.
The Washington-based global lender’s board is expected to approve the plan within a few months.