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GEAC 2025

Private Capital Mobilization in Infrastructure Investment

The global financing gap for women entrepreneurs is estimated to be US$1.7 trillion, highlighting a significant, untapped economic opportunity.[1] As G7 members seek to unlock private capital for sustainable infrastructure development, this presents a historic opportunity for the G7 to take the lead in reorienting infrastructure investment—particularly through gender-responsive private capital mobilization—toward inclusive, equitable development.

Recommendations

Invest in gender equality

Increase accountability

Rationale

Investing in gender equality and increasing accountability is crucial because it addresses systemic barriers faced by women entrepreneurs and ensures that infrastructure projects cater to women’s needs. Men manage 90% of investments.[2] However, nearly all investors in women-led businesses feel their expectations are being met or surpassed: 90% for financial performance and 97% for impact performance.[3] Integrating gender-responsive criteria and requiring recipients to build gender knowledge and collect benchmarking data can drive systemic change and create more-inclusive economies.

Concessional capital can catalyze private investment in high-impact gender-sensitive projects, while bonds with gender criteria can mobilize institutional capital effectively. The Equality Fund’s success with feminist finance models demonstrates strong social and economic returns, and scaling these efforts will expand their reach and impact.

Transparency and data-driven reporting on gender equity will improve accountability and inform future infrastructure investments, ensuring smarter investments and greater equity.

Finally, gender-equitable infrastructure can empower communities by improving access to jobs, education, health care, safety, and digital connectivity, areas in which women remain underrepresented in infrastructure planning, underserved by infrastructure outcomes, and under-capitalized as entrepreneurs and leaders.

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Footnotes

[1] International Finance Corporation. (2017)

[2] Market Watch. (2018)

[3] Gender Lens Investing. (2024)

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Source: Official website of Canada's 2025 G7 presidency


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