CDB recommits to tackling regional challenges through strategic realignment

NASSAU, Bahamas — In a landmark closing address at the Caribbean Development Bank’s (CDB) 56th Annual Meeting held in Nassau on 7 June 2026, CDB President Daniel Best announced a sweeping strategic realignment, reaffirming the institution’s commitment to confronting the Caribbean region’s most urgent development challenges and raising living standards for local communities.

The policy shift comes after sustained pressure from a broad coalition of regional stakeholders, including youth leaders, national policymakers and industry advocates, who have called on the regional development lender to prioritize high-impact areas: youth capacity-building, professional skills training, climate resilience, and inclusive, sustainable economic expansion. For years, the bank has faced growing expectations to expand its support for the Caribbean’s development agenda, amid overlapping crises ranging from crumbling core infrastructure and unmet workforce readiness needs to rising global geopolitical uncertainty and accelerating climate-related disasters.

Addressing delegates and regional leaders at the ceremony, President Best acknowledged the widespread concerns raised by stakeholders, confirming that the bank has heeded calls from its governing board and Caribbean youth for a more coordinated development approach and faster execution of ongoing institutional reforms and core strategic priorities. Against this backdrop, Best committed the CDB to accelerating action across all its operations, outlining the new direction: “by aligning our efforts across countries and partners, accelerating decision-making, and deploying practical solutions that translate policy into progress.”

“Our focus is to move to implementation to impact, from plans to performance, and to ensure that every action we take delivers meaningful and lasting change for the Caribbean,” Best emphasized.

Turning to the broader global context shaping the Caribbean’s outlook, Best noted the region continues to grapple with a cascade of interconnected challenges: escalating climate shocks, rising geopolitical tensions across major economies, persistent fiscal constraints for small island developing states, slowing global demand and growth, and the onset of the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season, which brings annual risk of catastrophic damage to Caribbean coastal communities and infrastructure.

“Friends, we arrived this week carrying the weight of a world in flux,” Best said. “These realities have not changed, but we continue to approach these challenges with collective purpose. Throughout this meeting, we listened to one another. We exchanged ideas and together we confronted some of the defining questions of our time.”

President Best highlighted that the week’s deliberations centered on three core priorities: boosting regional competitiveness, strengthening systemic resilience to shocks, and expanding economic and social opportunities for current and future generations. Despite the stacked challenges facing the region, Best said a unifying, forward-looking consensus emerged from the talks.

“The future of the Caribbean will not be determined by the challenges we face; it will be determined by the choices we make in response to them,” he stated.

He also referenced opening remarks by Bahamian Prime Minister Philip Davis, who urged regional leaders to reject a mindset of merely enduring hardship. “Our goal cannot simply be to survive. Our mission is to thrive,” Best quoted Davis as saying.

According to Best, this proactive, growth-focused philosophy is embedded in the CDB’s newly adopted 2026-2035 Strategic Plan, which guided all discussions during the annual meeting. “At its heart lies a simple proposition: resilience is not an end in itself. Resilience is the foundation upon which prosperity is built,” he explained.

Under the restructured strategic agenda, the CDB will maintain its longstanding commitment to advancing economic, social, and environmental resilience, while elevating three priorities to the core of all operations: youth development, ambitious climate action, and institutional capacity-building for strong regional governance.

Discussions held during the meeting’s Impact Room sessions reinforced a key insight for the bank: sustainable long-term development across the Caribbean cannot be funded through public sector resources alone. To fill financing gaps, Best noted that the region must ramp up efforts to mobilize cross-border private investment, strengthen local and regional entrepreneurship, and build a policy and regulatory environment that enables broad, investment-led economic growth.

During breakout sessions focused on the CDB’s EDGEx initiative, participants also emphasized the growing critical role of robust data, evidence-based research, and shared knowledge in designing effective development policy and delivering measurable outcomes. Best stressed that Caribbean nations need to invest in modern, scalable national data systems, expand cross-border knowledge sharing, and leverage locally generated evidence to guide public decision-making and speed up the delivery of tangible development results.

Finally, Best noted that discussions on climate finance reiterated a harsh reality long understood by Caribbean nations: the region, which contributes less than 1% of global greenhouse gas emissions, bears a disproportionate share of climate change’s damaging impacts, and requires targeted, accessible climate finance to build resilience and reduce risk.