Nancy Yi

Financial Health And Innovations at United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF)

Nancy Yi currently serves in the role of Financial Health and Innovations at the United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF) since December 2020. Prior experience includes a position as an MBA Summer Intern-Strategy Designer at Digital Boost, a platform aiding small businesses during COVID-19, and serving as the Head of Think Tank at Yiben Fintech, a leading fintech media startup. Previously, Nancy co-founded and was COO at Keystone Financial Technology, a fintech for inclusion startup recognized as one of Newseed's top 50 most valuable startups in 2016. Early career experience includes roles as a Senior Analyst at Infinity Equity Group and as a Consultant at Deloitte. Nancy holds an MBA from the University of Oxford and a Bachelor of Business Administration from the City University of Hong Kong, complemented by coursework at Indiana University Bloomington.

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United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF)

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The UN Capital Development Fund makes public and private finance work for the poor in the world’s 46 least developed countries (#LDCs). With its capital mandate and instruments, UNCDF offers “last mile” finance models that unlock public and private resources, especially at the domestic level, to reduce poverty and support local economic development. This last mile is where available resources for development are scarcest; where market failures are most pronounced; and where benefits from national growth tend to leave people excluded. UNCDF’s financing models work through two channels: savings-led financial inclusion that expands the opportunities for individuals, households, and small businesses to participate in the local economy, providing them with the tools they need to climb out of poverty and manage their financial lives; and by showing how localized investments -- through fiscal decentralization, innovative municipal finance, and structured project finance -- can drive public and private funding that underpins local economic expansion and sustainable development. UNCDF financing models are applied in thematic areas where addressing barriers to finance at the local level can have a transformational effect for poor and excluded people and communities. By strengthening how finance works for poor people at the household, small enterprise, and local infrastructure levels, UNCDF contributes to SDG 1 on eradicating poverty with a focus on reaching the last mile and addressing exclusion and inequalities of access. At the same time, UNCDF deploys its capital finance mandate in line with SDG 17 on the means of implementation, to unlock public and private finance for the poor at the local level. By identifying those market segments where innovative financing models can have transformational impact in helping to reach the last mile, UNCDF contributes to a number of different SDGs and currently to 28 of 169 targets.


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