KARACHI: The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) has officially launched the Women Entrepreneurship (WE) Finance Code, an international collaborative initiative designed to boost financial institutions’ disclosure and commitment toward funding Women Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (WMSMEs).
Originally launched by the World Bank Group in 2023, the WE Finance Code aims to close the global financing gap for women entrepreneurs by creating incentives, enhancing transparency, and fostering accountability among financial institutions worldwide.
The program is a joint effort of 14 governments and eight multilateral development agencies, including the World Bank (WB), Asian Development Bank (ADB), Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), and Islamic Development Bank (IsDB).
To date, regulators and central banks in 18 countries have signed and launched the Code in partnership with their technical partners. These include the United Kingdom, Egypt (with EBRD), Sri Lanka and Fiji (with ADB), Indonesia (with IsDB), Nigeria (with WB), Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan (with EBRD).
Pakistan became a signatory to the WE Finance Code in February 2025, with the SBP taking the lead as the official industry anchor for its implementation. The Asian Development Bank is serving as the technical partner for Pakistan, supported by national and international consultants.
As the champion of the Code, the SBP will mobilize stakeholders to address persistent gaps in access to finance for women entrepreneurs and strengthen Pakistan’s banking sector through public-private coalitions focused on targeted interventions.
By adopting the WE Finance Code, Pakistani banks can position themselves as leaders in promoting women’s economic empowerment, unlock new business opportunities, and diversify risk portfolios.
The WE Finance Code Champion’s network will provide a robust, data-driven, multi-stakeholder platform to increase WMSME financing, promote collaboration, and harmonize sector-wide definitions and documentation for a consistent approach to supporting women-owned businesses.
According to the SBP, expanding financial services to women customers could boost revenues for Pakistan’s financial service providers by an estimated $650 million.
