Publications /
Opinion

Back
The New Flexi-Lateralism: Five Building Blocks for Development Cooperation in a Fractured World
Authors
Andy Sumner
Stephan Klingebiel
May 8, 2026

This Blog was originally published on cgdev.org.

 

The OECD Conference on the Future of International Development Co-operation (which is set to take place in Paris on 11-12 May 2026) comes at a moment of acute strain. OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) countries' official development assistance fell by almost a quarter in 2025, and is projected to fall further in 2026. The US has withdrawn from or defunded dozens of multilateral bodies. Development cooperation, long predicated on a stable Western-led institutional order, is now operating in conditions marked by contested policy norms and shrinking public finance. The question confronting delegates in Paris is not whether cooperation is changing. It is how any new configuration will work in practice.

In a new CGD policy paper, we argue that a “new flexi-lateralism” is emerging as a pragmatic response to these conditions. We define this new flexi-lateralism as international cooperation—which happens through flexible, practical tools and selective coalitions, anchored in UN norms—that proceeds even when universal commitments are openly contested and attacked.

We draw from evidence of debt-servicing initiatives launched at the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development (FfD4) in Sevilla in July 2025. Sevilla is instructive because the US did not participate. What happened thus tells us something important about how cooperation proceeds when a superpower is absent.

Defining the new flexi-lateralism

Our paper identifies five defining characteristics of the new flexi-lateralism evident in the Sevilla initiatives. Each speaks to the agenda in Paris:

1. Selective participation with pathways for others to join

Classic multilateralism typically aims for universal membership. The Sevilla debt initiatives took a different route:

The Borrowers' Forum convened debtor countries under UNCTAD (meaning there is a collective voice for countries that owe debt, allowing them to coordinate positions and negotiate with creditors jointly).

The Global Hub for Debt Swaps centred on the World Bank, Spain and a subset of creditors. It acts as a clearing house, facilitating arrangements in which a portion of a country’s debt is cancelled in exchange for committed domestic investment in development or climate goals.

The Debt Pause Clause Alliance is a coalition committed to inserting clauses into loan contracts that automatically suspend repayment obligations when a borrower country is struck by a severe economic or climate shock. The alliance brought together creditors, multilateral development banks and selected private investors.

In each case, coalitions of willing actors moved ahead while leaving structured pathways for others to join later. The trade-off is that selectivity gains speed and feasibility at the cost of breadth.

2. UN-anchoring with extra-UN operation

None of the three Sevilla initiatives we study abandoned universal norms. The Borrowers' Forum sits under a UN mandate. The Hub and Alliance were launched at a UN conference and frame their work with the language of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. Legitimacy is drawn from the universal system. Execution, though, shifts to multilateral development banks, expert groups and operational platforms outside the classic Bretton Woods architecture. This separation of legitimacy from delivery is a defining feature of the new configuration. 

3. Modular instruments

The Sevilla cases moved cooperation from declaratory texts to operational tools. Swap templates, contractual pause clauses, debt registries and coordination platforms replaced the pursuit of a single grand deal. These instruments can be revised through pilots and monitoring without reopening a full-scale negotiation. 

4. Orchestration across intermediaries

In each case, an international organisation steered cooperation indirectly rather than issuing binding commands. UNCTAD enabled the Forum. The World Bank orchestrated the Hub. Multilateral development banks coordinated the Alliance. This pattern fits orchestration theory of governance without hierarchy, achieved by mobilising intermediaries rather than mandating compliance.

5. Iteration and learning

The Hub and Alliance are structured around pilots, standard-setting, monitoring and revision cycles. The Forum supplies a standing venue for collective learning on negotiation strategy. This experimentalist logic assumes that cooperation under contestation cannot be settled once and for all. It proceeds through iterative adjustment.

Implications for the future of development cooperation

These five characteristics describe a mode of multilateralism that is institutionally connected to universal bodies, yet flexible in its participation rules, venue choice and relies on modular instruments rather than all-encompassing bargains.

The concept is not a replacement for universal multilateralism. It is a description of what cooperation looks like when universal bargains stall and a superpower withdraws.

The risks are numerous. Selectivity can erode inclusiveness. Non-participating creditors, including China and major private bondholders, can free ride on macroeconomic stability gains generated by swaps or pause clauses without offering comparable terms. Voluntary commitments may lack enforceability. Accountability mechanisms remain weak. Without transparency, open accession and meaningful participation by weaker actors, club-based arrangements risk deepening fragmentation.

The OECD conference “will focus on action, connecting geopolitical realities with development priorities and translating vision into practical strategic directions.”

So how does the flexi-lateralism framework help? We argue that cooperation is reconfiguring into selective coalitions using discrete modular instruments, orchestrated through intermediaries, connected to universal norms but no longer dependent on universal participation. Whether this configuration can maintain legitimacy while delivering speed and adaptation is an open question.

Delegates in Paris could look at the design principles we set out that distinguish workable flexi-lateral arrangements from fragmentation, namely, transparency, open accession pathways, and normative alignment with agreed development goals. These are the features that differentiate new forms of cooperation.


 

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    January 10, 2022
    Le président Tshisekedi a initié, à partir de 2019, une refonte significative de la politique étrangère de la République démocratique du Congo (RDC) et des objectifs qui lui sont assignés. Cette redéfinition stratégique, marquée par un important activisme sur les plans international et continental, a permis à la RDC de briser l’isolement diplomatique auquel elle faisait face depuis 2016, de reprendre la coopération avec plusieurs partenaires importants et de redynamiser sa présence ...
  • Authors
    January 6, 2022
    Le président français Emmanuel Macron a de grandes ambitions pour l'Union européenne. Sa doctrine est d'approfondir l'intégration politique de l'Union. Donner à l'Europe l'esprit et les moyens pour faire face aux bouleversements écologiques, sécuritaires, énergétiques et technologiques qui menacent la place de l'Union dans un monde en profondes ruptures. La présidence française du Conseil de l'Union européenne pour le premier semestre 2022 est pleine de défis, mais c'est l'occasion ...
  • December 27, 2021
    Dans un pays aussi stable que l’Allemagne, les changements de Chancelier sont rares. Angela Merkel est restée seize ans au pouvoir, tout comme en son temps Helmut Kohl. La nouvelle coalition à trois partis (sociaux-démocrates, verts, libéraux) entend faire bouger le pays. Comment l’Afrique doit-elle aborder le nouveau pouvoir ? Celui-ci peut-il insuffler de la dynamique aux relations euro-africaines ? Peut-on attendre de Berlin une appréhension fine des enjeux de développement et de ...
  • Authors
    December 7, 2021
    Ce Policy Brief se propose d’apporter un éclairage sur la nouvelle place du Sud dans les relations internationales et le rôle que peut jouer le Maroc dans cet essor. Il existe, en effet, des opportunités pour le Royaume du Maroc de représenter et d’accompagner son continent d’appartenance, l’Afrique, pour la promotion des narratifs alternatifs, notamment sur les questions du changement climatique et de la migration. ...
  • Authors
    Laurence Nardon
    Siméon Rust
    December 6, 2021
    Thanks to the positive momentum in transatlantic relations brought about by the arrival of the Biden administration, significant progress is expected on a range of key digital issues. New rules are emerging that are designed to level the playing field for economic actors and ensure the respect of civil liberties, while significant new investments in technological innovation are taking place amid considerable industrial reorganizations. This paper proposes to shed light on seven part ...
  • Authors
    December 6, 2021
    Between January 2020 and June 2021, the world spent about US $16.5 trillion (18% of world GDP) to fight COVID-19, and this amount does not even include the most important losses such as deaths, mental health effects, restrictions on human freedom, and other nonmonetary suffering. Nearly 90% of this amount was spent by developed economies; the rest by emerging market and developing economies. Low-income countries spent just US $12.5 billion, or less than 0.0001% of the total. Moreove ...
  • November 30, 2021
    Pourquoi ce thème ? Pourquoi, alors que nous traversons une pandémie sans précédent, l'auteur a-t-il décidé de comprendre les liens entre la Chine, l'espace arabo-africain et les nouvelles routes de la soie ? À cause du Covid-19, le monde se trouve à un tournant historique et stratégique du processus de mondialisation. Selon ses observations (comme homme politique), cette pandémie est bien plus qu'une crise sanitaire, c'est une crise globale qui a des impacts sociaux, économiques, ...
  • Authors
    Dominique Lecompte
    Thierry Vircoulon
    November 26, 2021
    Bien qu’il soit assez largement passé inaperçu en France, l’accord signé le 3 décembre 2020 entre l’Union européenne (UE) et l’Organisation des États d’Afrique, des Caraïbes et du Pacifique (ACP) représente un virage important dans les relations anciennes entre l’UE et les pays du Sud. Cette dernière a développé une politique d’aide dès le Traité de Rome en 1957, a signé le premier accord de coopération en 1963 et est aujourd’hui souvent le premier bailleur de ces pays, notamment en ...