AFDB President Akinwumi Adesina's announcement, which did not include details of the proposed instruments, comes after former farmers turned down an initial deal to receive payment within ten years via treasury bills, according to an email seen by Reuters that the Commercial Farmers Union director sent to members last week.
"It is important to try and fast track and front load these payments. Further delay will cause lack of trust," Adesina said at a press conference in Harare.
Adesina said the new proposal to former white farmers would "help leverage the capital markets to fund the compensation without adding debt to Zimbabwe," without providing further details.
Zimbabwe agreed in 2020 to compensate local white farmers whose land was taken by the government from 2000 to 2001 to resettle Black families, in one of the most divisive policies of the Robert Mugabe era, while foreign white farmers were allowed to apply to get seized land back.
Zimbabwe, which had more than $14 billion in external debt as of September 2022, has not been able to secure financing from the likes of the International Monetary Fund in more than two decades due to its arrears.
Adesina said that 91% of Zimbabwe's multilateral debt and 61% of its bilateral debt is in arrears.
"The government takes full ownership of the debt process and the implementation of reforms," Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube told the press conference.