What This Program Is Actually For
Not for everyone. Intentionally.
JJ/WBGSP is not for fresh graduates or generalists. It is specifically designed for mid-career professionals already working in development who need graduate training to do their jobs better. The minimum work experience requirement is three years — not a soft preference, a hard rule. The field of study must be development-related. And the expectation — clearly stated — is that you return home and apply what you learn.
If you're not already working in development, this is not the right scholarship for you right now. That's not a judgment — it's just an honest read of what this program is selecting for.
Who This Scholarship Serves
Two separate tracks, two different timelines. Make sure you know which one applies to you.
Developing Country Nationals
- •National of one of 78 eligible developing countries
- •Mid-career professional with 3+ years development work in the past 6 years
- •Currently employed full-time in development work when applying
- •Committed to returning home after graduation
- •Two windows, typically Jan 15 – Feb 27 and Mar 30 – May 29 (2027 cycle dates to be confirmed)
Japanese Nationals
- •Must be a national of Japan only (no dual developed-country citizenship)
- •Bachelor's degree from at least 3 years prior
- •Similar development work experience requirements apply
- •Separate window, typically Feb 16 – Apr 17 (2027 cycle dates to be confirmed)
- •Notification timeline differs from developing country track
Before You Go Further
Three Things Most Applicants Get Wrong
Applying before university admission
You cannot apply to the World Bank directly. You must first apply to a participating university, get admitted, and be nominated by that university before you can access the scholarship portal. Most applicants discover this only after wasting weeks.
The residency trap
The program must be outside your country of citizenship AND outside your current country of residence. If you're Nigerian living in Germany, you cannot apply to programs in Germany. Many diaspora applicants miss this completely.
Multiple applications
You are allowed exactly one application per window. Submitting more than one — whether by accident or to hedge your bets — is an automatic disqualification. There is no appeal and no second chance.
The Four Selection Pillars
Applications are scored by two independent assessors. These four categories make up 100% of your score. No interview. No final round. What you submit is what gets evaluated.
Professional Experience
Depth, breadth, and development relevance of your paid work. Quality over title or employer prestige.
Recommendations
Two letters from people who know your development work closely. Specific examples of impact, not generic praise.
Commitment to Home Country
Evidence you genuinely intend to return and apply your training. The most decisive and most misunderstood criterion.
Academic Background
The lowest weight. Fit between your education and proposed study matters more than grades alone.
What Nobody Tells You
Things that are true, important, and hard to find on the official website.
The Complete Guide
Ten chapters covering everything from eligibility to career outcomes.
Program overview, key facts, and what nobody tells you
78 countries, work requirements, the residency trap
What's covered, what isn't, and the stipend gap
The two-stage process explained clearly
How applications are scored, category by category
All 44 programs and how to choose strategically
How to write what assessors are actually looking for
The questions everyone asks but few sources answer
How it compares to Chevening, Fulbright, DAAD, and others
Where scholars actually end up post-graduation