The World Bank has added $US480 million ($A522 million) in emergency aid to the Philippines, taking to nearly $US1 billion its support as the death toll from super typhoon Haiyan passed 5200.
World Bank President Jim Yong Kim made the pledge, added to $US500 million committed Monday, in a phone call with Philippine President Benigno Aquino, the development lender said.
The new money will be provided through the bank's existing Community Driven Development Project for the Philippines, which will alow localities to tap the funds for their own rebuilding projects.
"The project will empower communities themselves to lead the reconstruction effort, by offering a transparent way for people to identify their own needs," the Bank said in a statement on Friday.
The Bank has already deployed disaster specialists to Manila to help the government assess the damages and identify rebuilding priorities in the wake of the storm, which blasted through the center of the country on November 8, flattening entire communities and leaving up to four million people displaced.
Early estimates by analysts of the typhoon's economic cost to the Philippines have been put at around $US14 billion.
"We have been encouraged by the resilience of the Filipino people and the determination shown by President Aquino and his team as they work to recover from a disaster of unprecedented scale," Kim said in the statement.
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