Regional development banks
In: International conciliation, S. 5-83
ISSN: 0020-6407
466488 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: International conciliation, S. 5-83
ISSN: 0020-6407
In: The Economic Journal, Band 83, Heft 330, S. 595
In: Third world quarterly, Band 15, Heft 3, S. 459-482
ISSN: 0143-6597
World Affairs Online
In: Profiling Vulnerability and Resilience, S. 123-136
World Affairs Online
In: International organization, Band 35, Heft 2, S. 303-328
ISSN: 0020-8183
World Affairs Online
In: Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting, Band 110, S. 273-277
ISSN: 2169-1118
The international banking system serves as the institutional basis for the functioning of the global financial markets. Being in the process of continuous development is its characteristic feature. Each international banking institution has its own specificity and structure. The purposes of their creation and the main functions are defined by their statutes, rules, and founding acts. Despite the diversity of the subject maps of the international banking system, they share a common goal – developing cooperation and ensuring the integrity and stabilization of the world economy, regulation of international economic relations, and ensuring the transnational movement of funds. Legal analysis of statutory activities of international regional development banks, and forms of their interaction. The first among the international regional development banks is the European Investment Bank (EIB), which was founded in 1958 by EU Member States. According to the Bank's Statute, the objectives of the Bank are to develop the common market by investing funds in the development of Member States' economies. A legal analysis of the EIB's purpose, function and structure demonstrates that a regional financial institution was established in the European Region, which by its very nature is an international development bank which serves as a development bank not only in relation to EU Member States but also to other European countries. Changes in the geopolitical and economic situation in Europe in the late 1980s – early 1990s were one of the reasons for the creation of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, a fundamentally new interstate financial structure that had no analogues concerning either its founders or their goals and methods before. The aim was to create a single lending center for both the public and private sectors of the economy: cooperation between different departments of one international organization should be less complicated than cooperation between two international organizations. Having included the word "bank" in the Preamble to the Agreement, the Contracting Parties stated that they were establishing a multilateral financial institution that would help to achieve these goals, and create a new and unique structure for cooperation in Europe. With a European Development Bank in the European Region, the EIB, Member States have combined the capabilities and finances of an existing development bank with a new financial institution, which by its legal nature is a development bank – EBRD. Membership of two international organizations in an international regional development bank simultaneously is a new thing in the international banking law. In fact, the European Union is a member of the EBRD three times: EU Member States are members of the European Investment Bank and also members of the EBRD.The creation and operation of European development banks is a sample of interaction forms between international regional development banks, and integration processes observed in the international financial system, within which the international law performers solve current problems, in particular in the political and financial spheres.The article is devoted to the legal analysis of the activities of international regional development banks, forms of their interaction. The purpose, goals, functions, structure of regional development banks are investigated. Forms of their interaction are considered ; Статья посвящена правовому анализу деятельности международных региональных банков развития, форм их взаимодействия. Исследованы цели, функции, структура региональных банков развития. Рассмотрены формы их взаимдействия ; Стаття присвячена правовому аналізу діяльності міжнародних регіональних банків розвитку, форм їх взаємодії. Досліджено мету, цілі, функції, структуру регіональних банків розвитку, розглянуто форми їх взаємодії
BASE
The international banking system serves as the institutional basis for the functioning of the global financial markets. Being in the process of continuous development is its characteristic feature. Each international banking institution has its own specificity and structure. The purposes of their creation and the main functions are defined by their statutes, rules, and founding acts. Despite the diversity of the subject maps of the international banking system, they share a common goal – developing cooperation and ensuring the integrity and stabilization of the world economy, regulation of international economic relations, and ensuring the transnational movement of funds. Legal analysis of statutory activities of international regional development banks, and forms of their interaction. The first among the international regional development banks is the European Investment Bank (EIB), which was founded in 1958 by EU Member States. According to the Bank's Statute, the objectives of the Bank are to develop the common market by investing funds in the development of Member States' economies. A legal analysis of the EIB's purpose, function and structure demonstrates that a regional financial institution was established in the European Region, which by its very nature is an international development bank which serves as a development bank not only in relation to EU Member States but also to other European countries. Changes in the geopolitical and economic situation in Europe in the late 1980s – early 1990s were one of the reasons for the creation of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, a fundamentally new interstate financial structure that had no analogues concerning either its founders or their goals and methods before. The aim was to create a single lending center for both the public and private sectors of the economy: cooperation between different departments of one international organization should be less complicated than cooperation between two international organizations. Having included the word "bank" in the Preamble to the Agreement, the Contracting Parties stated that they were establishing a multilateral financial institution that would help to achieve these goals, and create a new and unique structure for cooperation in Europe. With a European Development Bank in the European Region, the EIB, Member States have combined the capabilities and finances of an existing development bank with a new financial institution, which by its legal nature is a development bank – EBRD. Membership of two international organizations in an international regional development bank simultaneously is a new thing in the international banking law. In fact, the European Union is a member of the EBRD three times: EU Member States are members of the European Investment Bank and also members of the EBRD.The creation and operation of European development banks is a sample of interaction forms between international regional development banks, and integration processes observed in the international financial system, within which the international law performers solve current problems, in particular in the political and financial spheres.The article is devoted to the legal analysis of the activities of international regional development banks, forms of their interaction. The purpose, goals, functions, structure of regional development banks are investigated. Forms of their interaction are considered ; Статья посвящена правовому анализу деятельности международных региональных банков развития, форм их взаимодействия. Исследованы цели, функции, структура региональных банков развития. Рассмотрены формы их взаимдействия ; Стаття присвячена правовому аналізу діяльності міжнародних регіональних банків розвитку, форм їх взаємодії. Досліджено мету, цілі, функції, структуру регіональних банків розвитку, розглянуто форми їх взаємодії
BASE
The international banking system serves as the institutional basis for the functioning of the global financial markets. Being in the process of continuous development is its characteristic feature. Each international banking institution has its own specificity and structure. The purposes of their creation and the main functions are defined by their statutes, rules, and founding acts. Despite the diversity of the subject maps of the international banking system, they share a common goal – developing cooperation and ensuring the integrity and stabilization of the world economy, regulation of international economic relations, and ensuring the transnational movement of funds. Legal analysis of statutory activities of international regional development banks, and forms of their interaction. The first among the international regional development banks is the European Investment Bank (EIB), which was founded in 1958 by EU Member States. According to the Bank's Statute, the objectives of the Bank are to develop the common market by investing funds in the development of Member States' economies. A legal analysis of the EIB's purpose, function and structure demonstrates that a regional financial institution was established in the European Region, which by its very nature is an international development bank which serves as a development bank not only in relation to EU Member States but also to other European countries. Changes in the geopolitical and economic situation in Europe in the late 1980s – early 1990s were one of the reasons for the creation of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, a fundamentally new interstate financial structure that had no analogues concerning either its founders or their goals and methods before. The aim was to create a single lending center for both the public and private sectors of the economy: cooperation between different departments of one international organization should be less complicated than cooperation between two international organizations. Having included the word "bank" in the Preamble to the Agreement, the Contracting Parties stated that they were establishing a multilateral financial institution that would help to achieve these goals, and create a new and unique structure for cooperation in Europe. With a European Development Bank in the European Region, the EIB, Member States have combined the capabilities and finances of an existing development bank with a new financial institution, which by its legal nature is a development bank – EBRD. Membership of two international organizations in an international regional development bank simultaneously is a new thing in the international banking law. In fact, the European Union is a member of the EBRD three times: EU Member States are members of the European Investment Bank and also members of the EBRD.The creation and operation of European development banks is a sample of interaction forms between international regional development banks, and integration processes observed in the international financial system, within which the international law performers solve current problems, in particular in the political and financial spheres.The article is devoted to the legal analysis of the activities of international regional development banks, forms of their interaction. The purpose, goals, functions, structure of regional development banks are investigated. Forms of their interaction are considered ; Статья посвящена правовому анализу деятельности международных региональных банков развития, форм их взаимодействия. Исследованы цели, функции, структура региональных банков развития. Рассмотрены формы их взаимдействия ; Стаття присвячена правовому аналізу діяльності міжнародних регіональних банків розвитку, форм їх взаємодії. Досліджено мету, цілі, функції, структуру регіональних банків розвитку, розглянуто форми їх взаємодії
BASE
In: International organization, Band 35, Heft 2, S. 303-328
ISSN: 1531-5088
This paper examines the experience of developing countries in the three major regional financial institutions, the Inter-American, Asian, and African Development Banks. In the Inter-American Development Bank, members from developing countries have secured both influence and resources; in the Asian Development Bank they have secured resources but little influence; in the African Development Bank they have influence but limited resources. This variation can be explained by the different issue area power structures within which the banks function. The Inter-American Development Bank has functioned within a hegemonic structure. The dominant power, the United States, pursued long-term political objectives and accepted considerable autonomy for developing countries within the Bank. The Asian Development Bank has functioned within a bipolar structure with Japan playing an increasingly important role. As a normal power, Japan has pursued tangible economic interests and has constrained the behavior of the Asian Development Bank. Until the late 1970s the African Development Bank functioned in a multipolar structure that largely excluded nonregional countries. This exclusion made it impossible to generate substantial resources. Experience in the regional development banks suggests that a hegemonic structure can offer weaker states both resources and influence provided that the milieu goals of the dominant power are not violated.
In: Financing Philippine Business Enterprises, Publication series
In: http://orbilu.uni.lu/handle/10993/47030
In this introduction, we present the categories and the analytical framework that we apply to examine Regional Development Banks, and specifically a form of rational choice institutionalism—Principal-Agent analysis. We apply the categories and framework to each Regional Development Bank in its specific political economy context, with a view to setting out and analysing the similarities and differences among Regional Development Bank. We demonstrate and explain an important evolution in the main objectives of Regional Development Bank lending activities over three distinct periods: from regional integration and development, to market promotion and development, and then to geographical expansion—and multi-polarity promotion for some Regional Development Banks—and a more strategic interventionism in the market, that includes market shaping activities including industrial policy. We explain this evolution in terms of the agency of the Regional Development Banks in relation to their multiple principal—the shareholder national governments.
BASE