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Regional Development Banks (Indonesian: Bank Pembangunan Daerah, or BPD) are a type of bank in Indonesia that is established and owned by the local provincial government. Its purpose is to boost regional development and provide initial capital to the province that private banks would not risk giving, as well as giving basic financial services ...
Foreign exchange bank Bank NTT: 17 July 1962 East Nusa Tenggara Government Non-foreign exchange bank Bank Papua: 13 April 1966 Papua and West Papua Government BRK Syariah: 15 August 1961 Riau dan Riau Islands Government Foreign exchange bank Bank Sulselbar: 13 January 1961 South Sulawesi and West Sulawesi Government Bank Sulteng: 1 April 1969
Japan: Development Bank of Japan (DBJ) Kazakhstan: Development Bank of Kazakhstan (BRKZ) Malaysia: Development Bank of Sarawak (DBOS) South Korea: Korea Development Bank (KDB) Kuwait: Industrial Bank of Kuwait (IDK) Pakistan: Industrial Development Bank of Pakistan (IDBP) Papua New Guinea: National Development Bank of Papua New Guinea (NDB)
Bank Pembangunan Daerah Banten (formerly Bank Pundi Indonesia from September 2010 until August 2016, headquartered in Jakarta) [1] is a bank focusing on micro-enterprises and small and medium enterprises. It is a regional development bank owned by the government of Banten province.
The Agricultural Bank was renamed the Rural Development Bank of Papua New Guinea in 1994 following Asian Development Bank intervention, which continued through 1996. [12] After being renamed, the bank focused on rural loans only, with a preference for small and medium-sized operations. [13] The bank was insolvent in 2004, resulting in a new ...
Between 2004 and 2013, the World Bank committed to lend or give at least $338 billion, according to bank data. Its private-lending affiliate, the International Finance Corporation, committed to invest at least $116 billion during the same period in corporations and other banks in pursuit of the overall goal of alleviating poverty.
Bank Pembangunan Indonesia (Bapindo), state-owned since establishment; Bank Rakyat Indonesia was known as 1845: "Purwokertoan Assistance and Savings Bank for Native Aristocrats" (Dutch: De Purwokertosche Hulp- en Spaarbank der Inlandsche Hoofden). 1934-42: "General Public Credit Bank" (Dutch: Algemene Volkskredietbank),
For two years the body of three-year-old Abiyah Yasharahyalah lay underground in the back garden of a terraced house in Birmingham. The little boy was buried by his parents, who believed he would ...