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The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) is the central bank of Pakistan. Its Constitution , as originally laid down in the State Bank of Pakistan Order 1948, remained basically unchanged until 1 January 1974, when the bank was nationalised and the scope of its functions was considerably enlarged.
No Governor Took office Left office Time in office 1 Zahid Hussain: 10 June 1948 19 July 1953 5 years, 40 days 2 Abdul Qadir: 20 July 1953 19 July 1960
Deutsche Bank AG (Deutsche Bank Pakistan) Citi Bank N.A (CitiBank N.A Pakistan) Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Limited (ICBC Pakistan) Bank of China [3] (Bank of China Pakistan Branch) The Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank (HSBC Bank Pakistan) The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ (MUFG Bank Pakistan) Standard Chartered Bank (Standard Chartered ...
The National Institute of Banking and Finance (NIBAF) is a subsidiary of the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) head by the managing director, a board of directors and the governor of State Bank of Pakistan. NIBAF, a non-profit organisation, aims at providing training and development to central and commercial bankers at national as well as ...
Following the creation of Pakistan, Qadir was appointed as Joint Secretary in Ministry of Finance and later became the chairman of the Central Board of Revenue. [3] In 1950, he was appointed Secretary of the Ministry of Finance, becoming the first Pakistani to hold this position after succeeding Victor Turner.
As the Deputy Governor (Banking and Financial Markets & Reserve Management) at the State Bank of Pakistan, Ahmed introduced a risk-based methodology for bank supervision, issued and implemented the latest international Basel capital adequacy standards, and established a depositors’ protection scheme.
In line with State Bank of Pakistan vision 2020 to enhance and promote financial inclusion, 1LINK launched Pakistan’s first domestic payment scheme – PayPak in April, 2016. [4] PayPak has 10% of market share in terms of volume of cards in the market. [5] While Visa has 40%, Mastercard and UnionPay have 25% each of market share. [5]
The FMU was headed by a Director and its reporting entities were the regulated Banking Institutions coming under the ambit of the central bank. [2] After the approval of the Anti-Money Laundering Act, 2010, FMU was established as an autonomous government agency under the law in order to act as the Financial Intelligence Unit of Pakistan.