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Ajaypal Singh "Ajay" Banga (born November 10, 1959 [1]) is an Indian-born American business executive. [2] He is the president of the World Bank Group. [3] He was the executive chairman of Mastercard, after having previously been president and chief executive officer (CEO) of the company from July 2010 until December 31, 2020.
Vice-President: Salary: €421,308 per annum [1] Website: ecb.europa.eu: The president of the European Central Bank is the head of the European Central Bank (ECB), ...
Head of state annual salary (USD from 2019 IMF exchange rate) Head of government annual salary (USD from 2019 IMF exchange rate) ... 71,397 USD (Vice President) [90]
First interim World Bank Group president born outside United States First World Bank Group president born in Europe First World Bank Group president from Germany: 9 James Wolfensohn: June 1, 1995 – May 31, 2005 United States [a] Corporate lawyer and investment banker First permanent World Bank Group president born outside United States
Moynihan held numerous banking positions before becoming president of consumer and small business banking (SBB) at Bank of America in January 2009. [13] He joined Fleet Boston bank in April 1993 as a deputy general counsel. [12] From 1999 to April 2004, he was an executive vice president, managing Fleet's brokerage and wealth management division.
After his first year, his 7 million euro compensation made him one of the best paid chief executives in European banking. [9] As of September, Christian will spend 15% of his monthly net salary buying the German lender's shares as part of his efforts to revive the bank's profitability. [12]
David Robert Malpass (born March 8, 1956 [1]) is an American economic analyst and former government official who served as President of the World Bank Group from 2019 to 2023.
The president of the bank is the president of the entire World Bank Group. The president is responsible for chairing meetings of the boards of directors and for overall management of the bank. Traditionally, based on a tacit understanding between the United States and Europe, the president of the World Bank has been