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  2. International Finance Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Finance...

    The International Finance Corporation (IFC) is an international financial institution that offers investment, advisory, and asset-management services to encourage private-sector development in less developed countries. The IFC is a member of the World Bank Group and is headquartered in Washington, D.C. in the United States.

  3. U.S. International Development Finance Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._International...

    The United States International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) is a development finance institution and agency of the United States federal government. DFC invests in development projects primarily in lower and middle-income countries. [ 1 ]

  4. World Bank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Bank

    Before Malpass became president, his son Robert had joined the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a branch of the World Bank Group that lends money to private sector businesses and whose USD 5.5 billion funding from a USD 13 billion World Bank capital increase was secured by the US Treasury at the time that David Malpass was the Treasury ...

  5. World Bank Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Bank_Group

    the International Finance Corporation (IFC), established in 1956, which provides various forms of financing without sovereign guarantees, primarily to the private sector; the International Development Association (IDA), established in 1960, which provides concessional financing (interest-free loans or grants), usually with sovereign guarantees;

  6. International financial institutions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_financial...

    An international financial institution (IFI) is a financial institution that has been established (or chartered) by more than one country, and hence is subject to international law. Its owners or shareholders are generally national governments, although other international institutions and other organizations occasionally figure as shareholders.

  7. World Bank’s Business-Lending Arm Backed Palm Oil Producer ...

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/projects/worldbank...

    In Honduras, the business-lending arm of the World Bank aligned itself with a key player in a land dispute that has left more than 130 people dead, including Gregorio Chávez, a preacher who went out to tend his garden one day and didn’t come back. In the last decade, the International Finance Corp.’s lending and influence has soared, even as it has embraced financing methods that shield ...

  8. HSBC Finance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HSBC_Finance

    HSBC Finance Corporation was formed from the legal entity that had been known as Household International—shortly after Household International settled for US$486 million in charges pertaining to predatory lending, after burning through $389 million in legal fees and expenses [1] —and is now expanding its consumer finance model via the HSBC ...

  9. International finance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_finance

    International finance (also referred to as international monetary economics or international macroeconomics) is the branch of financial economics broadly concerned with monetary and macroeconomic interrelations between two or more countries.