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Credit unions of Jamaica (1 P) ... Union Bank of Jamaica This page was last ... Contact Wikipedia; Code of Conduct; Developers; Statistics;
Fly Jamaica Airways: Consumer services Airlines Kingston: 2011 Airline, defunct 2019 P D Gleaner Company: Consumer services Publishing Kingston: 1834 Newspaper, publisher P A GraceKennedy: Conglomerates - Kingston: 1922 Financials, industrials, retail P A GSB Co-operative Credit Union: Financials Banks Kingston: 1944 Credit union P A Hedonism ...
Pages in category "Credit unions of Jamaica" ... GSB Co-operative Credit Union ... Contact Wikipedia; Code of Conduct;
A bank branch can be identified from the bank code. Denmark has 4-digit bank code (called Registreringsnummer, or Reg. nr.). France has a 10 digit code, the first 5 digits contain the clearing identifier of the banking company (Code Banque), followed by the 5-digit branch code (Code Guichet). Both numbers are only used as a combined prefix for ...
In 1950 GSB was the first credit union in Jamaica (and the Caribbean) to contract with the CUNA Mutual Insurance Society to protect members' savings and loans, standard for all credit unions. In 1954 it rented offices at the Teachers Mutual Aid Society Building at 28 Duke Street, hiring Horace Abrahams as the first general manager of a Jamaican ...
NCB Group Limited was listed on the Jamaica Stock Exchange in 1986. [4] Between 1986 and 1991, the Government of Jamaica divested 61% of its shares in NCB Group Limited, and sold the remaining 39% to Jamaica M&N Investments Limited (a joint venture of the Jamaica Mutual Life Assurance Society and Jamaica National Building Society) in 1992. [4]
Prior to 2002, the operations of what is now CIBC Caribbean were run as the separate businesses of Barclays Bank and CIBC West Indies, part of CIBC's group of companies. Barclays had been active in the region since 1836 and CIBC's foray into the region began with branches in Jamaica in 1920. [5]
Although Bustamante and others had counseled an industrial union, membership in the new organization was limited to white-collar workers. Government workers throughout Jamaica flocked to the new union, and parish branches sprung up nationwide. The first general meeting of the union was held in June 1941 and a constitution adopted.