Directory International orgs
🌐

The multilateral institutions

The institutions that coordinate financial policy across borders, set global standards (Basel Accords, IFRS), and publish the data on which comparative finance depends. The post-1944 Bretton Woods architecture plus the post-2008 expansions.

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All tags Basel Accords Bretton Woods Central bank cooperation Development Financial stability G-SIBs Macroeconomic data OECD member countries Open data Policy coordination Post-2008 Sovereign lending Tax policy
BFI 🇨🇭
Bank for International Settlements
"The central bank for central banks"
1930–

Founded in 1930 in Basel to coordinate reparations payments after the First World War, the BIS evolved into the meeting place and back-office for central banks. It hosts the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (which produces the Basel Accords governing bank capital and liquidity globally), the Committee on the Global Financial System, and several other standard-setting bodies. The BIS also publishes some of the most valuable data on cross-border banking flows, credit cycles, and global financial stability.

Central bank cooperation Basel Accords Financial stability
IMF 🌐
International Monetary Fund
Multilateral lender; surveillance and policy advice
1944–

Created at the 1944 Bretton Woods conference, the IMF is the lender of last resort to nations facing balance-of-payments crises. Its 190+ member countries contribute to a pool of resources that the Fund deploys with policy conditions attached — the basis for its often-controversial "structural adjustment" reputation. Beyond lending, the IMF conducts annual Article IV surveillance of every member economy, publishes the World Economic Outlook twice yearly, and houses some of the world's deepest cross-country economic databases.

Bretton Woods Sovereign lending Macroeconomic data
WB 🌐
World Bank
Multilateral development lender
1944–

The other Bretton Woods institution, originally established to finance European postwar reconstruction and now focused on long-term development lending to lower- and middle-income countries. The "World Bank Group" actually contains several distinct institutions (IBRD, IDA, IFC, MIGA, ICSID) with different mandates. Beyond its lending operations the Bank publishes the World Development Indicators — the most-used cross-country economic database in the world, available free through a public API.

Bretton Woods Development Open data
O 🌐
OECD
Advanced-economy policy coordination
1961–

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development brings together 38 mostly high-income countries to coordinate policy across taxation, education, labor markets, financial regulation, and dozens of other fields. Successor to the OEEC (which administered postwar Marshall Plan aid), the OECD is best known for its policy reviews, the PISA education assessments, and its tax-policy work — including the 2021 global minimum corporate tax agreement that committed 140+ countries to a 15% floor on multinational taxation.

Policy coordination Tax policy OECD member countries
FSB 🇨🇭
Financial Stability Board
Global financial-stability standard-setter
2009–

Created at the April 2009 G20 London summit in direct response to the global financial crisis, the FSB coordinates national financial authorities and international standard-setting bodies (Basel Committee, IOSCO, IAIS) to develop and promote effective financial regulation. It produces the annual list of global systemically important banks (G-SIBs) that are subject to higher capital requirements. Headquartered at the BIS in Basel, the FSB has no enforcement power of its own — it works by peer pressure and consensus among national regulators.

Financial stability G-SIBs Post-2008