Fractional reserve banking and Multilateral development bank: Difference between pages

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''Banking''.
(MDB).


A required minimum ratio of vault cash and balances ('[[reserves]]') with the [[central bank]] to deposits taken by the bank that the central bank requires commercial banks to hold, where the required ratio is less than 100%.
Development banks are national or regional banks established to provide loans or equity capital for productive investment, often accompanied by technical assistance, in developing countries.


This is the usual situation.
A multilateral development bank is a supranational one, set up by more than one country.




== See also ==
* [[African Development Bank]]  (AFDB)
* [[Asian Development Bank]]  (ADB)
* [[Central bank]]
* [[Development bank]] 
* [[Development finance institution]]  (DFI)
* [[European Bank for Reconstruction and Development]]  (EBRD)
* [[European Investment Bank]]  (EIB)
* [[Inter-American Development Bank]]  (IDB)
* [[International Finance Corporation]]  (IFC)
* [[Islamic Development Bank]]  (ISDB)
* [[Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development]]
* [[Supranational]]


== See also ==
[[Category:The_business_context]]
* [[Monetary policy]]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]
* [[Reserve requirements]]
[[Category:Investment]]
* [[100% reserve banking]]
[[Category:Long_term_funding]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]
[[Category:Trade_finance]]

Revision as of 02:33, 15 December 2021

(MDB).

Development banks are national or regional banks established to provide loans or equity capital for productive investment, often accompanied by technical assistance, in developing countries.

A multilateral development bank is a supranational one, set up by more than one country.


See also