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Asian Development Bank

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) is a regional development bank established on 19 December 1966,[4] which is headquartered in the Ortigas Center located in the city of Mandaluyong, Metro Manila, Philippines. The bank also maintains 31 field offices around the world[5] to promote social and economic development in Asia. The bank admits the members of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP, formerly the Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East or ECAFE) and non-regional developed countries.[6] From 31 members at its establishment, ADB now has 68 members.

Asian Development Bank
AbbreviationADB
Formation19 December 1966; 56 years ago (1966-12-19)
TypeMultilateral Development Bank
Legal statusTreaty
PurposeSocial and Economic Development
HeadquartersMandaluyong, Philippines
Region served
INDO- PACIFIC
Membership
68 countries
President
Masatsugu Asakawa (from 17 January 2020)[1]
Main organ
Board of Governors[2]
Staff
3,092[3]
Websitewww.adb.org
Asian Development Bank member states
  Outside regions
  Asia-Pacific region

The ADB was modeled closely on the World Bank, and has a similar weighted voting system where votes are distributed in proportion with members' capital subscriptions. ADB releases an annual report that summarizes its operations, budget and other materials for review by the public.[7] The ADB-Japan Scholarship Program (ADB-JSP) enrolls about 300 students annually in academic institutions located in 10 countries within the Region. Upon completion of their study programs, scholars are expected to contribute to the economic and social development of their home countries.[8] ADB is an official United Nations Observer.[9]

As of 31 December 2020, Japan and the United States each holds the largest proportion of shares at 15.571%. China holds 6.429%, India holds 6.317%, and Australia holds 5.773%.[10]

Organization

 
ADB Headquarters in Mandaluyong, Metro Manila, Philippines
 
President Rodrigo Duterte pose for a photo with ADB President Takehiko Nakao and other officials of ADB during the 51st ADB Annual Meeting in Ortigas Center, Mandaluyong, Philippines on May 5, 2018.

The highest policy-making body of the bank is the Board of Governors, composed of one representative from each member state. The Board of Governors, in turn, elect among themselves the twelve members of the board of directors and their deputies. Eight of the twelve members come from regional (Asia-Pacific) members while the others come from non-regional members.[11]

The Board of Governors also elect the bank's president, who is the chairperson of the board of directors and manages ADB. The president has a term of office lasting five years, and may be reelected. Traditionally, and because Japan is one of the largest shareholders of the bank, the president has always been Japanese.

The current president is Masatsugu Asakawa. He succeeded Takehiko Nakao on 17 January 2020,[12] who succeeded Haruhiko Kuroda in 2013.[13]

The headquarters of the bank is at 6 ADB Avenue, Mandaluyong, Metro Manila, Philippines,[14][15] and it has 42 field offices in Asia and the Pacific and representative offices in Washington, Frankfurt, Tokyo and Sydney. The bank employs about 3,000 people, representing 60 of its 68 members.[16]

List of presidents

Name Dates Nationality
Takeshi Watanabe 1966–1972   Japanese
Shiro Inoue 1972–1976   Japanese
Taroichi Yoshida 1976–1981   Japanese
Masao Fujioka 1981–1989   Japanese
Kimimasa Tarumizu 1989–1993   Japanese
Mitsuo Sato 1993–1999   Japanese
Tadao Chino 1999–2005   Japanese
Haruhiko Kuroda 2005–2013   Japanese
Takehiko Nakao 2013–2020   Japanese
Masatsugu Asakawa (*) 2020–present   Japanese

(*) As from 17 January 2020, Masatsugu Asakawa was president of ADB.[17]

History

1960s

As early as 1956, Japan Finance Minister Hisato Ichimada had suggested to United States Secretary of State John Foster Dulles that development projects in Southeast Asia could be supported by a new financial institution for the region. A year later, Japanese Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi announced that Japan intended to sponsor the establishment of a regional development fund with resources largely from Japan and other industrial countries. But the US did not warm to the plan and the concept was shelved. See full account in "Banking the Future of Asia and the Pacific: 50 Years of the Asian Development Bank," July 2017.

The idea came up again late in 1962 when Kaoru Ohashi, an economist from a research institute in Tokyo, visited Takeshi Watanabe, then a private financial consultant in Tokyo, and proposed a study group to form a development bank for the Asian region. The group met regularly in 1963, examining various scenarios for setting up a new institution and drew on Watanabe's experiences with the World Bank. However, the idea received a cool reception from the World Bank itself and the study group became discouraged.

In parallel, the concept was formally proposed at a trade conference organized by the Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East (ECAFE) in 1963 by a young Thai economist, Paul Sithi-Amnuai. (ESCAP, United Nations Publication March 2007, "The first parliament of Asia" pp. 65). Despite an initial mixed reaction, support for the establishment of a new bank soon grew.

An expert group was convened to study the idea, with Japan invited to contribute to the group. When Watanabe was recommended, the two streams proposing a new bank—from ECAFE and Japan—came together. Initially, the US was on the fence, not opposing the idea but not ready to commit financial support. But a new bank for Asia was soon seen to fit in with a broader program of assistance to Asia planned by United States President Lyndon B. Johnson in the wake of the escalating U.S. military support for the government of South Vietnam.

As a key player in the concept, Japan hoped that the ADB offices would be in Tokyo. However, eight other cities had also expressed an interest: Bangkok, Colombo, Kabul, Kuala Lumpur, Manila, Phnom Penh, Singapore, and Tehran. To decide, the 18 prospective regional members of the new bank held three rounds of votes at a ministerial conference in Manila in November/December 1965. In the first round on 30 November, Tokyo failed to win a majority, so a second ballot was held the next day at noon. Although Japan was in the lead, it was still inconclusive, so a final vote was held after lunch. In the third poll, Tokyo gained eight votes to Manila's nine, with one abstention. Therefore, Manila was declared the host of the new development bank; the Japanese were mystified and deeply disappointed. Watanabe later wrote in his personal history of ADB: "I felt as if the child I had so carefully reared had been taken away to a distant country." (Asian Development Bank publication, "Towards a New Asia", 1977, p. 16)

As intensive work took place during 1966 to prepare for the opening of the new bank in Manila, high on the agenda was choice of president. Japanese Prime Minister Eisaku Satō asked Watanabe to be a candidate. Although he initially declined, pressure came from other countries and Watanabe agreed. In the absence of any other candidates, Watanabe was elected first President of the Asian Development Bank at its Inaugural Meeting on 24 November 1966.

By the end of 1972, Japan had contributed $173.7 million (22.6% of the total) to the ordinary capital resources and $122.6 million (59.6% of the total) to the special funds. In contrast, the United States contributed only $1.25 million to the special fund.[6]

After its creation in the 1960s, ADB focused much of its assistance on food production and rural development. At the time, Asia was one of the poorest regions in the world.[18]

Early loans went largely to Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, South Korea and the Philippines; these nations accounted for 78.48% of the total ADB loans between 1967 and 1972. Moreover, Japan received tangible benefits, 41.67% of the total procurements between 1967 and 1976. Japan tied its special funds contributions to its preferred sectors and regions and procurements of its goods and services, as reflected in its $100 million donation for the Agricultural Special Fund in April 1968.[6]

Watanabe served as the first ADB president to 1972.[19][20]

1970s–1980s

In the 1970s, ADB's assistance to developing countries in Asia expanded into education and health, and then to infrastructure and industry. The gradual emergence of Asian economies in the latter part of the decade spurred demand for better infrastructure to support economic growth. ADB focused on improving roads and providing electricity. When the world suffered its first oil price shock, ADB shifted more of its assistance to support energy projects, especially those promoting the development of domestic energy sources in member countries.[18]

Following considerable pressure from the Reagan Administration in the 1980s, ADB reluctantly began working with the private sector in an attempt to increase the impact of its development assistance to poor countries in Asia and the Pacific. In the wake of the second oil crisis, ADB expanded its assistance to energy projects. In 1982, ADB opened its first field office, in Bangladesh, and later in the decade, it expanded its work with non-government organizations (NGOs).[18]

Japanese presidents Inoue Shiro (1972–76) and Yoshida Taroichi (1976–81) took the spotlight in the 1970s. Fujioka Masao, the fourth president (1981–90), adopted an assertive leadership style, launching an ambitious plan to expand the ADB into a high-impact development agency.

On November 18, 1972, the Bank inaugurated its headquarters along Roxas Boulevard in Pasay City, Philippines. In the early 1990s, ADB moved its offices to Ortigas Center in Pasig City, with the Department of Foreign Affairs (Philippines) taking over its old Pasay premises.

1990s

In the 1990s, ADB began promoting regional cooperation by helping the countries on the Mekong River to trade and work together. The decade also saw an expansion of ADB's membership with the addition of several Central Asian countries following the end of the Cold War.[18]

In mid-1997, ADB responded to the financial crisis that hit the region with projects designed to strengthen financial sectors and create social safety nets for the poor. During the crisis, ADB approved its largest single loan – a $4 billion emergency loan to South Korea. In 1999, ADB adopted poverty reduction as its overarching goal.[18]

2000s

The early 2000s saw a dramatic expansion of private sector finance. While the institution had such operations since the 1980s (under pressure from the Reagan Administration) the early attempts were highly unsuccessful with low lending volumes, considerable losses and financial scandals associated with an entity named AFIC. However, beginning in 2002, the ADB undertook a dramatic expansion of private sector lending under a new team. Over the course of the next six years, the Private Sector Operations Department (PSOD) grew by a factor of 41 times the 2001 levels of new financings and earnings for the ADB. This culminated with the Board's formal recognition if these achievements in March 2008, when the Board of Directors formally adopted the Long Term Strategic Framework (LTSF). That document formally stated that assistance to private sector development was the lead priority of the ADB and that it should constitute 50% of the bank's lending by 2020.

In 2003, the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic hit the region and ADB responded with programs to help the countries in the region work together to address infectious diseases, including avian influenza and HIV/AIDS. ADB also responded to a multitude of natural disasters in the region, committing more than $850 million for recovery in areas of India, Indonesia, Maldives, and Sri Lanka which were impacted by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami. In addition, $1 billion in loans and grants was provided to the victims of the October 2005 earthquake in Pakistan.[18]

In December 2005, China donated $20 million to the ADB for a regional poverty alleviation fund; China's first such fund set up at an international institution.[21]

In 2009, ADB's Board of Governors agreed to triple ADB's capital base from $55 billion to $165 billion, giving it much-needed resources to respond to the global economic crisis. The 200% increase is the largest in ADB's history, and was the first since 1994.[18]

2010s

Asia moved beyond the economic crisis and by 2010 had emerged as a new engine of global economic growth though it remained home to two-thirds of the world's poor. In addition, the increasing prosperity of many people in the region created a widening income gap that left many people behind. ADB responded to this with loans and grants that encouraged economic growth.[18]

In early 2012, the ADB began to re-engage with Myanmar in response to reforms initiated by the government. In April 2014, ADB opened an office in Myanmar and resumed making loans and grants to the country.[18]

In 2017, ADB combined the lending operations of its Asian Development Fund (ADF) with its ordinary capital resources (OCR). The result was to expand the OCR balance sheet to permit increasing annual lending and grants to $20 billion by 2020 — 50% more than the previous level.[18]

In 2020, ADB gave a $2 million grant from the Asia Pacific Disaster Response Fund, to support the Armenian government in the fight against the spread of COVID-19 pandemic. In the same year, the ADB committed a $20 million loan to Electric Networks of Armenia, that will ensure electricity for the citizens during the pandemic, as well as approved $500,000 in regional technical assistance to procure personal protective equipment and other medical supplies.[22]

Objectives and activities

Aim

The ADB defines itself as a social development organization that is dedicated to reducing poverty in Asia and the Pacific through inclusive economic growth, environmentally sustainable growth, and regional integration. This is carried out through investments – in the form of loans, grants and information sharing – in infrastructure, health care services, financial and public administration systems, helping nations prepare for the impact of climate change or better manage their natural resources, as well as other areas.

Focus areas

Eighty percent of ADB's lending is concentrated public sector lending in five operational areas.[23]

  • Education – Most developing countries in Asia and the Pacific have earned high marks for a dramatic rise in primary education enrollment rates in the last three decades, but daunting challenges remain, threatening economic and social growth.[24]
  • Environment, Climate Change, and Disaster Risk Management – Environmental sustainability is a prerequisite for economic growth and poverty reduction in Asia and the Pacific.[25]
  • Finance Sector Development – The financial system is the lifeline of a country's economy. It creates prosperity that can be shared throughout society and benefit the poorest and most vulnerable people. Financial sector and capital market development, including microfinance, small and medium-sized enterprises, and regulatory reforms, is vital to decreasing poverty in Asia and the Pacific.This has been a key priority of the Private Sector Operations Department (PSOD) since 2002. One of the most active sub-sectors of finance is the PSOD's support for trade finance. Each year the PSOD finances billions of dollars in letters of credit across all of Asia and the rest of the world.[26]
  • Infrastructure, including transport[27] and communications,[28] energy,[29] water supply and sanitation,[30] and urban development.[31]
  • Regional Cooperation and Integration – Regional cooperation and integration (RCI) was introduced by President Kuroda when he joined the ADB in 2004. It was seen as a long-standing priority of the Japanese government as a process by which national economies become more regionally connected. It plays a critical role in accelerating economic growth, reducing poverty and economic disparity, raising productivity and employment, and strengthening institutions.[32]
  • Private Sector Lending – This priority was introduced into the ADB's activities at the insistence of the Reagan Administration. However, that effort was never a true priority until the administration of President Tadeo Chino who in turn brought in a seasoned American banker – Robert Bestani. From then on, the Private Sector Operations Department (PSOD) grew at a very rapid pace, growing from the smallest financing unit of the ADB to the largest in terms of financing volume. As noted earlier, this culminated in the Long Term Strategic Framework (LTSF) which was adopted by the Board in March 2008.

Financings

The ADB offers "hard" loans on commercial terms primarily to middle income countries in Asia and "soft" loans with lower interest rates to poorer countries in the region. Based on a new policy, both types of loans will be sourced starting January 2017 from the bank's ordinary capital resources (OCR), which functions as its general operational fund.[33]

The ADB's Private Sector Department (PSOD) can and does offer a broader range of financings beyond commercial loans. They also have the capability to provide guarantees, equity and mezzanine finance (a combination of debt and equity).

In 2017, ADB lent $19.1 billion of which $3.2 billion went to private enterprises, as part of its "nonsovereign" operations. ADB's operations in 2017, including grants and cofinancing, totaled $28.9 billion.[34]

ADB obtains its funding by issuing bonds on the world's capital markets. It also relies on the contributions of member countries, retained earnings from lending operations, and the repayment of loans.[35]

Five largest borrowing countries[36][37]
Country 2018 2017 2016 2015
$ million % $ million % $ million % $ million %
  China 17,015 16.6 16,284 16.9 15,615 24.8 14,646 25.2
  India 16,115 15.7 14,720 15.2 13,331 21.2 12,916 22.2
  Pakistan 10,818 10.6 10,975 11.4 4,570 7.3 4,319 7.4
  Indonesia 10,356 10.1 9,393 9.7 8,700 13.8 8,214 14.1
  Bangladesh 9,169 8.9 8,685 9.0 - - - -
  Philippines - - - - 5,935 9.4 5,525 9.5
Others 38,998 38.1 36,519 37.8 14,831 23.5 12,486 21.6
Total 102,470 100.0 96,577 100.0 62,983 100.0 58,106 100.0

Private sector investments

ADB provides direct financial assistance, in the form of debt, equity and mezzanine finance to private sector companies, for projects that have clear social benefits beyond the financial rate of return. ADB's participation is usually limited but it leverages a large amount of funds from commercial sources to finance these projects by holding no more than 25% of any given transaction.[38]

Cofinancing

ADB partners with other development organizations on some projects to increase the amount of funding available. In 2014, $9.2 billion—or nearly half—of ADB's $22.9 billion in operations were financed by other organizations.[39] According to Jason Rush, Principal Communication Specialist, the Bank communicates with many other multilateral organizations.

Funds and resources

More than 50 financing partnership facilities, trust funds, and other funds – totalling several billion each year – are administered by ADB and put toward projects that promote social and economic development in Asia and the Pacific.[40] ADB has raised Rs 5 billion or around Rs 500 crores from its issuance of 5-year offshore Indian rupee (INR) linked bonds.

On 26 Feb 2020, ADB raises $118 million from rupee-linked bonds and supporting the development of India International Exchange in India, as it also contributes to an established yield curve which stretches from 2021 through 2030 with $1 billion of outstanding bonds.[41]

Access to information

ADB has an information disclosure policy that presumes all information that is produced by the institution should be disclosed to the public unless there is a specific reason to keep it confidential. The policy calls for accountability and transparency in operations and the timely response to requests for information and documents.[42] ADB does not disclose information that jeopardizes personal privacy, safety and security, certain financial and commercial information, as well as other exceptions.[43]

Notable projects and technical assistance

Criticism

Since the ADB's early days, critics have charged that the two major donors, Japan and the United States, have had extensive influence over lending, policy and staffing decisions.[55]

Oxfam Australia has criticized the Asian Development Bank for insensitivity to local communities. "Operating at a global and international level, these banks can undermine people's human rights through projects that have detrimental outcomes for poor and marginalized communities."[56] The bank also received criticism from the United Nations Environmental Program, stating in a report that "much of the growth has bypassed more than 70 percent of its rural population, many of whom are directly dependent on natural resources for livelihoods and incomes."[57]

There had been criticism that ADB's large scale projects cause social and environmental damage due to lack of oversight. One of the most controversial ADB-related projects is Thailand's Mae Moh coal-fired power station. Environmental and human rights activists say ADB's environmental safeguards policy as well as policies for indigenous peoples and involuntary resettlement, while usually up to international standards on paper, are often ignored in practice, are too vague or weak to be effective, or are simply not enforced by bank officials.[58][59]

The bank has been criticized over its role and relevance in the food crisis. The ADB has been accused by civil society of ignoring warnings leading up the crisis and also contributing to it by pushing loan conditions that many say unfairly pressure governments to deregulate and privatize agriculture, leading to problems such as the rice supply shortage in Southeast Asia.[60]

Indeed, whereas the Private Sector Operations Department (PSOD) closed out that year with financings of $2.4 billion, the ADB has significantly dropped below that level in the years since and is clearly not on the path to achieving its stated goal of 50% of financings to the private sector by 2020. Critics also point out that the PSOD is the only Department that actually makes money for the ADB. Hence, with the vast majority of loans going to concessionary (sub-market) loans to the public sector, the ADB is facing considerable financial difficulty and continuous operating losses.

Largest countries and regions by subscribed capital and voting power

The following table are amounts for 20 largest countries by subscribed capital and voting power at the Asian Development Bank as of December 2020.[61]

The 20 largest countries and regions by subscribed capital and voting power at the Asian Development Bank
Rank Country Subscribed capital
(% of total)
Voting power
(% of total)
World 100.000 100.000
1   Japan 15.571 12.751
1   United States 15.571 12.751
3   China 6.429 5.437
4   India 6.317 5.347
5   Australia 5.773 4.913
6   Indonesia 5.434 4.641
7   Canada 5.219 4.469
8   South Korea 5.026 4.315
9   Germany 4.316 3.747
10   Malaysia 2.717 2.468
11   Philippines 2.377 2.196
12   France 2.322 2.152
13   Pakistan 2.174 2.033
14   United Kingdom 2.038 1.924
15   Italy 1.803 1.737
16   New Zealand 1.532 1.520
17   Thailand 1.358 1.381
18   Taiwan 1.087 1.164
19   Netherlands 1.023 1.113
20   Bangladesh 1.019 1.109
All Remaining Members 10.894 22.832

Members

 
Asian Development Bank – Developing Member Countries (DMC) graduation stages[62]
  Outside regions
  Asia-Pacific region developed members
  DMC graduated from assistance, Group-D
  Ordinary Capital Resources (OCR) financing, Group-C
  OCR and ADF blended financing, Group-B
  Asian Development Fund (ADF) financing, Group-A

ADB has 68 members (as of 23 March 2019): 49 members from the Asian and Pacific Region, 19 members from Other Regions.[63] The year after a member's name indicates the year of membership. At the time a country ceases to be a member, the Bank shall arrange for the repurchase of such country's shares by the Bank as a part of the settlement of accounts with such country in accordance with the provisions of paragraphs 3 and 4 of Article 43.[64]

Regional members Date of accession
  Islamic Republic of Afghanistan 1966
  Australia
  Cambodia
  India
  Indonesia
  Japan
  Laos[65]
  Malaysia
    Nepal
  New Zealand
  Pakistan
  Philippines
  Samoa
  Singapore
  South Korea
  Sri Lanka
  Taiwan (as "Taipei, China")[66][67]
  Thailand
  South Vietnam[68]
  Hong Kong[69] 1969
  Fiji 1970
  Papua New Guinea 1971
  Tonga 1972
  Burma 1973
  Solomon Islands
  Kiribati 1974
  Cook Islands 1976
  Maldives 1978
  Vanuatu 1981
  Bangladesh 1973
  Bhutan 1982
  China 1986
  Federated States of Micronesia 1990
  Marshall Islands
  Mongolia 1991
  Nauru
  Tuvalu 1993
  Kazakhstan 1994
  Kyrgyzstan
  Uzbekistan 1995
  Tajikistan 1998
  Azerbaijan 1999
  Turkmenistan 2000
  Timor-Leste 2002
  Palau 2003
  Armenia 2005
  Brunei Darussalam 2006
  Georgia 2007
  Niue 2019
Nonregional members Date of accession
  Austria 1966
  Belgium
  Canada
  Denmark
  Finland
  Germany[70]
  Italy
  Netherlands
  Norway
  Sweden
  United Kingdom
  United States
  Switzerland 1967
  France 1970
  Spain 1986
  Turkey 1991
  Portugal 2002
  Luxembourg 2003
  Ireland 2006

See also

References

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  60. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 July 2011.
  61. ^ Members, Capital Stock, and Voting Power (PDF). adb.org. May 2021. doi:10.22617/FLS210109. S2CID 243528302.
  62. ^ A Graduation Policy for the Bank's DMCs. Asian Development Bank. Asian Development Bank. 26 November 1998.
  63. ^ "Members". Asian Development Bank. 18 December 2020.
  64. ^ Agreement Establishing the Asian Development Bank. Asian Development Bank. 4 December 1965. Retrieved 10 December 2007.
  65. ^ Joined as Kingdom of Laos, succeeded by Lao PDR in 1975
  66. ^ Asian Development Bank and Taipei,China: Fact Sheet. Asian Development Bank. Asian Development Bank. 26 April 2021.
  67. ^ Joined as Republic of China representing not only Taiwan Area, but also nominally Mainland China until 1986. However, its share of Bank capital was based on the size of Taiwan's capital, unlike the World Bank and IMF where the government in Taiwan had had a share. The representation was succeeded by China in 1986. However, the ROC was allowed to retain its membership, but under the name of "Taipei,China" (space deliberately omitted after the comma) 8 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine — a name it protests. Uniquely, this allows both sides of the Taiwan Straits to be represented at the institution.
  68. ^ until 1975 then Vietnam
  69. ^ Joined as "British Hong Kong", not "Hong Kong SAR"
  70. ^ Founding member; joined as West Germany.

Further reading

  • Huang, P.W. 1975. The Asian Development Bank: Diplomacy and Development in Asia. New York, NY: Vantage Press.
  • Krishnamurti, R. 1977. ADB: The Seeding Days. Manila: Asian Development Bank.
  • McCawley, Peter. 2017. Banking on the Future of Asia and the Pacific: 50 Years of the Asian Development Bank. Manila: Asian Development Bank, ISBN 978-92-9257-791-9 (print), ISBN 978-92-9257-792-6 (e-ISBN), ISBN 978-4-326-50451-0 (Japanese language edition).
  • McCawley, Peter. 2020. Indonesia and the Asian Development Bank: Fifty Years of Partnership Manila: Asian Development Bank, ISBN 978-92-9262-202-2 (print), ISBN 978-92-9262-204-6 (e-book). DOI: Indonesia and the Asian Development Bank: Fifty Years of Partnership
  • Watanabe, Takeshi. 1977 (reprinted 2010). Towards a New Asia. Manila: Asian Development Bank.
  • Wihtol, Robert. 1988. The Asian Development Bank and Rural Development: Policy and Practice. Hampshire, UK: Macmillan Press.
  • Wilson, Dick. 1997. A Bank for Half the World: The Story of the Asian Development Bank, 1966-1986. Manila: Asian Development Bank.
  • Yasutomo, D.T. 1983. Japan and the Asian Development Bank. New York, NY: Praeger.

External links

  • Official website
  • ADB Institute
  • "Inequality Worsens across Asia", Dollars & Sense magazine, November/December 2007. Article discussing recent reports from the ADB.
  • "The right business environment" Youth unemployment in Asia. An interview with Jesus Felipe, advisor in the Economics and Research Department of ADB.

asian, development, bank, regional, development, bank, established, december, 1966, which, headquartered, ortigas, center, located, city, mandaluyong, metro, manila, philippines, bank, also, maintains, field, offices, around, world, promote, social, economic, . The Asian Development Bank ADB is a regional development bank established on 19 December 1966 4 which is headquartered in the Ortigas Center located in the city of Mandaluyong Metro Manila Philippines The bank also maintains 31 field offices around the world 5 to promote social and economic development in Asia The bank admits the members of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific UNESCAP formerly the Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East or ECAFE and non regional developed countries 6 From 31 members at its establishment ADB now has 68 members Asian Development BankAbbreviationADBFormation19 December 1966 56 years ago 1966 12 19 TypeMultilateral Development BankLegal statusTreatyPurposeSocial and Economic DevelopmentHeadquartersMandaluyong PhilippinesRegion servedINDO PACIFICMembership68 countriesPresidentMasatsugu Asakawa from 17 January 2020 1 Main organBoard of Governors 2 Staff3 092 3 Websitewww wbr adb wbr orgAsian Development Bank member states Outside regions Asia Pacific region The ADB was modeled closely on the World Bank and has a similar weighted voting system where votes are distributed in proportion with members capital subscriptions ADB releases an annual report that summarizes its operations budget and other materials for review by the public 7 The ADB Japan Scholarship Program ADB JSP enrolls about 300 students annually in academic institutions located in 10 countries within the Region Upon completion of their study programs scholars are expected to contribute to the economic and social development of their home countries 8 ADB is an official United Nations Observer 9 As of 31 December 2020 Japan and the United States each holds the largest proportion of shares at 15 571 China holds 6 429 India holds 6 317 and Australia holds 5 773 10 Contents 1 Organization 1 1 List of presidents 2 History 2 1 1960s 2 2 1970s 1980s 2 3 1990s 2 4 2000s 2 5 2010s 3 Objectives and activities 3 1 Aim 3 2 Focus areas 4 Financings 5 Private sector investments 6 Cofinancing 7 Funds and resources 8 Access to information 9 Notable projects and technical assistance 10 Criticism 11 Largest countries and regions by subscribed capital and voting power 12 Members 13 See also 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksOrganization Edit ADB Headquarters in Mandaluyong Metro Manila Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte pose for a photo with ADB President Takehiko Nakao and other officials of ADB during the 51st ADB Annual Meeting in Ortigas Center Mandaluyong Philippines on May 5 2018 The highest policy making body of the bank is the Board of Governors composed of one representative from each member state The Board of Governors in turn elect among themselves the twelve members of the board of directors and their deputies Eight of the twelve members come from regional Asia Pacific members while the others come from non regional members 11 The Board of Governors also elect the bank s president who is the chairperson of the board of directors and manages ADB The president has a term of office lasting five years and may be reelected Traditionally and because Japan is one of the largest shareholders of the bank the president has always been Japanese The current president is Masatsugu Asakawa He succeeded Takehiko Nakao on 17 January 2020 12 who succeeded Haruhiko Kuroda in 2013 13 The headquarters of the bank is at 6 ADB Avenue Mandaluyong Metro Manila Philippines 14 15 and it has 42 field offices in Asia and the Pacific and representative offices in Washington Frankfurt Tokyo and Sydney The bank employs about 3 000 people representing 60 of its 68 members 16 List of presidents Edit Name Dates NationalityTakeshi Watanabe 1966 1972 JapaneseShiro Inoue 1972 1976 JapaneseTaroichi Yoshida 1976 1981 JapaneseMasao Fujioka 1981 1989 JapaneseKimimasa Tarumizu 1989 1993 JapaneseMitsuo Sato 1993 1999 JapaneseTadao Chino 1999 2005 JapaneseHaruhiko Kuroda 2005 2013 JapaneseTakehiko Nakao 2013 2020 JapaneseMasatsugu Asakawa 2020 present Japanese As from 17 January 2020 Masatsugu Asakawa was president of ADB 17 History Edit1960s Edit As early as 1956 Japan Finance Minister Hisato Ichimada had suggested to United States Secretary of State John Foster Dulles that development projects in Southeast Asia could be supported by a new financial institution for the region A year later Japanese Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi announced that Japan intended to sponsor the establishment of a regional development fund with resources largely from Japan and other industrial countries But the US did not warm to the plan and the concept was shelved See full account in Banking the Future of Asia and the Pacific 50 Years of the Asian Development Bank July 2017 The idea came up again late in 1962 when Kaoru Ohashi an economist from a research institute in Tokyo visited Takeshi Watanabe then a private financial consultant in Tokyo and proposed a study group to form a development bank for the Asian region The group met regularly in 1963 examining various scenarios for setting up a new institution and drew on Watanabe s experiences with the World Bank However the idea received a cool reception from the World Bank itself and the study group became discouraged In parallel the concept was formally proposed at a trade conference organized by the Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East ECAFE in 1963 by a young Thai economist Paul Sithi Amnuai ESCAP United Nations Publication March 2007 The first parliament of Asia pp 65 Despite an initial mixed reaction support for the establishment of a new bank soon grew An expert group was convened to study the idea with Japan invited to contribute to the group When Watanabe was recommended the two streams proposing a new bank from ECAFE and Japan came together Initially the US was on the fence not opposing the idea but not ready to commit financial support But a new bank for Asia was soon seen to fit in with a broader program of assistance to Asia planned by United States President Lyndon B Johnson in the wake of the escalating U S military support for the government of South Vietnam As a key player in the concept Japan hoped that the ADB offices would be in Tokyo However eight other cities had also expressed an interest Bangkok Colombo Kabul Kuala Lumpur Manila Phnom Penh Singapore and Tehran To decide the 18 prospective regional members of the new bank held three rounds of votes at a ministerial conference in Manila in November December 1965 In the first round on 30 November Tokyo failed to win a majority so a second ballot was held the next day at noon Although Japan was in the lead it was still inconclusive so a final vote was held after lunch In the third poll Tokyo gained eight votes to Manila s nine with one abstention Therefore Manila was declared the host of the new development bank the Japanese were mystified and deeply disappointed Watanabe later wrote in his personal history of ADB I felt as if the child I had so carefully reared had been taken away to a distant country Asian Development Bank publication Towards a New Asia 1977 p 16 As intensive work took place during 1966 to prepare for the opening of the new bank in Manila high on the agenda was choice of president Japanese Prime Minister Eisaku Satō asked Watanabe to be a candidate Although he initially declined pressure came from other countries and Watanabe agreed In the absence of any other candidates Watanabe was elected first President of the Asian Development Bank at its Inaugural Meeting on 24 November 1966 By the end of 1972 Japan had contributed 173 7 million 22 6 of the total to the ordinary capital resources and 122 6 million 59 6 of the total to the special funds In contrast the United States contributed only 1 25 million to the special fund 6 After its creation in the 1960s ADB focused much of its assistance on food production and rural development At the time Asia was one of the poorest regions in the world 18 Early loans went largely to Indonesia Thailand Malaysia South Korea and the Philippines these nations accounted for 78 48 of the total ADB loans between 1967 and 1972 Moreover Japan received tangible benefits 41 67 of the total procurements between 1967 and 1976 Japan tied its special funds contributions to its preferred sectors and regions and procurements of its goods and services as reflected in its 100 million donation for the Agricultural Special Fund in April 1968 6 Watanabe served as the first ADB president to 1972 19 20 1970s 1980s Edit In the 1970s ADB s assistance to developing countries in Asia expanded into education and health and then to infrastructure and industry The gradual emergence of Asian economies in the latter part of the decade spurred demand for better infrastructure to support economic growth ADB focused on improving roads and providing electricity When the world suffered its first oil price shock ADB shifted more of its assistance to support energy projects especially those promoting the development of domestic energy sources in member countries 18 Following considerable pressure from the Reagan Administration in the 1980s ADB reluctantly began working with the private sector in an attempt to increase the impact of its development assistance to poor countries in Asia and the Pacific In the wake of the second oil crisis ADB expanded its assistance to energy projects In 1982 ADB opened its first field office in Bangladesh and later in the decade it expanded its work with non government organizations NGOs 18 Japanese presidents Inoue Shiro 1972 76 and Yoshida Taroichi 1976 81 took the spotlight in the 1970s Fujioka Masao the fourth president 1981 90 adopted an assertive leadership style launching an ambitious plan to expand the ADB into a high impact development agency On November 18 1972 the Bank inaugurated its headquarters along Roxas Boulevard in Pasay City Philippines In the early 1990s ADB moved its offices to Ortigas Center in Pasig City with the Department of Foreign Affairs Philippines taking over its old Pasay premises 1990s Edit In the 1990s ADB began promoting regional cooperation by helping the countries on the Mekong River to trade and work together The decade also saw an expansion of ADB s membership with the addition of several Central Asian countries following the end of the Cold War 18 In mid 1997 ADB responded to the financial crisis that hit the region with projects designed to strengthen financial sectors and create social safety nets for the poor During the crisis ADB approved its largest single loan a 4 billion emergency loan to South Korea In 1999 ADB adopted poverty reduction as its overarching goal 18 2000s Edit The early 2000s saw a dramatic expansion of private sector finance While the institution had such operations since the 1980s under pressure from the Reagan Administration the early attempts were highly unsuccessful with low lending volumes considerable losses and financial scandals associated with an entity named AFIC However beginning in 2002 the ADB undertook a dramatic expansion of private sector lending under a new team Over the course of the next six years the Private Sector Operations Department PSOD grew by a factor of 41 times the 2001 levels of new financings and earnings for the ADB This culminated with the Board s formal recognition if these achievements in March 2008 when the Board of Directors formally adopted the Long Term Strategic Framework LTSF That document formally stated that assistance to private sector development was the lead priority of the ADB and that it should constitute 50 of the bank s lending by 2020 In 2003 the severe acute respiratory syndrome SARS epidemic hit the region and ADB responded with programs to help the countries in the region work together to address infectious diseases including avian influenza and HIV AIDS ADB also responded to a multitude of natural disasters in the region committing more than 850 million for recovery in areas of India Indonesia Maldives and Sri Lanka which were impacted by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami In addition 1 billion in loans and grants was provided to the victims of the October 2005 earthquake in Pakistan 18 In December 2005 China donated 20 million to the ADB for a regional poverty alleviation fund China s first such fund set up at an international institution 21 In 2009 ADB s Board of Governors agreed to triple ADB s capital base from 55 billion to 165 billion giving it much needed resources to respond to the global economic crisis The 200 increase is the largest in ADB s history and was the first since 1994 18 2010s Edit Asia moved beyond the economic crisis and by 2010 had emerged as a new engine of global economic growth though it remained home to two thirds of the world s poor In addition the increasing prosperity of many people in the region created a widening income gap that left many people behind ADB responded to this with loans and grants that encouraged economic growth 18 In early 2012 the ADB began to re engage with Myanmar in response to reforms initiated by the government In April 2014 ADB opened an office in Myanmar and resumed making loans and grants to the country 18 In 2017 ADB combined the lending operations of its Asian Development Fund ADF with its ordinary capital resources OCR The result was to expand the OCR balance sheet to permit increasing annual lending and grants to 20 billion by 2020 50 more than the previous level 18 In 2020 ADB gave a 2 million grant from the Asia Pacific Disaster Response Fund to support the Armenian government in the fight against the spread of COVID 19 pandemic In the same year the ADB committed a 20 million loan to Electric Networks of Armenia that will ensure electricity for the citizens during the pandemic as well as approved 500 000 in regional technical assistance to procure personal protective equipment and other medical supplies 22 Objectives and activities EditAim Edit The ADB defines itself as a social development organization that is dedicated to reducing poverty in Asia and the Pacific through inclusive economic growth environmentally sustainable growth and regional integration This is carried out through investments in the form of loans grants and information sharing in infrastructure health care services financial and public administration systems helping nations prepare for the impact of climate change or better manage their natural resources as well as other areas Focus areas Edit Eighty percent of ADB s lending is concentrated public sector lending in five operational areas 23 Education Most developing countries in Asia and the Pacific have earned high marks for a dramatic rise in primary education enrollment rates in the last three decades but daunting challenges remain threatening economic and social growth 24 Environment Climate Change and Disaster Risk Management Environmental sustainability is a prerequisite for economic growth and poverty reduction in Asia and the Pacific 25 Finance Sector Development The financial system is the lifeline of a country s economy It creates prosperity that can be shared throughout society and benefit the poorest and most vulnerable people Financial sector and capital market development including microfinance small and medium sized enterprises and regulatory reforms is vital to decreasing poverty in Asia and the Pacific This has been a key priority of the Private Sector Operations Department PSOD since 2002 One of the most active sub sectors of finance is the PSOD s support for trade finance Each year the PSOD finances billions of dollars in letters of credit across all of Asia and the rest of the world 26 Infrastructure including transport 27 and communications 28 energy 29 water supply and sanitation 30 and urban development 31 Regional Cooperation and Integration Regional cooperation and integration RCI was introduced by President Kuroda when he joined the ADB in 2004 It was seen as a long standing priority of the Japanese government as a process by which national economies become more regionally connected It plays a critical role in accelerating economic growth reducing poverty and economic disparity raising productivity and employment and strengthening institutions 32 Private Sector Lending This priority was introduced into the ADB s activities at the insistence of the Reagan Administration However that effort was never a true priority until the administration of President Tadeo Chino who in turn brought in a seasoned American banker Robert Bestani From then on the Private Sector Operations Department PSOD grew at a very rapid pace growing from the smallest financing unit of the ADB to the largest in terms of financing volume As noted earlier this culminated in the Long Term Strategic Framework LTSF which was adopted by the Board in March 2008 Financings EditThe ADB offers hard loans on commercial terms primarily to middle income countries in Asia and soft loans with lower interest rates to poorer countries in the region Based on a new policy both types of loans will be sourced starting January 2017 from the bank s ordinary capital resources OCR which functions as its general operational fund 33 The ADB s Private Sector Department PSOD can and does offer a broader range of financings beyond commercial loans They also have the capability to provide guarantees equity and mezzanine finance a combination of debt and equity In 2017 ADB lent 19 1 billion of which 3 2 billion went to private enterprises as part of its nonsovereign operations ADB s operations in 2017 including grants and cofinancing totaled 28 9 billion 34 ADB obtains its funding by issuing bonds on the world s capital markets It also relies on the contributions of member countries retained earnings from lending operations and the repayment of loans 35 Five largest borrowing countries 36 37 Country 2018 2017 2016 2015 million million million million China 17 015 16 6 16 284 16 9 15 615 24 8 14 646 25 2 India 16 115 15 7 14 720 15 2 13 331 21 2 12 916 22 2 Pakistan 10 818 10 6 10 975 11 4 4 570 7 3 4 319 7 4 Indonesia 10 356 10 1 9 393 9 7 8 700 13 8 8 214 14 1 Bangladesh 9 169 8 9 8 685 9 0 Philippines 5 935 9 4 5 525 9 5Others 38 998 38 1 36 519 37 8 14 831 23 5 12 486 21 6Total 102 470 100 0 96 577 100 0 62 983 100 0 58 106 100 0Private sector investments EditADB provides direct financial assistance in the form of debt equity and mezzanine finance to private sector companies for projects that have clear social benefits beyond the financial rate of return ADB s participation is usually limited but it leverages a large amount of funds from commercial sources to finance these projects by holding no more than 25 of any given transaction 38 Cofinancing EditADB partners with other development organizations on some projects to increase the amount of funding available In 2014 9 2 billion or nearly half of ADB s 22 9 billion in operations were financed by other organizations 39 According to Jason Rush Principal Communication Specialist the Bank communicates with many other multilateral organizations Funds and resources EditMore than 50 financing partnership facilities trust funds and other funds totalling several billion each year are administered by ADB and put toward projects that promote social and economic development in Asia and the Pacific 40 ADB has raised Rs 5 billion or around Rs 500 crores from its issuance of 5 year offshore Indian rupee INR linked bonds On 26 Feb 2020 ADB raises 118 million from rupee linked bonds and supporting the development of India International Exchange in India as it also contributes to an established yield curve which stretches from 2021 through 2030 with 1 billion of outstanding bonds 41 Access to information EditADB has an information disclosure policy that presumes all information that is produced by the institution should be disclosed to the public unless there is a specific reason to keep it confidential The policy calls for accountability and transparency in operations and the timely response to requests for information and documents 42 ADB does not disclose information that jeopardizes personal privacy safety and security certain financial and commercial information as well as other exceptions 43 Notable projects and technical assistance EditAfghanistan Hairatan to Mazar e Sharif Railway Project 44 Armenia Water Supply and Sanitation Sector Project 45 Bhutan Green Power Development Project 46 India Rural Roads Sector II Investment Program 47 Indonesia Vocational Education Strengthening Project 48 Laos Northern and Central Regions Water Supply and Sanitation Sector Project 49 Mongolia Food and Nutrition Social Welfare Program and Project 50 Philippines North South Commuter Railway Project Malolos Clark Railway Project and South Commuter Railway Project jointly funded with Japan International Cooperation Agency 51 52 Solomon Islands Pacific Private Sector Development Initiative 53 India Agartala Municipal Infrastructure Development Project 54 Criticism EditSince the ADB s early days critics have charged that the two major donors Japan and the United States have had extensive influence over lending policy and staffing decisions 55 Oxfam Australia has criticized the Asian Development Bank for insensitivity to local communities Operating at a global and international level these banks can undermine people s human rights through projects that have detrimental outcomes for poor and marginalized communities 56 The bank also received criticism from the United Nations Environmental Program stating in a report that much of the growth has bypassed more than 70 percent of its rural population many of whom are directly dependent on natural resources for livelihoods and incomes 57 There had been criticism that ADB s large scale projects cause social and environmental damage due to lack of oversight One of the most controversial ADB related projects is Thailand s Mae Moh coal fired power station Environmental and human rights activists say ADB s environmental safeguards policy as well as policies for indigenous peoples and involuntary resettlement while usually up to international standards on paper are often ignored in practice are too vague or weak to be effective or are simply not enforced by bank officials 58 59 The bank has been criticized over its role and relevance in the food crisis The ADB has been accused by civil society of ignoring warnings leading up the crisis and also contributing to it by pushing loan conditions that many say unfairly pressure governments to deregulate and privatize agriculture leading to problems such as the rice supply shortage in Southeast Asia 60 Indeed whereas the Private Sector Operations Department PSOD closed out that year with financings of 2 4 billion the ADB has significantly dropped below that level in the years since and is clearly not on the path to achieving its stated goal of 50 of financings to the private sector by 2020 Critics also point out that the PSOD is the only Department that actually makes money for the ADB Hence with the vast majority of loans going to concessionary sub market loans to the public sector the ADB is facing considerable financial difficulty and continuous operating losses Largest countries and regions by subscribed capital and voting power EditThe following table are amounts for 20 largest countries by subscribed capital and voting power at the Asian Development Bank as of December 2020 61 The 20 largest countries and regions by subscribed capital and voting power at the Asian Development Bank Rank Country Subscribed capital of total Voting power of total World 100 000 100 0001 Japan 15 571 12 7511 United States 15 571 12 7513 China 6 429 5 4374 India 6 317 5 3475 Australia 5 773 4 9136 Indonesia 5 434 4 6417 Canada 5 219 4 4698 South Korea 5 026 4 3159 Germany 4 316 3 74710 Malaysia 2 717 2 46811 Philippines 2 377 2 19612 France 2 322 2 15213 Pakistan 2 174 2 03314 United Kingdom 2 038 1 92415 Italy 1 803 1 73716 New Zealand 1 532 1 52017 Thailand 1 358 1 38118 Taiwan 1 087 1 16419 Netherlands 1 023 1 11320 Bangladesh 1 019 1 109All Remaining Members 10 894 22 832Members Edit Asian Development Bank Developing Member Countries DMC graduation stages 62 Outside regions Asia Pacific region developed members DMC graduated from assistance Group D Ordinary Capital Resources OCR financing Group C OCR and ADF blended financing Group B Asian Development Fund ADF financing Group A ADB has 68 members as of 23 March 2019 49 members from the Asian and Pacific Region 19 members from Other Regions 63 The year after a member s name indicates the year of membership At the time a country ceases to be a member the Bank shall arrange for the repurchase of such country s shares by the Bank as a part of the settlement of accounts with such country in accordance with the provisions of paragraphs 3 and 4 of Article 43 64 Regional members Date of accession Islamic Republic of Afghanistan 1966 Australia Cambodia India Indonesia Japan Laos 65 Malaysia Nepal New Zealand Pakistan Philippines Samoa Singapore South Korea Sri Lanka Taiwan as Taipei China 66 67 Thailand South Vietnam 68 Hong Kong 69 1969 Fiji 1970 Papua New Guinea 1971 Tonga 1972 Burma 1973 Solomon Islands Kiribati 1974 Cook Islands 1976 Maldives 1978 Vanuatu 1981 Bangladesh 1973 Bhutan 1982 China 1986 Federated States of Micronesia 1990 Marshall Islands Mongolia 1991 Nauru Tuvalu 1993 Kazakhstan 1994 Kyrgyzstan Uzbekistan 1995 Tajikistan 1998 Azerbaijan 1999 Turkmenistan 2000 Timor Leste 2002 Palau 2003 Armenia 2005 Brunei Darussalam 2006 Georgia 2007 Niue 2019 Nonregional members Date of accession Austria 1966 Belgium Canada Denmark Finland Germany 70 Italy Netherlands Norway Sweden United Kingdom United States Switzerland 1967 France 1970 Spain 1986 Turkey 1991 Portugal 2002 Luxembourg 2003 Ireland 2006See also Edit Banks portalAfrican Development Bank Asian Clearing Union Asian Development Bank Institute ADBI Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank AIIB Asia Cooperation Dialogue Asia Council Caribbean Development Bank Eurasian Development Bank International Monetary Fund South Asia Subregional Economic Cooperation World BankReferences Edit Masatsugu Asakawa Elected ADB President 2 December 2019 About Management adb org ADB Annual Report 2016 Asian Development Bank Asian Development Bank 2017 doi 10 22617 FLS178712 ISBN 9789292577742 ADB History adb org Retrieved 26 November 2015 Departments and Offices adb org Retrieved 26 November 2015 a b c Ming Wan Winter 1995 1996 Japan and the Asian Development Bank Pacific Affairs University of British Columbia 68 4 509 528 doi 10 2307 2761274 JSTOR 2761274 Archived from the original on 7 August 2011 Anonymous ADB Annual Reports Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 26 November 2015 Scholarship Program List of Academic Institutions Asian Development Bank 12 October 2017 Intergovernmental Organizations www un org Shareholders PDF Asian Development Bank adb org Archived from the original PDF on 3 August 2017 Retrieved 26 November 2015 Board of Directors Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 26 November 2015 New ADB President Masatsugu Asakawa Assumes Office Asian Development Bank Asian Development Bank 17 January 2020 Retrieved 24 January 2020 New ADB President Takehiko Nakao Assumes Office Asian Development Bank 28 April 2013 Contacts Archive Asian Development Bank Retrieved on April 21 2015 6 ADB Avenue Mandaluyong 1550 Philippines Contacts How to Visit ADB Archive Asian Development Bank Retrieved on April 21 2015 Key Facts Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 26 November 2015 ADB New ADB President Masatsugu Asakawa Assumes Office News Release 17 January 2020 a b c d e f g h i j ADB History Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 21 December 2015 Devesh Kapur John Prior Lewis Richard Charles Webb 1 December 2010 The World Bank Perspectives Brookings Institution Press pp 304 ISBN 978 0 8157 2014 0 Frank N Magill 23 April 2014 Chron 20c Hist Bus Comer Routledge pp 891 ISBN 978 1 134 26462 9 Zhao Suisheng 2023 The dragon roars back transformational leaders and dynamics of Chinese foreign policy Stanford California Stanford University Press p 70 ISBN 978 1 5036 3415 2 OCLC 1332788951 Asian Development Bank PDF adb org Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Core Operational Areas Asian Development Bank adb org 30 March 2014 Retrieved 14 December 2015 Education Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 Environment Climate Change and Disaster Risk Management Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 Finance Sector Development Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 Sustainable Transport for All Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 Information and Communications Technology Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 Energy Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 Water for All Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 Urban Development Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 Regional Cooperation and Integration Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 ADF OCR Merger to Boost Support for Region s Poor adb org Asian Development Bank 2 May 2015 Retrieved 27 November 2015 ADB news release adb org Asian Development Bank 12 January 2018 Retrieved 12 January 2018 FAQs Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 27 November 2015 Management s Discussion and Analysis and Annual Financial Statements PDF Asian Development Bank 31 December 2016 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 2018 FINANCIAL REPORT PDF Asian Development Bank 31 December 2018 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Private Sector Nonsovereign Financing Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 Official Cofinancing Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 Funds Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 ADB raises 118 million from rupee linked bonds The Economic Times 26 February 2020 Retrieved 23 March 2020 Overview Asian Development Bank adb org Retrieved 14 December 2015 Exceptions to Disclosure Asian Development Bank adb org 9 September 2014 Retrieved 14 December 2015 Hairatan to Mazar i Sharif railway Railways of Afghanistan www andrewgrantham co uk Retrieved 27 November 2015 Water Supply and Sanitation Sector Project Additional Financing in Armenia General Procurement Notice Devex www devex com Retrieved 27 November 2015 Proposed Green Power Development Project in Bhutan Devex www devex com Retrieved 27 November 2015 Government signs loan agreement with ADB for Rural Roads Sector II Investment Program Project 4 Special Content Association Releases ConstructionBiz360 www constructionbiz360 com Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 27 November 2015 ADB supports vocational education in Indonesia Antara 28 September 2012 Retrieved 27 November 2015 Murphy B J June 2012 Oudomxay hosts belated opening ceremony for water treatment plant Lao People s Democratic Republic Retrieved 27 November 2015 Food and Nutrition Social Welfare Programme and Project Capacity Development Project M amp E Oxford Policy Management Retrieved 27 November 2015 Malolos Clark Railway Project North South Commuter Railway PNR Clark Phase 2 Asian Development Bank 10 July 2019 Retrieved 24 January 2022 Philippines South Commuter Railway Project Asian Development Bank Retrieved 24 January 2022 Pacific banks go branchless to reach the unbanked Scoop News www scoop co nz Retrieved 27 November 2015 India Project Notice Bid Detail Kilby Christopher 2002 Donor Influence in MDBs The Case of the Asian Development Bank PDF The Review of International Organizations 68 4 509 528 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 16 September 2010 The Asian Development Bank and Food Security Oxfam Australia 13 June 2014 Inter Press Service News and Views from the Global South Archived from the original on 12 December 2007 Large scale ADB projects draw criticism The Japan Times RFI NGO criticises ADB and questions its ability to reduce poverty rfi fr ADB to meet amid food crisis growing poverty Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Members Capital Stock and Voting Power PDF adb org May 2021 doi 10 22617 FLS210109 S2CID 243528302 A Graduation Policy for the Bank s DMCs Asian Development Bank Asian Development Bank 26 November 1998 Members Asian Development Bank 18 December 2020 Agreement Establishing the Asian Development Bank Asian Development Bank 4 December 1965 Retrieved 10 December 2007 Joined as Kingdom of Laos succeeded by Lao PDR in 1975 Asian Development Bank and Taipei China Fact Sheet Asian Development Bank Asian Development Bank 26 April 2021 Joined as Republic of China representing not only Taiwan Area but also nominally Mainland China until 1986 However its share of Bank capital was based on the size of Taiwan s capital unlike the World Bank and IMF where the government in Taiwan had had a share The representation was succeeded by China in 1986 However the ROC was allowed to retain its membership but under the name of Taipei China space deliberately omitted after the comma Archived 8 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine a name it protests Uniquely this allows both sides of the Taiwan Straits to be represented at the institution until 1975 then Vietnam Joined as British Hong Kong not Hong Kong SAR Founding member joined as West Germany Further reading EditHuang P W 1975 The Asian Development Bank Diplomacy and Development in Asia New York NY Vantage Press Krishnamurti R 1977 ADB The Seeding Days Manila Asian Development Bank McCawley Peter 2017 Banking on the Future of Asia and the Pacific 50 Years of the Asian Development Bank Manila Asian Development Bank ISBN 978 92 9257 791 9 print ISBN 978 92 9257 792 6 e ISBN ISBN 978 4 326 50451 0 Japanese language edition McCawley Peter 2020 Indonesia and the Asian Development Bank Fifty Years of Partnership Manila Asian Development Bank ISBN 978 92 9262 202 2 print ISBN 978 92 9262 204 6 e book DOI Indonesia and the Asian Development Bank Fifty Years of Partnership Watanabe Takeshi 1977 reprinted 2010 Towards a New Asia Manila Asian Development Bank Wihtol Robert 1988 The Asian Development Bank and Rural Development Policy and Practice Hampshire UK Macmillan Press Wilson Dick 1997 A Bank for Half the World The Story of the Asian Development Bank 1966 1986 Manila Asian Development Bank Yasutomo D T 1983 Japan and the Asian Development Bank New York NY Praeger External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Asian Development Bank Official website Bank Information Center ADB Institute Inequality Worsens across Asia Dollars amp Sense magazine November December 2007 Article discussing recent reports from the ADB The right business environment Youth unemployment in Asia An interview with Jesus Felipe advisor in the Economics and Research Department of ADB Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Asian Development Bank amp oldid 1134907132, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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