
The EBRD is committed to the highest standards of corporate governance. The concept of good corporate governance is at the heart of all activities here at the EBRD but principally in our activities as an investor and as a law reformer.
Corporate Structure
Board of Governors
Board of Directors
The Board of Directors comprises 23 Directors and is chaired by the President. Each Director represents one or more shareholders. Subject to the Board of Governors’ overall authority, the Board of Directors is responsible for the direction of the Bank’s operations and policies in conformity with the general objectives set by the Board of Governors. It exercises the powers expressly assigned to it by the Agreement and those powers delegated to it by the Board of Governors.
The President
The President is elected and contracted by the Board of Governors. The President chairs the meetings of the Board of Directors and casts a deciding vote in case of an equal division. He or she is the legal representative and chief of staff of the Bank. Under the direction of the Board of Directors, the President conducts the day-to-day business of the Bank.
Vice Presidents
Board Committees
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the integrity of the Bank's financial statements and its accounting, financial reporting and disclosure policies and practices
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the soundness of the Bank's systems of internal controls that management has established regarding finance and accounting matters and their effective implementation
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the status, the ability to perform duties independently and the performance of the Bank's compliance, internal audit, evaluation and risk management functions
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the independence, qualifications and performance of the Bank's external auditor
- any other responsibilities that the Board may assign to the Committee from time to time.
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the budgetary, staff and administrative resources of the Bank
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efficiency, cost control and budgetary prudence
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overseeing the EBRD Shareholder Special Fund, the use of donor funding and relations with the donor community
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the Bank’s Human Resources policies
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specific responsibilities in relation to Governors, the President, Vice Presidents and Directors of the Bank
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policies relating to governance and ethics
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the Bank’s administrative arrangements
- other responsibilities within its remit.
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the Bank's financial policies
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the Bank’s Treasury operations, liquidity policy and borrowing programme
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the Bank’s operational policies
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the Bank’s strategic portfolio management within the framework of the Medium Term Strategy
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transparency and accountability of the Bank’s operations within the framework of the Public Information Policy and the Independent Recourse Mechanism (soon to be replaced with the Project Complaint Mechanism)
- other responsibilities within its remit.
Management Committee
Management Committees | Chair | Purpose of the Committee | Meeting frequency |
Executive Committee | President |
The custodian of all key aspects of the strategy, performance and financial soundness of the Bank.
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Monthly or as required |
Asset and Liability Committee | Senior Vice President, CFO and COO |
ALCom considers all matters of significance falling within Management competence in the areas of liquidity policy and management, as well as funding and other Treasury activities, including monitoring business plan implementation, limit compliance and hedging strategy implementation. Where authorisation rests with the Board, the role of ALCom is to advise the President on submissions to the Board. |
Quarterly |
Crisis Management Team | Vice President, CAO |
Prepares coordinated response to all critical internal and external issues arising in connection with events that affect the normal operations of the Bank.
Ensures that the crisis management plan and business recovery plan is in place and is tested on a regular basis.
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At least three times per year |
Equity Committee | First Vice President, Head of Client Services |
Maintains oversight over listed and unlisted equity investments.
Reviews and identifies suitable listed exit opportunities and makes recommendation on such exits to the Operations Committee.
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Quarterly |
Information Technology Governance Committee | Vice President, CAO |
Ensures that the Bank’s IT strategy and business plan support the Bank’s business strategy.
Establishes the framework for measuring business benefits and oversees the realisation of benefits arising from IT projects.
Reviews and approves business requests for budget allocation on new projects from the approved IT budget.
Responsible for the implementation of the Information Security Framework.
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At least six times per year |
Operations Committee | First Vice President, Head of Client Services | Considers all banking transactions at various stages (concept, structure and final reviews) before submission by the President for consideration by the Board of Directors. | Weekly |
Procurement Complaints Committee | Deputy General Counsel |
Considers complaints and disputes arising from tendering and contracts for goods, works and consultant services (including those funded by Technical Cooperation funds or the Bank’s budget) subject to the Procurement Policies and Rules or the Corporate Procurement Policy, as the case may be.
Reviews procurement and related matters referred to it by the Executive Committee.
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As required |
Risk Committee | Vice President, CRO | Oversees Bank-wide risks including credit and operational risk wish associated follow-up action. It also oversees risk aspects of the Banking and Treasury portfolios, approves risk policies, risk reports and considers new Banking and/ or Treasury products. | Fortnightly |
Strategy and Policy Committee | Vice President, Policy and Partnerships |
The custodian of transition strategy and policy work: country, sector and thematic strategies and related policies, policy products and policy-related research.
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Fortnightly |
The Administrative Tribunal forms part of the grievance system, which has been implemented to resolve employment issues and disputes. It comprises a panel of five judges, highly experienced lawyers from outside the EBRD. The President of the Tribunal is appointed by and from among the panel. For each appeal, the President of the Tribunal selects three members from the panel to serve for that appeal.
EBRD Codes of Conduct
Compliance
Reporting
Operational risk
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errors or failures in transaction support systems and inadequate disaster recovery planning, including errors in the mathematical formulae of pricing or hedging models, or in the computation of the fair value of transactions
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external events
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damage to the Bank’s name and reputation, either directly by adverse comments or indirectly
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errors or omissions in the processing and settlement of transactions, whether in the areas of execution, booking or settlement or due to inadequate legal documentation
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errors in the reporting of financial results or failures in controls, such as unidentified limit excesses or unauthorised trading/trading outside policies
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dependency on a limited number of key personnel, inadequate or insufficient staff training or skill levels.
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the Bank’s Codes of Conduct
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disaster recovery/contingency planning
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the Public Information Policy
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client and project integrity due diligence procedures, including anti-money-laundering measures
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procedures for reporting and investigating suspected staff misconduct, including fraud
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the information security framework
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procurement and purchasing policies, including the detection of corrupt practices in procurement.
Internal Audit Department
External auditors
Compensation policy
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to be competitive in order to attract and retain high-calibre employees
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to take account of differing levels of responsibility
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to support a climate of constant staff development
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to be sufficiently flexible to respond rapidly to the market
- to motivate and encourage excellent performance.
- to help meet these objectives, the Bank's shareholders have agreed that the Bank should use market comparators to evaluate its staff compensation and that salary and performance-based compensation awards should be driven by performance. Market comparators for the Bank are primarily private sector financial institutions in each of its locations plus other IFIs.