Encyclopedia > Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina
The Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina is the central bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in the capital city, Sarajevo. Map of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Sarajevo) Coordinates: Country Bosnia and Herzegovina Entity Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina Canton Sarajevo Canton Mayor Semiha Borovac Area - City 142 km² (54. ...
A 50,00 konvertibilnih marka (Federation of BiH) banknote A 0,50 KM (Republika Srpska) banknote A 500,00 Dinar (Republic of Bosnia Hercegovina) banknote The Convertible Mark (Bosnian and Croatian: konvertibilna marka, Serbian: конвеÑÑибилна маÑка), (ISO 4217:BAM) is the currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina. ... The Economy of Bosnia and Herzegovina since Bosnia and Herzegovinas declaration of sovereignty in October 1991 and the declaration of independence from the former Yugoslavia on 3 March 1992. ... The economy of Europe is comprised of more than 665 million people in 48 different states. ... List of central banks Afghanistan â Da Afghanistan Bank Albania â Bank of Albania Algeria â Bank of Algeria Argentina â Banco Central de la República Argentina Armenia â Central Bank of Armenia Aruba â Centrale Bank van Aruba Australia â Reserve Bank of Australia Azerbaijan â National Bank of Azerbaijan Bahrain â Bahrain Monetary Agency Bangladesh â Bangladesh...
External links
Official website - Available in Bosnian, Serbian, Croatian and English
Peter Nicholl as Governor of the new CentralBank of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Nicholl is the second Governor of the CentralBank, succeeding Mr.
Under the Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina, enacted as part of the Dayton peace treaty, the CentralBank is the sole authority for monetary policy and the issuing of domestic currency.
Bosnia has been facing a dual challenge: not only must the nation recover from the war, but it also has to finish the transition from socialism to capitalism.
A CentralBank of Bosnia and Herzegovina was established in late 1997, successful debt negotiations were held with the London Club in December 1997 and with the Paris Club in October 1998, and a new currency, the Bosnia and Herzegovina convertible mark, was introduced in mid-1998.
According to World Bank estimates, GDP growth was 62% in the Federation and 25% in the RS in 1996, 35% in the Federation and flat in the RS in 1997, and continued growth in the Federation in 1998.