President Jozef Makúch Founded 1 January 1993 | Established 1 January 1993 Website www.nbs.sk | |
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Preceded by The State Bank of Czechoslovakia, 1950–1992 Profiles |
Ride from top floor national bank of slovakia
National Bank of Slovakia (Slovak: Národná banka Slovenska, NBS), is the central bank of Slovakia, which is a member of the European Union and the European System of Central Banks. Since 1 January 2009, it has also been a member of Eurosystem.
Contents
- Ride from top floor national bank of slovakia
- Iais pensions group presented by julia cillikova national bank of slovakia
- History
- Headquarters
- References
It has 9 regional branches and it is superior to all the banks in Slovakia.
Iais pensions group presented by julia cillikova national bank of slovakia
History
It is an independent institution, whose basic goal is to hold price stability. It was created on 1 January 1993, together with the Czech National Bank, as a split of the State Bank of Czechoslovakia.
Authorised by the Slovak Government, the Bank represents Slovakia in international financial institutions and in international money market transactions related to monetary policy performance.
The supreme governing body of the National Bank of Slovakia is the Bank Board, which formulates monetary policy, applies appropriate instruments, and rules on monetary measures. It is composed of the Governor and two Vice-Governors, who are appointed and dismissed by the President of Slovakia and other eight members, who are appointed and dismissed by the Slovak government following the proposal of the Governor. As many as three members of the Bank Board are not required to be in a working relationship with the NBS.
Since 12 January 2010 the head of the National Bank of Slovakia has been Doc. Ing. Jozef Makuch, PhD. He was appointed the Governor by the President of Slovakia on 1 January 2010.
Headquarters
The headquarters office building of the National Bank of Slovakia was opened on 23 May 2002 in Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia. At a height of 111.6 metres and with 33 floors it is the highest building in Bratislava, not including antenna height.