HOW ARE WE ORGANIZED

About-Us-Oversight

The IDB prioritizes social inclusion and equality; productivity and innovation; and regional economic integration in its development work across Latin America and the Caribbean. In doing so, it addresses the cross-cutting issues of gender equality and diversity; climate change and environmental sustainability; and institutional capacity and the rule of law.

Learn more about the Institutional Strategy here.

BOARD OF GOVERNORS

Governance of the IDB is vested in the Board of Governors, which tops the organizational structure of the Bank. Each member country appoints a Governor, whose voting power is proportional to the capital in the Bank subscribed by his or her country. Governors are usually ministers of finance, presidents of central banks or other high-ranking officials.

The Board of Governors holds an annual meeting in March or April of each year to review the Bank's operations and make major policy decisions. It may also hold extraordinary meetings on key issues. Their decisions are reflected in the list of Approved Resolutions of the Board of Governors

The IDB's Governors are ultimately responsible for overseeing the Bank's activities and administration, although in practice, they delegate many of those responsibilities to the Board of Executive Directors.

BOARD OF EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS

The Board of Executive Directors is responsible for the conduct of the operations of the Bank and for this purpose may exercise all the powers delegated by the Board of Governors. The Board of Executive Directors usually meets once a week and, among other duties, is responsible for approving loan and guarantee proposals, policies, country strategies, the administrative budget, setting interest rates, and making decisions on borrowings and other financial matters.

The Board of Executive Directors is composed of 14 Executive Directors representing 48 member countries and also includes 14 Alternates, who have full power to act when their principals are absent.

The Board of Executive Directors has five Standing Committees that review and discuss documents. This task of the Committees is based on an Annual Work Program. All fourteen Chairs of the Board of Executive Directors are members of each of the Standing Committees.

The work of the Board of Executive Directors is guided by the Regulations of the Board of Executive Directors, the Code of Conduct of the Board of Executive Directors and the Consolidated Procedures and Terms of Reference of the Standing Committees.

In accordance with the Access to Information Policy, effective 1 January 2011, the Bank makes public the following records of the Board of Executive Directors:

IDB PRESIDENCY

The President of the IDB is the institution's legal representative and chief executive officer. He is responsible for the Bank’s day-to-day business and manages its operations and administration with the assistance of the staff of the Office of the Presidency.

The President, who is elected by the Board of Governors, chairs the meetings of the Board of Executive Directors but has no vote, except to break a tie.

The President also makes proposals on the general policy of the Bank for consideration by the Board.

To contact the president please write to PRE@iadb.org

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MANAGEMENT BIOGRAPHIES

President Ilan Goldfajn
Executive Vice President Jordan Schwartz
Vice President for Countries Anabel González
Vice President for Finance and Administration, Chief Financial Officer and General Manager of the Finance Department Gustavo De Rosa
Vice President for Sectors and Knowledge Ana María Ibáñez
Chief, Office of the Presidency Andre Soares
Secretary of the IDB Gerardo Corrochano
Deputy Secretary of the IDB Susana Sitja
Executive Advisor to the President Amanda Glassman
Chief Advisor of the Office of the Executive Vice President Nestor Roa
Ethics Officer Alberto Rivera-Fournier
Executive Auditor Alan Kato
Chief, Office of Institutional Integrity Laura Profeta
Manager, Office of Outreach and Partnerships Matias Bendersky
Manager, Office of Strategic Planning and Development Effectiveness Alexandre Meira da Rosa
Chief Risk Officer Søren Elbech
Chief Executive Officer, IDB Lab Irene Arias Hofman
General Manager, Country Department Southern Cone, and Country Representative in Chile María Florencia Attademo-Hirt
General Manager a.i., Andean Country Group and Country Representative in Venezuela Miguel Coronado
General Manager, Country Department Caribbean Group and Country Representative in Jamaica Anton Edmunds
General Manager, Country Department Central America, Haiti, Mexico, Panama, and the Dominican Republic, and Country Representative in Panama Tomás Bermúdez
Chief Economist and General Manager of the Research Department Eric Parrado Herrera
Manager, Social Sector Ferdinando Regalía
Manager, Infrastructure and Energy Sector Rigoberto Ariel Yépez-García
Manager, Institutions for Development Susana Cordeiro Guerra
Manager, Climate Change and Sustainable Development Sector Juan Pablo Bonilla
Manager, Knowledge, Innovation and Communication Sector Juliano Seabra
Manager, Integration and Trade Sector Fabrizio Opertti
General Counsel and General Manager, Legal Department John Scott
General Manager, Human Resources Department Beatriz López Galvis
Chief Information Officer and General Manager, Department of Information Technology Jean-Michel Baudoin
General Manager, Budget and Administrative Services Department Diego Murguiondo
MEMBER COUNTRIES
Argentina* ^ Ecuador* ^ Nicaragua* ^
Austria*  El Salvador* ^ Norway*
Bahamas* ^ Finland* Panama* ^
Barbados* ^  France*^ Paraguay* ^
Belgium* Germany*  Peru* ^
Belize* ^ Guatemala* ^ Portugal*^
Bolivia* ^ Guyana* ^ Slovenia
Brazil* ^ Haiti*^ Spain* ^
Canada^ Honduras* ^   Suriname*^ 
Chile* ^ Israel*  Sweden*^
China, People's Republic of* ^ Italy* ^ Switzerland*^
Colombia* ^ Jamaica* ^ Trinidad and Tobago* ^ 
Costa Rica* ^ Japan* ^ United Kingdom ^
Croatia Korea, Republic of* ^ United States* ^
Denmark*  Mexico* ^ Uruguay* ^  
Dominican Republic* ^ Netherlands* ^ Venezuela* ^
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* Member of the Inter-American Investment Corporation
^ Member of the Multilateral Investment Fund

Borrowing Member Countries

Non-Borrowing Member Countries

The IDB was founded in 1959 as a partnership between 19 Latin American countries and the United States. The original member countries were Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela and the United States.

Over the next several decades, the Bank expanded its membership, initially through the Western Hemisphere. Trinidad and Tobago became a member in 1967, to be soon joined by Barbados (1969), Jamaica (1969), Canada (1972), Guyana (1976), The Bahamas (1977) and Suriname (1980). The 22 non-regional or non-Western Hemisphere member countries, consisting of 16 European states plus Israel and Japan, joined between 1976 and 1986. Belize became a member in 1992 and Croatia and Slovenia joined as successor states of Yugoslavia in 1993. The Republic of Korea became a member country in 2005 and the People's Republic of China became a member country in 2009.

Cuba signed but did not ratify the Agreement Establishing the Bank, the institution’s charter, so it has not become a member.

Today the IDB is owned by 48 member states, of which 26 are borrowing members in Latin America and the Caribbean. Each member country's voting power is based on its subscription to the institution's Ordinary Capital (OC) resources.

To become a regional member, a country needs prior membership to the Organization of the American States. To become a nonregional member, a country needs to be a member of the International Monetary Fund. A second basic requirement in both cases is the subscription of shares of the Ordinary Capital and contribution to the Fund for Special Operations.