European Investment Bank

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European Investment Bank
European Investment Bank (emblem).svg
Founded 1958
Type International financial institution
Location
  • Luxembourg
Owner EU member states
President
Werner Hoyer
Employees
2,000
Mission EU's long-term lending institution
Website eib.org
European Union
Flag of the European Union

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government
of the European Union

The European Investment Bank (EIB) is the European Union's nonprofit long-term lending institution established in 1958 under the Treaty of Rome. As a "policy-driven bank" whose shareholders are the member states of the EU, the EIB uses its financing operations to bring about European integration and social cohesion.[1] It should not be confused with the European Central Bank.

The EIB is a publicly owned international financial institution and its shareholders are the EU member states. Thus the member states set the bank's broad policy goals and oversee the two independent decision-making bodies—the board of governors and the board of directors.[2]

It is the world's largest international public lending institution.[3]

In 2009, Caisse des Dépots, Cassa Depositi e Prestiti, KfW and European Investment Bank founded the Long-Term Investors Club.[4]

History

The European Investment Bank was founded in Brussels in 1958 when the Treaty of Rome came into force. It relocated to Luxembourg, its current headquarters, in 1968. By 1999, it had more than 1,000 staff members, a figure that had nearly doubled by 2012; when the EIB was founded in 1958 it had 66 employees.[5]

The EIB Group was formed in 2000, comprising the EIB and the European Investment Fund (EIF), the EU's venture capital arm that provides finances and guarantees for small and medium enterprises (SMEs). The EIB is the EIF's majority shareholder, with 62% of the shares.[6] In 2012, the EIB Institute was created, with the goal of promoting "European initiatives for the common good" in EU Member States and candidate and potential candidate countries, as well as EFTA nations.

The total subscribed capital of the Bank was EUR 232 billion in 2012.[7] The capital of the EIB was virtually doubled between 2007 and 2009 in response to the crisis. The EU heads of government agreed to increase paid-in capital by EUR 10 billion in June 2012, with implementation expected in early 2013.

For the fiscal year 2011, EIB lent EUR 61 billion in various loan products, bringing total outstanding loans to EUR 395 billion; one-third higher than at the end of 2008. Nearly 90% of these were with EU member states with the remainder dispersed between around 150 "partner countries" (in southern and eastern Europe, the Mediterranean region, Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean and the Pacific). The bank uses its AAA credit rating and funds itself by raising equivalent amounts on the capital markets.

Mission

As the "Bank of the European Union", the EIB's mission is to make a difference to the future of Europe and its partners by supporting sound investments which further EU policy goals.[8]

Although about 90 percent of projects financed by the EIB are based in EU member countries, the bank does fund projects in about 150 other countries—non-EU Southeastern European countries, Mediterranean partner countries, ACP countries, Asian and Latin American countries, Russia and other eastern neighbours of the EU.[9] According to the EIB, it works in these countries to implement the financial pillar of the union's external cooperation and development policies by encouraging private sector development, infrastructure development, security of energy supply and environmental sustainability. In the wake of the 2014 Russian military intervention in Ukraine, the Council of the European Union instructed the EIB to suspend the signature of new financing operations in Russia.[10]

Strategy

Operating strategy:

  • To finance viable capital projects which further EU objectives
  • To borrow on the capital markets to finance these projects

Lending strategy within the EU

Within the EU the EIB has six priority objectives:

  • Cohesion and convergence (regional policy)
  • Support for small and medium-sized enterprises
  • Environmental sustainability
  • Knowledge economy
  • Development of Trans-European Networks of transport and energy
  • Sustainable, competitive, and secure energy supply

Lending strategy outside the EU

Outside the EU the EIB's priority objectives for lending activity are:

  • Private sector development
  • Financial sector development
  • Infrastructure development
  • Security of energy supply
  • Environmental sustainability
  • EU presence

When making loans outside the EU, the bank has lending mandates based on EU external cooperation and development policies, which differ from region to region.

  1. Pre-Accession: Candidate and Potential Candidate countries in the Enlargement region (states which could possibly join the EU)
  2. European Neighbourhood: Mediterranean Neighbourhood / Russia and Eastern Neighbours
  3. Development: Africa, Pacific and Caribbean (ACP) / Republic of South Africa
  4. Economic Cooperation: Asia and Latin America (ALA)

Within pre-accession countries, activities support both the EU priority lending objectives and the objectives of the external mandates.[8]

Corporate policies

Transport Policy (renewed in 2011), Transparency Policy (renewed in 2010), Corporate Social Responsibility Policy, Governance at the EIB, Complaints Mechanism Policy (renewed in 2010), Anti-Fraud and Anti-Corruption Policy, Integrity Policy and Compliance Charter, Statement on Environmental and Social Principles and Standards, EIB Whistleblowing Policy, EIB Policy towards weakly regulated, non-transparent and uncooperative jurisdictions.

Governance

The EIB is governed by the:

  • Board of Governors – usually the Finance Ministers of the Member States. Their mandate is to authorise EIB activities outside the Union, form credit policy guidelines and approve the annual accounts.
  • Board of directors – twenty-eight members (one nominated by each member state and one by the European Commission).[11]:13–14 There are eighteen alternates,[11]:13–14 meaning that some of these positions are shared by groups of states.[12] The board also co-opts a maximum of six experts (three directors and three alternates),[11]:13–14 who participate in the Board meetings in an advisory capacity, without voting rights. The Board has sole power to take decisions in respect of loans, guarantees and borrowings. They are responsible only to the bank.
  • Management committee – EIB President and eight vice-presidents
  • Audit committee – six members appointed by the Board of Governors

Offices

EIB headquarters, East building

The headquarters is situated at 100 Boulevard Konrad Adenauer in Kirchberg, Luxembourg.[13] The building's first phase, now the West building, was designed by British architect Sir Denys Lasdun and is one of his few works outside the UK.

EIB headquarters, West building

An extension, the East building, was designed by Ingenhoven Architects, Düsseldorf. Covered by a glass roof that spans the entire structure, the extension adds 72,500 meters of office space.[14]

The EIB has offices in the different EU countries, including Athens, Berlin, Brussels, Bucharest, Fort-de-France, Martinique (one of France's overseas departments); Helsinki, Lisbon, London, Madrid, Paris, Rome, Sofia, Warsaw, Copenhagen and Vienna.

Outside of the EU, it has offices in Belgrade, Serbia; Kiev, Ukraine Ankara, Turkey; Beijing, China; Cairo, Egypt; Dakar, Senegal; Istanbul, Turkey; Nairobi, Kenya; Pretoria, South Africa; Rabat, Morocco; Sydney, Australia; and Tunis, Tunisia and Tbilisi, Georgia.[15]

In 2007, the EIB opened a regional office in Helsinki, located at the headquarters of the Nordic Investment Bank (NIB), with the aim of enhancing the Bank's presence in the Baltic Sea region.[16]

Presidents

The EIB president is the head of the Management Committee, a nine-member executive body that is responsible for the day-to-day operations of the EIB. They are "appointed by the EIB's Board of Governors, on a proposal from the board of directors", for a renewable six-year term. The President is also the chair of the board of directors.[17]

The current EIB president is Werner Hoyer, a German politician with a doctorate in economics. He became president in January 2012.[18]

Former presidents include:[19]

  • Werner Hoyer (Germany): January 2012 –
  • Philippe Maystadt (Belgium): March 2000 – December 2011
  • Sir Brian Unwin (UK): April 1993 – December 1999
  • Ernst-Günther Bröder (Germany): August 1984 – March 1993
  • Yves Le Portz (France): September 1970 – July 1984
  • Paride Formentini (Italy): June 1959 – September 1970
  • Pietro Campilli (Italy): February 1958 – May 1959

Shareholders

The shareholders of the EIB are the 28 member states of the EU, while each state’s share in the EIB’s capital is based on its economic weight within the European Union (expressed in GDP) at the time of its accession.[20] Shares of capital are following:[21]

Country Capital (EUR mil.) Capital (%)
Germany 39,195 16.1
France 39,195 16.1
Italy 39,195 16.1
United Kingdom 39,195 16.1
Spain 23,517 9.7
Belgium 10,865 4.5
Netherlands 10,865 4.5
Sweden 7,208 3.0
Denmark 5,501 2.3
Austria 5,393 2.2
other member states 23,156 9.5
Total 243,284 100

Active projects

Controversial projects

There are a few projects financed or under the appraisal procedure by the EIB that have raised objections from local communities as well as international and national NGOs.[22][23] Such projects include the M10 motorway in Russia[citation needed], the Gazela Bridge in Serbia,[citation needed] the Rača Bridge in Croatia,[citation needed] the D1 motorway in the Slovakia, Šoštanj Power Plant in Slovenia,[24] the Bujagali Hydroelectric Power Station in Uganda[25] and the mining sector in Zambia.[26]

The Transparency Policy of the EIB has been heavily criticised by NGOs in the past. In 2004, Article 19 issued a memorandum in which it accused the EIB of failing to meet international (including EU) standards on openness.[27] However, NGOs acknowledge important improvements in the EIB's transparency since 2004, and the new transparency policy adopted in 2010 is widely considered to be up to standards reflecting international best practice.[28]

The EIB addresses complaints internally and the bank can also be referred to the European Ombudsman if concerns about maladministration persist.[29]

See also

Notes and references

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  3. Policing the Banks: Accountability Mechanisms for the Financial Sector, Maartje van Putten, p.146
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  12. The alternates are nominated as follows:
    • 2 by Germany
    • 2 by France
    • 2 by Italy
    • 2 by the UK
    • 1 jointly by Spain and Portugal
    • 1 jointly by Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands
    • 2 jointly by Denmark, Greece, Ireland and Romania
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  22. Challenging the European Investment Bank (PDF)
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External links