International economic organizations govern global trade, finance, development, and monetary stability — and they are a consistent fixture in UPSC Prelims, Banking, RBI Grade B, SEBI, NABARD, and SSC CGL exams.
From the IMF and World Bank (the Bretton Woods twins) to the WTO, ADB, and BRICS-aligned New Development Bank, these institutions shape India’s economic relationships with the world. This page gives you a complete, updated list of the world’s most important economic organizations with their headquarters, current heads, membership, mandate, and exam-critical facts for confident, focused revision.
⚡ Quick Facts
- The IMF and World Bank were both created at the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944 — they are called the “Bretton Woods Institutions.”
- The WTO replaced GATT (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) on 1 January 1995 — India is a founding member.
- The Asian Development Bank (ADB) is headquartered in Manila, Philippines — Japan has the largest shareholding.
- The New Development Bank (NDB), established by BRICS nations in 2015, is headquartered in Shanghai, China.
- India is a member of G20, G77, WTO, IMF, World Bank, ADB, AIIB, and is a founding member of the NDB.
The biggest confusion: ADB vs AIIB. ADB (1966, Manila, Japan leads) vs AIIB (2016, Beijing, China leads — India is 2nd largest shareholder). Also: the IMF ≠ World Bank — IMF = monetary/BOP support; World Bank = development loans. Another trap: WEF (World Economic Forum) is not an intergovernmental body — it is a private foundation hosting Davos. And Ajay Banga (Indian-American, ex-Mastercard CEO) is World Bank President (2023) — not IMF head (that is Kristalina Georgieva).
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🌐 International Economic Organizations — Complete List
| # ↕ | Organization ↕ | HQ ↕ | Est. ↕ | Current Head (2026) | Members | India’s Role / Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | IMF (International Monetary Fund) | Washington D.C., USA | 1945 | Kristalina Georgieva (Managing Director) | 190 | Bretton Woods twin; India 8th largest quota holder; gave BOP support in 1991 crisis |
| 2 | World Bank Group | Washington D.C., USA | 1944 (IBRD) | Ajay Banga (President — Indian-American; ex-Mastercard CEO, since 2023) | 189 | 5 arms: IBRD+IDA+IFC+MIGA+ICSID; India largest historical borrower; first Indian-origin President |
| 3 | WTO (World Trade Organization) | Geneva, Switzerland | 1995 | Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (Director-General) | 164 | Replaced GATT on 1 Jan 1995; India is founding member; covers goods, services (GATS), IP (TRIPS) |
| 4 | ADB (Asian Development Bank) | Manila, Philippines | 1966 | Masato Kanda (President) | 68 | Japan = largest shareholder; USA = 2nd; India = 4th; funds infrastructure across Asia-Pacific |
| 5 | AIIB (Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank) | Beijing, China | 2016 | Jin Liqun (President) | 109 | China-led; India = 2nd largest shareholder; funds infrastructure; newer China-initiated alternative to ADB |
| 6 | NDB (New Development Bank — BRICS Bank) | Shanghai, China | 2015 | Dilma Rousseff (President) | BRICS + expanded | India founding member; focuses on infrastructure & sustainable development in emerging economies |
| 7 | BIS (Bank for International Settlements) | Basel, Switzerland | 1930 | Agustín Carstens (General Manager) | 63 central banks | “Central bank of central banks”; RBI is member; sets Basel norms (banking capital regulation) |
| 8 | EBRD (European Bank for Reconstruction & Development) | London, UK | 1991 | Odile Renaud-Basso (President) | 73 | Supports transition economies; India is a shareholder (non-regional member) |
| 9 | IFC (International Finance Corporation) | Washington D.C., USA | 1956 | Makhtar Diop (MD) | 185 | World Bank Group’s private sector arm; invests in private companies in developing nations |
| 10 | OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation & Development) | Paris, France | 1961 | Mathias Cormann (Secretary-General) | 38 | “Rich nations club”; India in accession talks (2023+); sets BEPS global tax standards; Pillar 2 = 15% minimum corporate tax |
| 11 | WEF (World Economic Forum) | Cologny / Geneva, Switzerland | 1971 | Klaus Schwab (Founder / Executive Chairman) | N/A (forum) | Davos Annual Meeting; Global Competitiveness Report; NOT an intergovernmental body — private foundation |
| 12 | UNCTAD (UN Conference on Trade and Development) | Geneva, Switzerland | 1964 | Rebeca Grynspan (Secretary-General) | 195 | UN body; promotes trade for developing nations; publishes World Investment Report (FDI data) |
| 13 | ILO (International Labour Organization) | Geneva, Switzerland | 1919 | Gilbert F. Houngbo (DG) | 187 | Oldest UN specialized agency; sets international labour standards; India is founding member |
| 14 | FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization) | Rome, Italy | 1945 | QU Dongyu (DG) | 195 | Eradicates hunger; food security; World Food Day = 16 October; India active member |
| 15 | IFAD (International Fund for Agricultural Development) | Rome, Italy | 1977 | Alvaro Lario (President) | 177 | Funds rural development and food security in developing nations; HQ in Rome alongside FAO |
| 16 | G20 (Group of Twenty) | Rotating (India 2023) | 1999 | Rotating Presidency | 20 major economies | India held Presidency 2023; theme: “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam”; New Delhi Declaration; African Union joined G20 |
| 17 | G7 (Group of Seven) | Rotating | 1975 | Rotating Presidency | 7 advanced nations | USA, UK, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Canada; India invited but not a member; EU observer |
| 18 | SWIFT | Brussels, Belgium | 1973 | Javier Pérez-Tanco (CEO) | 11,000+ institutions | Global financial messaging network; SWIFT ban used as financial sanction (Russia, Iran); India connected |
| 19 | SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organisation) | Beijing, China | 2001 | Zhang Ming (Secretary-General) | 9 full members | India full member since 2017; Pakistan also member; security + economic cooperation |
| 20 | BRICS | Rotating | 2009 (formal) | Rotating Presidency | 5 + 5 new (2024) | India founding member; expanded to 10 members Jan 2024; NDB + CRA are BRICS financial bodies |
| 21 | SAARC (South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation) | Kathmandu, Nepal | 1985 | Golam Sarwar (Secretary-General) | 8 | India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Maldives, Afghanistan; stalled due to India-Pakistan tensions |
| 22 | ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) | Jakarta, Indonesia | 1967 | Dr. Kao Kim Hourn (Secretary-General) | 10 | India is Dialogue Partner; ASEAN-India FTA; Indo-Pacific Economic Framework |
| 23 | AfDB (African Development Bank) | Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire | 1964 | Dr. Akinwumi Adesina (President) | 81 | India is non-regional member; invests in Africa’s infrastructure and development |
| 24 | APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation) | Singapore (Secretariat) | 1989 | Rotating (2024: Peru) | 21 economies | Forum (not formal body); covers 60% world GDP; India observer/dialogue partner; not a full member |
| 25 | CDB (Caribbean Development Bank) | Bridgetown, Barbados | 1969 | Dr. Hyginus Leon (President) | 29 | Regional bank for Caribbean nations; India is not a member |
⚖️ ADB vs AIIB — Most-Tested Comparison
| Parameter | ADB | AIIB |
|---|---|---|
| Established | 1966 | 2016 |
| Headquarters | Manila, Philippines | Beijing, China |
| Largest Shareholder | Japan | China |
| 2nd Largest Shareholder | USA | India |
| India’s Rank | 4th largest shareholder | 2nd largest shareholder |
| Members | 68 | 109 |
| Focus | Asia-Pacific development (broad) | Infrastructure in Asia |
| Current President | Masato Kanda | Jin Liqun |
🏦 World Bank Group — 5 Arms
All 5 arms are headed by the World Bank Group President. India primarily borrows from IBRD and IDA.
| Arm | Full Name | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| IBRD | International Bank for Reconstruction and Development | Loans to middle-income countries |
| IDA | International Development Association | Concessional loans to the poorest countries |
| IFC | International Finance Corporation | Invests in private sector in developing countries |
| MIGA | Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency | Provides political risk insurance for investors |
| ICSID | International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes | Resolves investment disputes between countries and investors |
⚖️ Compare Two Organizations
📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips
Both created at the Bretton Woods Conference, July 1944, New Hampshire, USA — to design the post-WWII monetary order. IMF: Provides short-term BOP support; maintains exchange rate stability; 190 members; HQ Washington D.C. World Bank (IBRD): Provides long-term development loans; fights poverty; HQ Washington D.C. Key distinction: IMF = monetary stability; World Bank = development finance. India is the largest historical borrower from the World Bank. IMF gave India emergency support in the 1991 BoP crisis. Ajay Banga (Indian-American, ex-Mastercard CEO) became World Bank President in 2023 — the first person of Indian origin to lead the institution.
The World Bank Group has 5 distinct arms — all headed by the same President. Mnemonic: “3 I’s + M + I” = IBRD + IDA + IFC + MIGA + ICSID. India primarily borrows from IBRD (middle-income loans) and IDA (concessional loans). IFC (private sector arm) separately invests in India’s private companies. MIGA provides political risk insurance. ICSID handles investor-state disputes.
Both fund infrastructure in Asia, but are very different. ADB (1966, Manila): Japan leads; India is 4th; broader Asia-Pacific development mandate. AIIB (2016, Beijing): China leads; India is 2nd; focused specifically on infrastructure. Key exam point: India has more proportional influence in AIIB (2nd) than ADB (4th). Both coexist and sometimes co-finance projects in India.
Original BRICS: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa. New members from January 2024: Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, UAE (Argentina was invited but declined). Now effectively 10 members. BRICS financial bodies: NDB (New Development Bank, Shanghai — like a development bank) + CRA (Contingent Reserve Arrangement — like an IMF for BRICS). India hosted G20 in 2023 (New Delhi Declaration, “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam” theme) and is a central voice in BRICS.
OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) — the “club of rich nations” — has 38 members, primarily from Europe, North America, and the Pacific. India formally applied for OECD accession in 2023 — a landmark economic diplomacy move. OECD sets global tax standards through the BEPS framework (Base Erosion and Profit Shifting) — including the Pillar 2 minimum corporate tax of 15%. India’s accession process involves review across 26 committees and is expected to take several years.
Bretton Woods twins: “IMF Monitors, World Bank Builds”
IMF = Monetary stability, BOP support | World Bank = Development loans, poverty reduction
World Bank 5 Arms: “3 I’s + M + I” = IBRD · IDA · IFC · MIGA · ICSID
I = IBRD (middle income) | I = IDA (poorest) | I = IFC (private sector) | M = MIGA (risk insurance) | I = ICSID (disputes)
ADB vs AIIB in one line: “ADB 1966 Manila Japan; AIIB 2016 Beijing China; India 4th vs 2nd”
🃏 Flashcards
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🧩 Practice Quiz
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Both the IMF and the World Bank (IBRD) were created at the Bretton Woods Conference held in New Hampshire, USA in July 1944. They are collectively known as the “Bretton Woods Institutions” and form the backbone of the international monetary and financial system established after World War II.
Japan is the largest shareholder in the ADB, headquartered in Manila, Philippines. The USA is the second largest shareholder and India is the fourth. This is in contrast to the AIIB (Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank), where China is the largest shareholder and India is the second largest — a frequently tested distinction.
The New Development Bank (NDB), established by BRICS nations in 2015, is headquartered in Shanghai, China. India is a founding member. The NDB focuses on infrastructure and sustainable development in emerging economies and has expanded its membership beyond the original five BRICS nations.
The World Trade Organization (WTO) replaced GATT on 1 January 1995, following the Uruguay Round of trade negotiations. GATT had been operational since 1947. WTO has a broader mandate covering goods, services (GATS), intellectual property (TRIPS), and dispute settlement. India is a founding member of the WTO.
Ajay Banga is of Indian-American heritage and served as CEO of Mastercard before being nominated by the USA and elected as World Bank President in 2023. He is the first person of Indian origin to lead the World Bank and has prioritised climate finance and private sector mobilisation in his presidency.
✅ Key Takeaways
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
The IMF and the World Bank are both Bretton Woods Institutions created in 1944, but serve different purposes. The IMF focuses on international monetary stability — it monitors exchange rates, provides short-term financial assistance to countries facing balance of payments crises, and helps maintain global financial stability. The World Bank focuses on long-term economic development and poverty reduction — it provides loans and grants for infrastructure, education, health, and governance projects. India received IMF support during the 1991 Balance of Payments crisis and is historically one of the World Bank’s largest borrowers. Both are headquartered in Washington D.C.
The AIIB (Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank) was established in 2016, is headquartered in Beijing, and is led by China (largest shareholder). India is the second largest shareholder in the AIIB. The AIIB focuses specifically on infrastructure investment across Asia and has 109 members globally. The ADB (Asian Development Bank), established in 1966, is headquartered in Manila, Philippines, led by Japan (largest shareholder), with the USA as second and India as fourth. The ADB covers broader development finance across Asia-Pacific. Both institutions fund India’s infrastructure projects — they coexist and sometimes co-finance projects.
India held the G20 Presidency from December 2022 to November 2023. The theme was “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam” (One Earth, One Family, One Future). The G20 Leaders’ Summit in New Delhi (September 2023) adopted the New Delhi Declaration. Key outcomes included consensus on global debt restructuring, climate finance for developing nations, the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) announcement, and the African Union’s full membership in the G20. India’s Presidency was widely regarded as one of the most successful, advancing the voice of the Global South.
International economic organizations are tested heavily in UPSC Prelims (International Relations, Economy), Banking Awareness (IBPS, SBI, RBI Grade B, NABARD, SEBI), and SSC CGL. Key tested facts include the Bretton Woods twins (IMF and World Bank, 1944), WTO replacing GATT (1995), ADB and AIIB headquarters and largest shareholders, the NDB (BRICS bank, Shanghai, 2015), Ajay Banga as World Bank President (2023), BRICS expansion to 10 members (January 2024), India’s G20 Presidency (2023, Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam), OECD accession talks (2023), BIS and Basel norms, SWIFT and financial sanctions, and India’s membership and shareholding positions in each institution.