The BIS has 55 member central banks (all entitled to be represented and vote in the general meetings) and is administered by a Board of Directors. There are six ex-officio directors, comprising the governors of the central banks of Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, and the UK, as well as the chairman of the board of governors of the US Federal Reserve system. Each ex-officio member may appoint another member of the same nationality.
There are also not more than nine elected governors on the board. As of February 2008 these elected members were the governors of the central banks of Canada, China, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Switzerland and the president of the European Central Bank.
The BIS was established in 1930 to handle German reparations settlements from World War I. Its place in the international financial world was greatly restricted by the Bretton Woods Conference 1944 and superseded by the International Monetary Fund. Its liaising role among central banks has since become its primary function.
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Bank for International Settlements