| Bank Indonesia | |||||
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| Headquarters | Jakarta, Indonesia | ||||
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| Established | 1 July 1953 | ||||
| Governor | Darmin Nasution [1] | ||||
| Central bank of | Indonesia | ||||
| Currency | Indonesian rupiah | ||||
| ISO 4217 Code | IDR | ||||
| Website | www.bi.go.id | ||||
Bank Indonesia is the central bank of The Republic of Indonesia. Bank Indonesia is currently governed by Darmin Nasution, former interim governor. The last governor before the interim phase, Boediono, resigned due to his vice presidential candidacy in the Indonesian presidential election. Darmin Nasution was sworn in by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on September 1, 2010.
Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati was proposed as a candidate to take over the Bank Indonesia governorship earlier in 2009. However, the suggestion did not proceed and later she left the cabinet on 5 May 2010 and moved to the World Bank Group as Managing Director. [1][2]
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Bank Indonesia was founded on 1 July 1953 from the nationalization of De Javasche Bank, a Dutch bank dating from colonial times.[2]
For the next 15 years, the Bank of Indonesia carried on commercial activities as well as acting as the nation’s bank.
This came to an end with the Law No.13/1968 on the Central Bank, which was subsequently replaced by Law No.23/1999, freeing the bank from government interference.
Thereafter, the bank reported to the parliament (People's Representative Council) instead of the president, and the bank’s governor was no longer a member of the cabinet.
The bank is led by the board of governors, comprising the governor, a senior deputy governor and at between four and seven deputy governors.
The governor and deputy governors serve a five year term ,and are eligible for re-election for a maximum of two terms.
The governor and senior deputy governor are nominated and appointed by the president, with approval from the People's Representative Council. Deputy governors are nominated by the governor and appointed by the president, with approval of the People's Representative Council.
The president has no power to dismiss a member of the board, except when a board member voluntarily resigns, is permanently handicapped, or is proven guilty of criminal offence.
The Board of Governors Meeting is the bank’s highest decision-making forum. It is held at least once a month to decide on general policy on monetary affairs, and at least once a week to evaluate policy implementation or to decide on other strategic and principle policy.
The Bank is active in promoting financial inclusion policy and is a leading member of the Alliance for Financial Inclusion. It hosted AFI's second annual Global Policy Forum (GPF) [3] in Bali, Indonesia in 2010.
The Bank describes its strategic objectives as being [4]:
The aim is to integrate all Automated Teller Machines in ASEAN countries and should be integrated first in each countries. On January 16, 2012 interconnection between Bank Mandiri ATMs and Bank Central Asia ATMs (Prima ATMs) launchs at the first time.[3]
It operates 37 offices across Indonesia, and four representative offices in New York, London, Tokyo and Singapore
| No | Name | Period |
| 1. | Radius Prawiro | 1966–1973 |
| 2. | Rachmat Saleh | 1973–1983 |
| 3. | Arifin Siregar | 1983–1988 |
| 4. | Adrianus Mooy | 1988–1993 |
| 5. | J. Soedradjad Djiwandono | 1993–1998 |
| 6. | Syahril Sabirin | 1998–2003 |
| 7. | Burhanuddin Abdullah | 2003–2008 |
| 8. | Boediono | 2008–2009 |
| 9. | Darmin Nasution | 2009- |
Coordinates: 6°10′54″S 106°49′17″E / 6.18167°S 106.82139°E
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