Myanmar and the International Monetary Fund (original) (raw)
Myanmar (officially known as the Republic of the Union of Myanmar, and also known as Burma), officially joined the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as of January 3, 1952; shortly before the end of term for the Union of Myanmar's first President, Sao Shwe Thaik, and the induction of Ba U. Since the induction of Myanmar as a member of the institution, they have made six arrangements with the IMF with its most recent arrangement made in 1981. As of 2019, they are currently led by Kyaw Kyaw Maung and Alternate U Soe Thein; their Special Drawing Rights (SDR) is at 0.79 million and quota consists of $516.8 million SDR which is 0.11% of the total IMF funds available. As of 2019, the country is under one of the twenty-four Executive Boards that facilitates the day-to-day operations of the IMF, l
Property | Value |
---|---|
dbo:abstract | Myanmar (officially known as the Republic of the Union of Myanmar, and also known as Burma), officially joined the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as of January 3, 1952; shortly before the end of term for the Union of Myanmar's first President, Sao Shwe Thaik, and the induction of Ba U. Since the induction of Myanmar as a member of the institution, they have made six arrangements with the IMF with its most recent arrangement made in 1981. As of 2019, they are currently led by Kyaw Kyaw Maung and Alternate U Soe Thein; their Special Drawing Rights (SDR) is at 0.79 million and quota consists of $516.8 million SDR which is 0.11% of the total IMF funds available. As of 2019, the country is under one of the twenty-four Executive Boards that facilitates the day-to-day operations of the IMF, led by Alisara Mahasandana and Alternate Keng Heng Tan; their co-board members consist of Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Republic of Fiji, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Nepal, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Tonga, and Vietnam. The Executive Board accumulates around 218,545 total votes which account for 4.34% of the Fund's total, Myanmar allocates 6,633 of the votes (0.13% of the total votes in the IMF). (en) |
dbo:thumbnail | wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Map_Myanmar.png?width=300 |
dbo:wikiPageID | 62491245 (xsd:integer) |
dbo:wikiPageLength | 12561 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger) |
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID | 1026956517 (xsd:integer) |
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink | dbr:Cambodia dbr:Rohingya_people dbr:Sao_Shwe_Thaik dbc:International_Monetary_Fund_relations dbr:Hong_Kong dbr:House_arrest dbr:Vietnam dbr:1990_Myanmar_general_election dbr:Chiang_Mai_Initiative dbr:Malaysia dbr:Singapore dbr:Stateless_nation dbr:Zeid_Raad_Al_Hussein dbr:Spillover_(economics) dbr:Measures_of_national_income_and_output dbr:Aung_San_Suu_Kyi dbr:Ba_U dbr:Bangladesh dbr:Brunei dbr:Brunei_Darussalam dbr:Tonga dbr:2008_Constitution_of_Myanmar dbr:Ethnic_group dbr:Fiji dbr:Balance_of_payments dbr:Balance_of_trade dbr:Foreign_exchange_reserves dbr:Private_sector dbr:International_Monetary_Fund dbr:Japan dbr:Thailand dbr:State-owned_bank dbc:Economy_of_Myanmar dbr:China dbr:Laos dbr:Recapitalization dbr:Religious_violence dbr:Philippines dbr:South_Korea dbr:Special_drawing_rights dbr:Gross_domestic_product dbr:Humanitarianism dbr:Indonesia dbr:Inflation_rate dbr:Nepal dbr:Office_of_the_United_Nations_High_Commissioner_for_Human_Rights dbr:Rakhine_State dbr:Market_economy dbr:Risk_management dbr:Military_junta dbr:Multi-party_system dbr:Taxation dbr:File:Map_Myanmar.png dbr:File:Rohingya_displaced_Muslims_022.jpg |
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate | dbt:Further dbt:Orphan |
dcterms:subject | dbc:International_Monetary_Fund_relations dbc:Economy_of_Myanmar |
rdfs:comment | Myanmar (officially known as the Republic of the Union of Myanmar, and also known as Burma), officially joined the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as of January 3, 1952; shortly before the end of term for the Union of Myanmar's first President, Sao Shwe Thaik, and the induction of Ba U. Since the induction of Myanmar as a member of the institution, they have made six arrangements with the IMF with its most recent arrangement made in 1981. As of 2019, they are currently led by Kyaw Kyaw Maung and Alternate U Soe Thein; their Special Drawing Rights (SDR) is at 0.79 million and quota consists of $516.8 million SDR which is 0.11% of the total IMF funds available. As of 2019, the country is under one of the twenty-four Executive Boards that facilitates the day-to-day operations of the IMF, l (en) |
rdfs:label | Myanmar and the International Monetary Fund (en) |
owl:sameAs | wikidata:Myanmar and the International Monetary Fund https://global.dbpedia.org/id/C3kms |
prov:wasDerivedFrom | wikipedia-en:Myanmar_and_the_International_Monetary_Fund?oldid=1026956517&ns=0 |
foaf:depiction | wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Map_Myanmar.png wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Rohingya_displaced_Muslims_022.jpg |
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf | wikipedia-en:Myanmar_and_the_International_Monetary_Fund |
is foaf:primaryTopic of | wikipedia-en:Myanmar_and_the_International_Monetary_Fund |