Bank for International Settlements
International financial institution and central-bank cooperation forum
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
67/100
Raw Score
57/85
Confidence
82%
Evidence
Strong
About
The Bank for International Settlements is the central-bank-owned international financial institution that supports monetary and financial stability, hosts major supervisory cooperation, and acts as a bank for central banks.
BIS shows above-neutral institutional alignment through a long public-financial-stability mission, central-bank cooperation, annual reporting, standard-setting support, and post-crisis reform architecture. The score is moderated by a severe wartime gold legacy, technocratic opacity, limited direct democratic accountability, and the fact that global financial-stability benefits are mediated through central banks rather than direct public service delivery.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Above-neutral alignment: strong public-financial-stability mission, cooperation infrastructure, audited reporting, and post-crisis reform capacity are tempered by a severe wartime gold legacy and technocratic accountability limits.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Official mission centers monetary and financial stability through central-bank cooperation rather than private extraction.
BIS publishes values including integrity, improvement, inclusion, sustainability, and social responsibility.
Long-term actions broadly match the stability mission, though wartime conduct and technocratic opacity complicate the record.
Contribution to Others
Financial stability work can protect households, depositors, workers, and taxpayers indirectly through safer financial systems.
Benefits are mostly system-level and mediated through central banks; direct vulnerable-group service is limited.
Member central banks represent countries accounting for most global GDP, and supervisory standards have global reach.
Standards reduce systemic risk, but Basel frameworks are debated for complexity, procyclicality, and uneven impact.
Personal Discipline
The public record shows technocratic restraint, risk-management culture, and prudential limits rather than faith-rooted worship practice.
BIS frames digital innovation and research as public goods for central banks, but it is not a charitable institution.
Ethics, conduct, risk management, and audited statements are visible, but some high-impact deliberation remains closed.
Reliability
Annual reports, audited financial statements, histories, and archival material create a substantial public record.
Formal central-bank governance is clear, but public accountability is indirect and highly technocratic.
Wartime Reichsbank gold transactions and later restitution impose a serious integrity burden despite later disclosure.
BIS has repeatedly delivered cooperation, research, and banking functions, while standards depend on member implementation.
Stability Under Pressure
Postwar monetary cooperation and post-2008 Basel III reforms show repeated crisis-response capacity.
Basel reforms, implementation monitoring, and revised principles show learning from prior weaknesses.
BIS has survived major geopolitical and financial shocks, but legitimacy depends on continuing transparency and member trust.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
BIS opened as the oldest international financial institution
The BIS was created in 1930 following the Hague Conference, initially tied to German reparations settlement and wider central-bank cooperation.
→ Created a permanent institution for central-bank cooperation and international settlement functions.
highWorld War II Reichsbank gold operations created lasting accountability burden
BIS archival reporting later documented wartime gold transactions for Reichsbank accounts and identified part of the deposited gold as looted from European central banks, later restituted through the Tripartite Gold Commission.
→ The episode remains the central moral and institutional integrity controversy in BIS history.
highBIS acted as technical agent for European payments cooperation
After World War II, European countries used BIS technical capacity in the creation and operation of the European Payments Union, supporting currency stabilisation and convertibility.
→ Helped support postwar European monetary cooperation and restoration of convertibility.
highBasel Committee formed after international banking-market disturbances
Central bank governors from Group of Ten countries established the Basel Committee, headquartered at BIS, to improve banking supervision and financial stability after events including the failure of Bankhaus Herstatt.
→ Created a recurring supervisory forum that developed the Basel Concordat and later global banking standards.
highBasel Capital Accord set a global bank-capital benchmark
The Basel Committee released the 1988 Basel Capital Accord, calling for a minimum ratio of capital to risk-weighted assets and later influencing bank regulation beyond member countries.
→ Established a widely adopted capital-adequacy framework for internationally active banks.
highBasel III reforms responded to global financial-crisis weaknesses
After the 2007-09 financial crisis exposed excessive leverage, inadequate liquidity buffers, weak risk governance, and poor incentives, the Basel Committee developed Basel III capital, liquidity, leverage, and disclosure reforms.
→ Produced a stronger global prudential framework, while debate continued over implementation, complexity, and procyclical effects.
highAnnual Report emphasized collaboration, audited statements, and digital public goods
The 2024/25 Annual Report described BIS work in central-bank collaboration, banking services, research, financial stability, innovation, digital public goods, governance, and externally audited financial statements.
→ Shows continuing institutional commitment to transparency through annual reporting and a modern public-goods role in central-bank technology.
mediumPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Second World War Reichsbank gold operations
1939BIS maintained and processed gold-account transactions involving the Reichsbank during the war; later BIS archival reporting identified a portion of new Reichsbank deposits as looted from European central banks.
Response: The institution later published archival details and reported restitution through the Tripartite Gold Commission, but the original conduct remains a severe accountability failure.
negativePostwar European monetary reconstruction
1950Europe needed currency stabilisation and payments cooperation after World War II.
Response: BIS served as a technical agent for European payments cooperation, supporting recovery and convertibility.
positiveGlobal financial crisis and Basel framework weaknesses
2008The financial crisis exposed excessive leverage, poor liquidity buffers, weak governance, and procyclicality in the banking system.
Response: The BIS-hosted Basel Committee developed Basel III reforms and implementation monitoring, improving resilience while leaving debates over complexity and impact.
positive_mixedProgression
crisis years
World War II gold operations created a grave historical integrity problem that still shapes institutional assessment.
decliningcurrent stage
The Basel Process, research, banking services, annual reporting, and innovation work give BIS broad modern public-financial-governance relevance.
stableearly years
Founded to handle post-World War I settlement functions and provide a standing central-bank cooperation mechanism.
mixedgrowth years
BIS rebuilt public utility through technical support for European payments, Basel supervision, research, and central-bank cooperation.
improvingBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Central-bank cooperation as a durable institutional purpose across settlement, payments, supervision, research, banking services, and innovation.
Concerns
- • Technocratic public benefit with indirect democratic accountability.
- • Serious historical integrity burden from wartime Reichsbank gold operations, partly mitigated by later disclosure and restitution.
Evidence Quality
7
Strong
3
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: strong
Institutional assessment based only on public evidence; it does not judge hidden intention or private belief.