PT Bank Negara Indonesia (Persero) Tbk
State-owned commercial bank and Indonesian financial-services institution
of 100 · improving trend · Strong moral/spiritual alignment
Standing
62/100
Raw Score
52/85
Confidence
72%
Evidence
Broad
About
Bank Negara Indonesia is a historically important Indonesian state-owned bank with strong national-development, commercial-banking, MSME, and sustainability-reporting evidence, balanced by serious governance failures in the 2003 letter-of-credit scandal and continuing environmental-finance criticism.
The observable pattern is mixed-positive: BNI has broad public reach, formal governance, regulated reporting, and financial-inclusion commitments, but its goodness alignment is constrained by past internal-control failure and weak external assessments of forest-risk lending policy.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
BNI shows strong public-purpose origins, broad financial reach, and improving formal sustainability governance, but historic internal-control failure and current environmental-finance criticism keep the profile mixed rather than clearly strong.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
National-development mandate and state-building role are well evidenced.
Formal mission, governance, and sustainability language are visible but partly institutionally self-reported.
Large public banking reach aligns with mandate, while environmental-finance criticism complicates the pattern.
Contribution to Others
Broad commercial and MSME banking role supports access to financial services.
Official reporting describes community, SDG, and financial-inclusion programs.
Stakeholder engagement is disclosed, but outcomes are not fully independently visible.
Forest-risk finance criticism indicates incomplete harm prevention in high-risk sectors.
Personal Discipline
Sustainable-finance commitments exist, but restraint in controversial sectors remains contested.
Community and national-development obligations are visible in public reporting.
Anti-corruption and code-of-ethics architecture is disclosed after a record that includes serious past failure.
Reliability
Listed-company and sustainability reporting are substantial and recurring.
OJK and Bank Indonesia supervision plus public reporting support a moderate-positive score.
The 2003 L/C scandal is a severe negative integrity marker.
External observers note limited grievance channels for finance-affected communities.
Stability Under Pressure
BNI survived recapitalization, scandal, and market pressure while remaining systemically important.
Post-scandal and recent ESG governance structures suggest reform, though outcome evidence is uneven.
Climate-risk and green-finance disclosures indicate improving readiness with active credibility tests.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Founded as Indonesia's first post-independence state bank
BNI was established under Government Regulation in Lieu of Law No. 2 of 1946 and initially served as a central bank before later becoming a state-owned commercial bank.
→ Created a foundational financial institution for Indonesia's postcolonial state-building period.
highMandated as a state-owned commercial bank supporting people's economy and national development
Law No. 17 of 1968 confirmed BNI's role as a bank mandated to improve the people's economy and participate in national development.
→ BNI's institutional purpose shifted into a public-development commercial banking role.
highListed shares publicly while remaining majority state-owned
BNI became the first Indonesian state-owned enterprise bank to list publicly, broadening accountability to market investors while retaining state majority ownership.
→ Introduced stronger market transparency expectations and a mixed state-public ownership model.
mediumLetter-of-credit scandal exposed serious internal-control weaknesses
Indonesian reporting and Jakarta Post coverage described a major L/C scandal involving BNI's Kebayoran Baru branch, weak supervision, and transactions made without adequate checks.
→ The scandal damaged profitability and trust and became a major negative integrity marker in BNI's public record.
highSustainability and governance disclosures strengthened through formal reporting
BNI's 2024 sustainability and annual-report disclosures identify climate change as an issue, describe ESG governance, sustainability targets, anti-corruption policy, stakeholder engagement, and board responsibility for sustainability reporting.
→ Improved transparency and reportability, though disclosure quality does not by itself prove full real-world impact.
mediumCivil-society assessments criticize forest-risk finance policies
BankTrack and Forests & Finance list BNI among banks exposed to controversial sectors and report a weak forest-risk policy score, including credit exposure to forest-risk commodity companies between 2016 and 2022.
→ Creates a material caveat against BNI's sustainability claims, especially around due diligence for high-risk commodity finance.
mediumPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Asian financial crisis aftermath and government recapitalization
1999BNI was recapitalized by the Indonesian government after systemic banking stress.
Response: The bank continued as a state-majority listed institution and later conducted corporate actions to strengthen capital structure.
resilience_with_public_support_dependency2003 L/C scandal
2003A major letter-of-credit scandal exposed weak branch-level controls and inadequate transaction checks.
Response: Contemporary reports describe internal audit findings and intended tightening of risk management and supervision.
negative_integrity_pressure_with_partial_reform_signalClimate and biodiversity finance scrutiny
2025Civil-society tracking highlighted weak forest-risk policy scores and exposure to forest-risk sectors.
Response: BNI reports ESG roadmaps, green financing, climate stress testing, and sustainability governance, but the criticism remains material.
active_accountability_pressureEvidence Quality
4
Strong
3
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: broad
Institutional profile based on observable public evidence; it does not judge hidden intent or private belief.