Club de Paris
The Paris Club is a group of currently 20 permanent members.
Other creditor countries can participate in negotiation meetings on a case by case basis, provided that certain conditions are met.
Finally, representatives of international financial institutions or countries can be invited to attend the meetings as observers.
http://www.clubdeparis.org
In 1956, the world economy was emerging from the aftermath of the Second World War. The Bretton Woods institutions were in the early stages of their existence, international capital flows were scarce, and exchange rates were fixed. Few African countries were independent and the world was divided along Cold War lines. Yet there was a strong spirit of international cooperation in the Western world and, when Argentina voiced the need to meet its sovereign creditors to prevent a default, France offered to host an exceptional three-day meeting in Paris that took place from 14 to 16 May 1956.
Today, the Paris Club provides debt treatments to debtor countries in a totally different world. Most countries are active players in the world economy and are interdependent through goods and capital flows. Financial globalization has created new opportunities for developing and emerging countries but has brought with it new risks of crisis. Sovereign debt is a minor source of borrowing for emerging economies given the development of emerging bond markets. But the low-income countries generally do not have access to these markets and assistance from bilateral and multilateral donors remains vital for them. Non-Paris Club creditors are becoming an increasingly important source of financing for these countries. Yet despite the fact that Paris Club creditors now have to deal with far more complex and diverse debt situations than in 1956, their original principles still stand.
There is little published on the Paris Club. You have to look for their effects.
https://www.state.gov/documents/organization/169731.pdf
(Note : the US Gov let the DRC out of a total of $1.8 Trillion of debt.)
London Club
An undertanding of what the London Club is should be fairly important on understanding government interaction with private banks.
http://vi.unctad.org/debt/debt/m3/Section%20II.htm
Commercial bank loans to developing countries, in particular to Latin American sovereign borrowers, started expanding in the 1950's. By the mid-sixties it had become part of commercial banks' business philosophies to develop global cross-border lending operations. The business boomed during the 1970's in the aftermath of the first oil shock, as banks found themselves in a perfect intermediation position. Banks, awash with liquidity, offered loans at competitive rates. As a result, external commercial debt in developing countries grew from an estimated US$ 36 billion in 1972, to approximately US$ 180 billion by 1979.
In the early 1980's, which witnessed a series of defaults, the rescheduling procedure for commercial bank debt was already in place. It had developed organically in the mid-seventies as a result of commercial bank negotiations with Peru and Zaire in 1976, and later with Turkey, Sudan and Poland. As a result of these initial operations, the commercial bank rescheduling process got the name 'London Club', as the meetings between commercial banks and Zaire, Turkey, Sudan and Poland took place in London, and English law governed most euro-currency loans which formed the bulk of rescheduled amounts.
As opposed to the Paris Club, which is a formalized name for meetings of official bilateral creditors, the London Club remains an informal appellation. In financial circles, the gathering of representatives from commercial banks for negotiations with a debtor country is referred to as a meeting of the Bank Advisory Committee, or Steering Committee , or Coordinating Committee. As opposed to the Paris Club, which has a permanent Secretariat based in the French Treasury, the London Club has no such permanent structure. The name London Club is also misleading as most of the meetings between commercial banks and creditors in fact took place in New York during the 1980's and early 1990's, which witnessed the peak of London Club activity with approximately 200 deals reached during this period.
Multilateral Development Banks
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_financial_institutions
Bretton Woods institutions
The best-known IFIs were established after World War II to assist in the reconstruction of Europe and provide mechanisms for international cooperation in managing the global financial system . They include the World Bank, the IMF, and the International Finance Corporation. Today the largest IFI in the world is the European Investment Bank which lent 61 billion euros to global projects in 2011.
Whoever worked on this wiki did a wonderful job at compiling a list of these banks. I've placed 3 from this list of 26 organizations. If you want to know where the NWO goes to the atm then this list is key.
The World Bank
The World Bank has set two ambitious goals to push extreme poverty to no more 3 percent by 2030, and to promote shared prosperity and greater equity in the developing world.
The World Bank is like a cooperative, made up of 189 member countries. These member countries, or shareholders, are represented by a Board of Governors, who are the ultimate policymakers at the World Bank. Generally, the governors are member countries' ministers of finance or ministers of development. They meet once a year at the Annual Meetings of the Boards of Governors of the World Bank Group and the International Monetary Fund.
The governors delegate specific duties to 25 Executive Directors, who work on-site at the Bank. The five largest shareholders appoint an executive director, while other member countries are represented by elected executive directors.
http://www.worldbank.org
search through their publications (77 docs on haiti) https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/
Bringing HOPE to Haiti's Apparel Industry : Improving Competitiveness through Factory-level
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/bitstream/handle/10986/3168/533160ESW0P11410Report10January2010.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
Internation Monetary Fund
The IMF, also known as the Fund, was conceived at a UN conference in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, United States, in July 1944. The 44 countries at that conference sought to build a framework for economic cooperation to avoid a repetition of the competitive devaluations that had contributed to the Great Depression of the 1930s.
The IMF's responsibilities: The IMF's primary purpose is to ensure the stability of the international monetary system—the system of exchange rates and international payments that enables countries (and their citizens) to transact with each other. The Fund's mandate was updated in 2012 to include all macroeconomic and financial sector issues that bear on global stability.
http://www.imf.org
search through documents http://www.imf.org/external/ns/search.aspx
African Development Bank Group
The overarching objective of the African Development Bank (AfDB) Group is to spur sustainable economic development and social progress in its regional member countries (RMCs), thus contributing to poverty reduction.
The Bank Group achieves this objective by: Mobilizing and allocating resources for investment in RMCs; and providing policy advice and technical assistance to support development efforts.
https://www.afdb.org
Similarly you have other sub IMF banks like
The Marshall Plan
http://marshallfoundation.org
From 1945 through 1947, the United States was already assisting European economic recovery with direct financial aid. Military assistance to Greece and Turkey was being given. The newly formed United Nations was providing humanitarian assistance. In January 1947, U. S. President Harry Truman appointed George Marshall, the architect of victory during WWII, to be Secretary of State. Writing in his diary on January 8, 1947, Truman said, “Marshall is the greatest man of World War II. He managed to get along with Roosevelt, the Congress, Churchill, the Navy and the Joint Chiefs of Staff and he made a grand record in China. When I asked him to [be] my special envoy to China, he merely said, ‘Yes, Mr. President I’ll go.’ No argument only patriotic action. And if any man was entitled to balk and ask for a rest, he was. We’ll have a real State Department now.”
In just a few months, State Department leadership under Marshall with expertise provided by George Kennan, William Clayton and others crafted the Marshall Plan concept, which George Marshall shared with the world in a speech on June 5, 1947 at Harvard. Officially known as the European Recovery Program (ERP), the Marshall Plan was intended to rebuild the economies and spirits of western Europe, primarily. Marshall was convinced the key to restoration of political stability lay in the revitalization of national economies. Further he saw political stability in Western Europe as a key to blunting the advances of communism in that region.
Marshall Plan nations were assisted greatly in their economic recovery. From 1948 through 1952 European economies grew at an unprecedented rate. Trade relations led to the formation of the North Atlantic alliance. Economic prosperity led by coal and steel industries helped to shape what we know now as the European Union.
Read that last part carefully. Led to the formation of the EU. (The Marshall plan is still in effect.)