Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dollar Savings Bank was the first bank in Pennsylvania and among the first ten in the nation to use an online teller accounting system. On April 1, 1975, Dollar Savings Bank launched Pay-By-Phone, a fully automated bill payment service for savings account customers. The system was the first in Pennsylvania and the second in the United States. [6]
OneWest Bank, a division of First Citizens BancShares, was a regional bank with over 60 retail branches in Southern California. OneWest Bank specialized in consumer deposit and lending including personal checking and savings accounts, money market accounts, CDs, and home loan products.
In 1980, Farmers & Merchants Bank, Milford Center and The First National Bank of Burton merged with Huntington Bancshares. [15] In 1981, the bank acquired Alexandria Bank Company and renamed it The Huntington State Bank, with a loan production office opening in Cincinnati. In 1982, the bank merged with the Reeves Banking and Trust Company. [15]
Electronic governance or e-governance is the application of information technology for delivering government services, exchange of information, communication transactions, integration of various stand-alone systems between government to citizen (G2C), government-to-business (G2B), government-to-government (G2G), government-to-employees (G2E) as well as back-office processes and interactions ...
Millions of euros belonging to hundreds of citizens living in Germany were channeled into the LGT Bank and other banks in Liechtenstein, [3] taking advantage of Liechtenstein-based trusts to evade paying taxes in Germany. According to the prosecutor's office these trusts "have been created apparently only to evade paying taxes."
First Citizens (FCB) is a bank based in Trinidad and Tobago. First Citizens has over TT$ 38 billion in assets, 25 branches in Trinidad and three in Tobago and five in Barbados . It also has a representative office in Costa Rica, which handles its Latam business. [ 1 ]
The Zurich Cantonal Bank was founded in 1870 as "bank of the citizens of Zürich" following an initiative of Johann Jakob Keller (1823–1903), then member of the cantonal council of Zürich. The canton of Zürich provided the necessary endowment capital and appointed the senior governing bodies.
The first move towards a national health insurance system was launched in Germany in 1883, with the Sickness Insurance Law. Industrial employers were mandated to provide injury and illness insurance for their low-wage workers, and the system was funded and administered by employees and employers through "sick funds", which were drawn from deductions in workers' wages and from employers ...