The National Bank of the Kingdom of Serbia was created by law of
King Milan I on , as a
sui generis establishment with a privileged charter that also granted the State the right to oversee its operations, including the right for the government's representative in the bank's management to veto any decision of the bank. It was ostensibly modeled after the
National Bank of Belgium, considered at the time to be at the forefront of modern banking institutions, which provided substantial technical assistance to Serbia for the creation of the National Bank. Even after the bank's formal establishment by law, its ownership structure was still debated, between some who advocated recourse to foreign capital (as at the
Imperial Ottoman Bank) given the scarcity of domestic resources, and others who doubted foreign shareholders would be sufficiently aligned with national interests. This point was resolved at a conference in May 1883 attended by Serbian merchants and business leaders, which resolved that they would provide the capital at the exclusion of foreigners. The first general assembly of the new institution took place from 26 to February 29, 1884. The first governor of the bank was
Aleksa Spasić, appointed in March 1884. The bank subsequently started operations on July 14, 1884. Originally it was located at 38
Knez Mihailova Street, at the corner of Dubrovačka Street (today Kralja Petra Street). In 1890 it moved to a larger building on Knez Mihailova Street, which remains known as the
National Bank Building. Following the
Balkan Wars, the National Bank opened branch offices in
Skopje and
Bitola in December 1913. In late 1915 during the disruption of
World War I, it was able to move much of its assets to
Marseille. The National Bank under governor
Đorđe Vajfert returned to Belgrade in December 1918. On , the Law on the National Bank of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes changed its name to the
National Bank of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and extended its activity to the whole territory of the newly formed country. ==Governors==