Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Caveat Emptor: Coping with Sovereign Risk Under the International Gold Standard, 1871-1913
- 2 Conduits for Long-Term Foreign Investment in the Gold Standard Era
- 3 The Gold-Exchange Standard: A Reinterpretation
- 4 The Bank of France and the Gold Standard, 1914-1928
- 5 Keynes’s Road to Bretton Woods: An Essay in Interpretation
- 6 Bretton Woods and the European Neutrals, 1944-1973
- 7 The 1948 Monetary Reform in Western Germany
- 8 The Burden of Power: Military Aspects of International Financial Relations During the Long 1950s
- 9 Denationalizing Money?: Economic Liberalism and the “National Question” in Currency Affairs
- 10 International Financial Institutions and National Economic Governance: Aspects of the New Adjustment Agenda in Historical Perspective
- Index
6 - Bretton Woods and the European Neutrals, 1944-1973
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2013
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Caveat Emptor: Coping with Sovereign Risk Under the International Gold Standard, 1871-1913
- 2 Conduits for Long-Term Foreign Investment in the Gold Standard Era
- 3 The Gold-Exchange Standard: A Reinterpretation
- 4 The Bank of France and the Gold Standard, 1914-1928
- 5 Keynes’s Road to Bretton Woods: An Essay in Interpretation
- 6 Bretton Woods and the European Neutrals, 1944-1973
- 7 The 1948 Monetary Reform in Western Germany
- 8 The Burden of Power: Military Aspects of International Financial Relations During the Long 1950s
- 9 Denationalizing Money?: Economic Liberalism and the “National Question” in Currency Affairs
- 10 International Financial Institutions and National Economic Governance: Aspects of the New Adjustment Agenda in Historical Perspective
- Index
Summary
In July 1944, when the Bretton Woods conference took place, though the war was not over, there was no doubt who would win it. The efforts of the wartime coalition (the United Nations) concentrated on building up a new postwar order, one able to combine peaceful interaction between states, social change, and economic growth. The conference at Bretton Woods aimed at an international financial system under the umbrella of the Pax Americana that would be able to guarantee the stability of a restored and improved version of the pre-1914 gold standard and, beyond it, to increase the scope for autonomous national economic policies in every country that joined the system. The two main institutional pillars of the new order were fixed exchange rates and - in the long term - free currency markets based on current account convertibility. In order to meet these two contradictory goals, the architects of the Bretton Woods System decided to introduce a gold-dollar standard. This system combined a sufficient built-in flexibility for the specific economic goal of every member state and a standardized procedure for realignment of the exchange rates in the case of “fundamental” asymmetries in the balance of payments.
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- Information
- International Financial History in the Twentieth CenturySystem and Anarchy, pp. 153 - 168Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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