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The U.S. and the emergence of flexible exchange rates: an analysis of foreign policy change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2009

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International monetary arrangements in effect since the Bretton Woods conference of 1944 underwent major changes in the early 1970s, most notably from the norm and practice of “fixed” exchange rates to a new mixed regime in which major rates are now flexible. The outcome strongly reflected the external monetary behavior of the U.S. government, which changed dramatically with the “Nixon shocks” of August 1971 and again with a second devaluation of the dollar in February 1973. Since then the U.S. has officially advocated the once-heretical policy of exchange-rate flexibility.

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Copyright © The IO Foundation and Cambridge University Press 1979

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References

1 They demanded depreciation without devaluation. Depreciation can be defined as a decline in the price of a currency measured in another currency or currencies. E.g., from $1.00 = 4 DM to $1.00 = 3 DM. Devaluation can be defined as a decline in the value of the currency declared in terms of some numéraire. E.g., from $1.00 = 1/35 ounce of gold to $1.00 = 1/40 ounce of gold.

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4 See, e.g., Maisel, Sherman J., Managing the Dollar (New York: Norton, 1973), p. 217.Google Scholar

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23 International financial commentary often recognizes the importance of the psychological factor of “confidence.” Keynes was certain that “the power of vested interests is vastly exaggerated compared with the gradual encroachment of ideas.”

24 These decisions are analyzed in John Odell, “The United States in the International Monetary System: Sources of Foreign-Policy Change” (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1976).Google Scholar

25 Interview. Many official participants in these decisions others were interviewed in 1975, including George Shultz, Herbert Stein, Paul Volcker, and Henry Fowler, but most interview evidence cannot be attributed to particular persons. Some text statements attributing a viewpoint to an individual are supported by an interview with that individual, while others are based on other evidence.

26 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Foreign Affairs, The International Implications of the New Economic Policy: Hearings, 92d Cong., 1st sess., 09 1971, pp. 3537.Google Scholar

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31 Peterson Report, vol. 2, chart 11.

32 Based on their public statements and interviews with their advisers.

33 Interview.

34 Interviews.

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38 Interview.

39 Interviews.

40 Interviews. Connally was attracted to the surcharge for an additional reason, mentioned below. The Connally-Volcker diagnosis of the deficit was not widely disputed by August 1971, but Connally's diagnosis of foreign government behavior was probably close to unique.

41 For Burns's views see Safire, William, Before the Fall: An Inside View of the Pre-Watergate White House (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1975), pp. 513524. Supplemented by interviews.Google Scholar

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45 Safire, , p. 514. This, the only available written account of the deliberations, and interview evidence are consistent with each other.Google Scholar

46 Suggested by an interview with a Camp David participant.

47 Suggested by a different participant. This interpretation is confirmed by Shultz, George P. and Dam, Kenneth W., Economic Policy Beyond the Headlines (New York: Norton, 1977), p. 117.Google Scholar

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50 Academic advocates of greater flexibility did debate with policy makers sporadically after the mid-1960s, and bankers and business leaders protested controls on capital outflow. For discussions of this activity and other channels of interest group effect, see Odell, chap. 6.

51 Assistant to the President. Peterson discussion with Jonathan D. Aronson, Harvard Business School, 21 January 1976. Notes provided by Aronson.

52 The monetary changes themselves might also be traced partly to domestic pressure against imports if policy makers expected that dollar depreciation would satisfy or silence domestic critics by helping to check imports, and if this was a relatively salient consideration for them on the monetary question. The need to undercut a possible shift in Congress to a more protectionist trade policy was a major factor persuading Paul Volcker to accept dollar depreciation. But there is no such evidence for Nixon and Connally, and it seems unlikely that Connally was searching for ways to defeat protectionism.

The fact that the Republican party took control of the executive branch from the Democrats probably added a weak background influence in favor of a shift in exchange rate policy. Republican party leaders' attitudes tend more toward removing economic controls and yielding to “market” forces than those of Democratic party leaders. In 1971 Democratic leaders might have given more attention to managing new U.S. exchange rates with U.S. foreign-exchange market intervention rather than abandoning defense of the dollar altogether. But the major policy shift was due to much more than party change.

53 A different interpretation might argue that “international” and “domestic” influences cannot be separated in these decisions. It is true that Connally was concerned with the competitive strength of U.S. business vis-à-vis producers in other countries. But the international economic situation and domestic politics may not covary perfectly. One can imagine a trade deficit without successful domestic protectionism (Britain in the late nineteenth century) or the opposite, a trade surplus with successful pressure for protection (Japan in recent years). An election could add an independent element to policy choice. While it is often difficult to disentangle forces present in a single case, I believe it is useful for analytical purposes to retain this traditional distinction.

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55 Interviews.

56 Interview.

57 Interviews.

58 New York Times, 7 08 1974, p. 47. Appointing advisers with different beliefs into the same organizational structure and process, for example the later Under Secretary of State Richard Cooper in place of Connally or Kissinger, would likely have influenced policy more than changing the structure.Google Scholar

59 Interviews.

60 For a different interpretation, see Kohl, Wilfred L., “The Nixon-Kissinger Foreign Policy System and U.S. European Relations: Patterns of Policy Making,” World Politics 28 (1975): 3740.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Most members of congress were silent on monetary issues, but a few contributed indirectly to policy change. Congressman Henry Reuss and Senator Jacob Javits of the Joint Economic Committee held hearings to investigate “The Balance of Payments Mess.” Their report, released on 7 August 1971, called for a depreciation of the dollar, either through an international conference or if necessary by unilateral U.S. action to go off gold. This news helped touch off the speculative wave that convinced Volcker and Shultz that it was time to act on plans already under consideration. Congress ratified the change in the dollar's gold value in 1972.

61 American Banker, 13 02 1973, p. 1Google Scholar. For these events see also Coombs, Charles A., “Treasury and Federal Reserve Foreign Exchange Operations,” Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Monthly Review 55 (1973): 4765Google Scholar; Economist, 27 01 1973, p. 71Google Scholar; Wall Street Journal, 5 02 and 12 02 1973.Google Scholar

62 The course chosen, the second dollar devaluation, has been strongly criticized for needlessly shaking confidence in the dollar and aggravating inflation. See Yeager, Leland B., International Monetary Relations: Theory, History, and Policy, 2d ed. (New York: Harper and Row, 1976), p. 597Google Scholar; Martin, William McC., “Statement before the Sub-committee on International Finance of the Committee on Finance, United States Senate” (1 06 1973)Google Scholar; Laffer, Arthur B., “The Bitter Fruits of Devaluation,” Wall Street Journal, 12 01 1974Google Scholar; Coombs, Charles A., The Arena of International Finance (New York: Wiley, 1976), pp. 225239.Google Scholar

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64 Interviews.

65 Interviews; New York Times, 14 02 1973Google Scholar; Wall Street Journal, 14 02 1973.Google Scholar

66 Interview.

67 Salant, Walter S., “The Post-Devaluation Weakness of the Dollar,” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1973, pp. 481496.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

68 Interviews; New York Times, 4 03 1973.Google Scholar

69 New York Times, 9 02, 10 02, 12 02, 17 02, 1973Google Scholar; Wall Street Journal, 12 02 1973.Google Scholar

70 Interview.

71 Interviews.

72 Keohane, Robert O. and Nye, Joseph S., Power and Interdependence: World Politics in Transition (Boston: Little, Brown, 1977), p. 152.Google Scholar

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