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Bretton Woods Conference

The Bretton Woods Conference, formally known as the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference, was the gathering of 730 delegates from all 44 allied nations at the Mount Washington Hotel, situated in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, United States, to regulate the international monetary and financial order after the conclusion of World War II.[1]

Bretton Woods Conference room

The conference was held from July 1 to 22, 1944. Agreements were signed that, after legislative ratification by member governments, established the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD, later part of the World Bank group) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). This led to what was called the Bretton Woods system for international commercial and financial relations.

Background

Multilateral economic cooperation among countries was crucial for the post-war world economies. Countries sought to establish an international monetary and financial system that fostered collaboration and growth among the participating countries (IMF and also created the IBRD — listed below)[2] They wanted to avoid the complications faced during the interwar period, due to leaving the gold standard, the great depression, and trade wars that spread the depression globally.[3] There would be a need for an entity that fostered equilibrium in exchange rates and prevented competitive devaluations while ensuring domestic policy autonomy for high employment and real income.[4]

Additionally, countries were concerned with crises like the one suffered by Germany in the 1920s. The Versailles treaty imposed reparations on the country for the damages it caused in World War I, and hyperinflation greatly affected the German economy. Prices rose 41 percent per day.[5] In the autumn of 1923, 1 Dollar was worth about 4 trillion Marks, forcing the population to barter.[6] Germany's subsequent economic turmoil led to its financial collapse and eventually to the rise of Nazism and World War II, aligning with some of John Maynard Keynes's concerns in The Economic Consequences of the Peace, published in 1919. Thus, to prevent a new crisis in the post-war world, the world economies deemed it imperative to establish a system that fostered international economic cooperation.[7] However, the U.S. and the U.K., the most influential parties in the conference, hadn't decided whether such a system was in their national best interests.

Early in World War II, John Maynard Keynes of the British Treasury and Harry Dexter White of the United States Treasury Department independently began to develop ideas about the financial order of the postwar world. (See below for Keynes's proposal for an International Clearing Union.) After negotiation between officials of the United States and the United Kingdom and consultation with some other Allies, a "Joint Statement by Experts on the Establishment of an International Monetary Fund", was published simultaneously in a number of Allied countries on April 21, 1944.[8] On May 25, 1944, the U.S. government invited the Allied countries to send representatives to an international monetary conference "for the purpose of formulating definite proposals for an International Monetary Fund and possibly a Bank for Reconstruction and Development.IBRD."[9] (The word "International" was added to the Bank's title late in the Bretton Woods Conference.) The United States also invited a smaller group of countries to send experts to a preliminary conference in Atlantic City, New Jersey, to develop draft proposals for the Bretton Woods conference. The Atlantic City conference was held from June 15–30, 1944.

The agreements

The Bretton Woods Conference had three main results: (1) Articles of Agreement to create the IMF, whose purpose was to promote stability of exchange rates and financial flows. (2) Articles of Agreement to create the IBRD, whose purpose was to speed reconstruction after the Second World War and to foster economic development, especially through lending to build infrastructure. (3) Other recommendations for international economic cooperation. The Final Act of the conference incorporated these agreements and recommendations.

Within the Final Act, the most important part in the eyes of the conference participants and for the later operation of the world economy was the IMF agreement. Its major features were:

  • An adjustably pegged foreign exchange market rate system: Exchange rates were pegged to gold. Governments were only supposed to alter exchange rates to correct a "fundamental disequilibrium".[10]
  • Member countries pledged to make their currencies convertible for trade-related and other current account transactions. There were, however, transitional provisions that allowed for indefinite delay in accepting that obligation, and the IMF agreement explicitly allowed member countries to regulate capital flows.[11] The goal of widespread current account convertibility did not become operative until December 1958, when the currencies of the IMF's Western European members and their colonies became convertible.
  • As it was possible that exchange rates thus established might not be favourable to a country's balance of payments position, governments had the power to revise them by up to 10% from the initially agreed level ("par value") without objection by the IMF. The IMF could concur in or object to changes beyond that level. The IMF could not force a member to undo a change, but could deny the member access to the resources of the IMF.[12]
  • All member countries were required to subscribe to the IMF's capital. Membership in the IBRD was conditioned on being a member of the IMF. Voting in both institutions was apportioned according to formulas giving greater weight to countries contributing more capital ("quotas").

Encouraging open markets

The seminal idea behind the Bretton Woods Conference was the notion of open markets. In his closing remarks at the conference, its president, U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau, stated that the establishment of the IMF and the IBRD marked the end of economic nationalism. This meant countries would maintain their national interest, but trade blocs and economic spheres of influence would no longer be their means. The second idea behind the Bretton Woods Conference was joint management of the Western political-economic order, meaning that the foremost industrial democratic nations must lower barriers to trade and the movement of capital, in addition to their responsibility to govern the system.

Structure of the conference

The highest body of the Bretton Woods Conference was the plenary session, which met only in the first and last days of the conference and existed mainly to confirm decisions reached by the lower bodies.[13]

The conference conducted its major work through three "commissions". Commission I dealt with the IMF and was chaired by Harry Dexter White, Assistant to the Secretary of the U.S. Treasury and the chief American negotiator at the conference. Commission II dealt with the IBRD and was chaired by John Maynard Keynes, economic adviser to the British Chancellor of the Exchequer and the chief British negotiator at the conference. Commission III dealt with "other means of international financial cooperation" and was chaired by Eduardo Suárez, Mexico's Minister of Finance and the leader of the Mexican delegation. It was a venue for ideas that did not fall under the other two commissions.

Each commission had a number of committees, and some committees had subcommittees. Every country at the conference was entitled to send delegates to all meetings of the commissions and the "standing committees", but other committees and subcommittees had restricted membership, to allow them to work more efficiently. Except when registering final approval or disapproval of proposals, the work of the conference generally proceeded by negotiation and informal consensus rather than by formal voting. When voting occurred, each country had one vote.

The main goal of the conference was to achieve an agreement on the IMF. Enough consensus existed that the conference was also able to achieve an agreement on the IBRD. Doing so required extending the conference from its original closing date of July 19, 1944 to July 22.

Because the United States was the world's largest economy at the time, and the main prospective source of funds for the IMF and IBRD, the U.S. delegation had the largest influence on the proposals agreed to at Bretton Woods.

The Bank for International Settlements controversy

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) became an object of scrutiny when the Norwegian delegation put forth evidence that the BIS was involved in war crimes.

The BIS, formed in 1930, was originally primarily intended to facilitate settling financial obligations arising from the peace treaties that concluded the First World War. During the Second World War, it helped the Germans transfer assets from occupied countries. Moreover, now that IMF was to be established, the BIS seemed to be superfluous. Commission III of the Bretton Woods Conference, therefore, considered Norway's proposal for "liquidation of the Bank for International Settlements at the earliest possible moment."[14] The proposal passed Commission III without objection[15] and was adopted as part of the Final Act of the conference.

Momentum for dissolving the BIS faded after U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt died in April 1945. Under his successor, Harry S. Truman, the top U.S. officials most critical of the BIS left office, and by 1948 the liquidation had been put aside.[16]

Monetary order in a post-war world

The need for post-war Western economic order was resolved with the agreements made on monetary order and open system of trade at the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference. These allowed for the synthesis of Britain's desire for full employment and economic stability and the United States' desire for free trade. The Bretton Woods system of pegged exchange rates lasted into the early 1970s.[citation needed]

Failed proposals

International Trade Organization

The Bretton Woods Conference recommended that participating governments reach agreement to reduce obstacles to international trade.[17] The recommendation was later embodied in the proposed International Trade Organization (ITO) to establish rules and regulations for international trade. The ITO would have complemented the IMF and IBRD. The ITO charter was agreed on at the U.N. Conference on Trade and Employment (held in Havana, Cuba, in March 1948), but the charter was not ratified by the U.S. Senate. As a result, the ITO never came into existence. The less ambitious General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was adopted in its place. However, in 1995, the Uruguay Round of GATT negotiations established the World Trade Organization (WTO) as the replacement body for GATT. The GATT principles and agreements were adopted by the WTO, which was charged with administering and extending them.

International Clearing Union

John Maynard Keynes first proposed the ICU in 1941, as a way to regulate the balance of trade. His concern was that countries with a trade deficit would be unable to climb out of it, paying ever more interest to service their ever-greater debt, and therefore stifling global growth. The ICU would effectively be a bank with its own currency (the "bancor"), exchangeable with national currencies at a fixed rate. It would be the unit for accounting between nations, so their trade deficits or surpluses could be measured by it.

On top of that, each country would have an overdraft facility in its "bancor" account with the ICU. Keynes proposed having a maximum overdraft of half the average trade size over five years. If a country went over that, it would be charged interest, obliging a country to reduce its currency value and prevent capital exports. But countries with trade surpluses would also be charged interest at 10% if their surplus was more than half the size of their permitted overdraft, obliging them to increase their currency values and export more capital. If at the year's end, their credit exceeded the maximum (half the size of the overdraft in surplus), the surplus would be confiscated.

Lionel Robbins reported that "it would be difficult to exaggerate the electrifying effect on thought throughout the whole relevant apparatus of government ... nothing so imaginative and so ambitious had ever been discussed". However, Harry Dexter White, representing the United States, which was the world's biggest creditor, said "We have been perfectly adamant on that point. We have taken the position of absolutely no."

Instead, White proposed an International Stabilization Fund, which would place the burden of maintaining the balance of trade on the deficit nations, and impose no limit on the surplus that rich countries could accumulate. White also proposed the creation of the IBRD (now part of the World Bank) which would provide capital for economic reconstruction after the war. The IMF as agreed to at Bretton Woods was much closer to White's proposal than to Keynes's.

 
Bretton Woods Conference Participating Nations Flag Display Case located within the Gold Room at the Mount Washington Hotel

Negotiators

State
Delegation members[18]
  Australia Leslie Melville, Frederick Wheeler, Arthur Tange
  Belgium Camille Gutt, Georges Theunis, René Boël
  Bolivia René Ballivián Calderón
  Brazil Artur de Sousa Costa, Francisco Alves dos Santos Filho, Roberto de Oliveira Campos
  British India Jeremy Raisman, C. D. Deshmukh, R. K. Shanmukham Chetty
  Canada James Lorimer Ilsley, Louis St Laurent, Douglas Abbott and Lionel Chevrier
  Chile Luis Álamos Barros
  Republic of China H.H. Kung, Tsiang Tingfu, Kuo Ping-Wen,
  Colombia Carlos Lleras Restrepo, Miguel López Pumarejo
  Costa Rica Francisco de Paula Gutiérrez Ross
  Cuba Eduardo I. Montoulieu
  Czechoslovakia Ladislav Feierabend (cs)
  Dominican Republic Anselmo Copello
  Ecuador Esteban F. Carbo
  Egypt Sany Lackany Bey
  El Salvador Agustín Alfaro Morán
  Ethiopia Ephrem Tewelde Medhen
  France Pierre Mendès France
  Greece Kyriakos Varvaressos
  Guatemala Manuel Noriega Morales
  Haiti André Liautaud
  Honduras Julián R. Cáceres
  Iceland Magnús Sigurðsson
  Iran Abol Hassan Ebtehaj [fa]
  Iraq Ibrahim Kamal
  Liberia William E. Dennis Sr.
  Luxembourg Hugues Le Gallais
  Mexico Eduardo Suárez, Víctor Urquidi
  Netherlands Johan Willem Beyen
  New Zealand Walter Nash, Edward Coldham Fussell
  Nicaragua Guillermo Sevilla Sacasa
  Norway Wilhelm Keilhau
  Panama Augusto Guillermo Arango
  Paraguay Celso R. Velázquez
  Peru Pedro Beltrán Espantoso
  Philippines Andrés Soriano
  Poland Ludwik Grosfeld
  South Africa S. Frank N. Gie
  Soviet Union Mikhail Stepanovich Stepanov
  United Kingdom John Maynard Keynes
  United States Henry Morgenthau Jr., Fred Vinson, Dean Acheson, Harry Dexter White
  Uruguay Mario La Gamma Acevedo
  Venezuela Rodolfo Rojas
  Yugoslavia Vladimir Rybar

Ratification of Bretton Woods Final Act and Savannah Conference

The Articles of Agreement for the IMF and IBRD signed at Bretton Woods did not come into force until ratified by countries with at least 80 percent of the capital subscriptions ("quotas"). The threshold was reached on December 27, 1945.

The institutions were formally organized at an inaugural meeting in Savannah, Georgia, on March 8–18, 1946.[19] Notably absent from Savannah was the USSR, which had signed the Bretton Woods Final Act but had then decided not to ratify it, rejecting the inclusion of the dollar alongside gold and citing that the institutions they had created were "branches of Wall Street".[20] The USSR never joined the IMF and IBRD, though its successor the Russian Federation did in 1992. Australia and New Zealand were likewise absent from formal participation at Savannah (Australia sent observers), though they joined the IMF and IBRD later.

Influence

Because of its success in founding two international organizations that have had long and influential lives, the Bretton Woods Conference is sometimes cited as an example worthy of imitation.[by whom?] In particular, since the collapse in the early 1970s of the system of pegged exchange rates agreed to at Bretton Woods there have been a number of Calls for a "New Bretton Woods".

See also

References

  1. ^ Markwell 2006.
  2. ^ "Creation of the Bretton Woods System". Federal Reserve History. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  3. ^ Benn, Steil (2014). The battle of Bretton Woods John Maynard Keynes, Harry Dexter, and the making of a new world order. ISBN 978-0-691-16237-9. OCLC 876136552.
  4. ^ Blume, Lawrence; Steven N. Durlauf, eds. (2008). The new Palgrave dictionary of economics (2nd ed.). Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 544–546. ISBN 978-0-333-78676-5. OCLC 181424188.[clarification needed]
  5. ^ "Hyperinflation". Econlib. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  6. ^ Taylor, Fred (2013). The downfall of money : Germany's hyperinflation and the destruction of the middle class (First U.S. ed.). New York. ISBN 978-1-62040-236-8. OCLC 827256847.
  7. ^ "Creation of the Bretton Woods System". Federal Reserve History. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  8. ^ https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/430/item/7569?start_page=506 2018-08-10 at the Wayback Machine, pp. 1629–36.
  9. ^ "Invitation of the United States of America to the Conference,"https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/430/item/7570?start_page=12 2018-08-10 at the Wayback Machine, pp. 3–5.
  10. ^ IMF Articles of Agreement, Article IV, https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/430/item/7570?start_page=954, pp. 945–48.
  11. ^ IMF Articles of Agreement, Articles VI, VIII, and XIV, https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/430/item/7570?start_page=960, pp. 951–52, 954–57, 965–66.
  12. ^ IMF Articles of Agreement, Article IV, Sections 5–6, https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/430/item/7570?start_page=960, pp. 946–47.
  13. ^ On the points discussed in this section, see Kurt Schuler and Andrew Rosenberg, The Bretton Woods Transcripts, pp. 7–9 (New York: Center for Financial Stability, 2013), ISBN 978-1-941801-01-7.
  14. ^ United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference, Final Act (London et al., 1944), Article IV.
  15. ^ Schuler and Rosenberg, The Bretton Woods Transcripts, p. 566.
  16. ^ "A brief history of the BIS, 1930–2005" (PDF). bis.org.
  17. ^ Bretton Woods Final Act, Section VII, "International Economic Problems,"https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/430/item/7570?start_page=950, p. 941.
  18. ^ A full list of conference attendees is in Kurt Schuler and Mark Bernkopf, "Who Was at Bretton Woods?," Center for Financial Stability Paper in Financial History, July 1, 2014, http://www.centerforfinancialstability.org/bw/Who_Was_at_Bretton_Woods.pdf.
  19. ^ IMF, "IMF Chronology," https://www.imf.org/external/np/exr/chron/chron.asp
  20. ^ Edward S. Mason and Robert E. Asher, "The World Bank Since Bretton Woods: The Origins, Policies, Operations and Impact of the International Bank for Reconstruction". (Washington DC: Brookings Institution, 1973), 29.

Bibliography

Further reading

External links

  •   Media related to Bretton Woods Conference at Wikimedia Commons
  • Proceedings and Documents of the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference, Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, July 1–22, 1944
  • Documents relating to the and , on FRASER
  • Transcripts and other resources for the conference hosted at the Center for Financial Stability

bretton, woods, conference, formally, known, united, nations, monetary, financial, conference, gathering, delegates, from, allied, nations, mount, washington, hotel, situated, bretton, woods, hampshire, united, states, regulate, international, monetary, financ. The Bretton Woods Conference formally known as the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference was the gathering of 730 delegates from all 44 allied nations at the Mount Washington Hotel situated in Bretton Woods New Hampshire United States to regulate the international monetary and financial order after the conclusion of World War II 1 Mount Washington Hotel Bretton Woods Conference room The conference was held from July 1 to 22 1944 Agreements were signed that after legislative ratification by member governments established the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development IBRD later part of the World Bank group and the International Monetary Fund IMF This led to what was called the Bretton Woods system for international commercial and financial relations Contents 1 Background 2 The agreements 3 Encouraging open markets 4 Structure of the conference 5 The Bank for International Settlements controversy 6 Monetary order in a post war world 7 Failed proposals 7 1 International Trade Organization 7 2 International Clearing Union 8 Negotiators 9 Ratification of Bretton Woods Final Act and Savannah Conference 10 Influence 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 Further reading 15 External linksBackground EditMultilateral economic cooperation among countries was crucial for the post war world economies Countries sought to establish an international monetary and financial system that fostered collaboration and growth among the participating countries IMF and also created the IBRD listed below 2 They wanted to avoid the complications faced during the interwar period due to leaving the gold standard the great depression and trade wars that spread the depression globally 3 There would be a need for an entity that fostered equilibrium in exchange rates and prevented competitive devaluations while ensuring domestic policy autonomy for high employment and real income 4 Additionally countries were concerned with crises like the one suffered by Germany in the 1920s The Versailles treaty imposed reparations on the country for the damages it caused in World War I and hyperinflation greatly affected the German economy Prices rose 41 percent per day 5 In the autumn of 1923 1 Dollar was worth about 4 trillion Marks forcing the population to barter 6 Germany s subsequent economic turmoil led to its financial collapse and eventually to the rise of Nazism and World War II aligning with some of John Maynard Keynes s concerns in The Economic Consequences of the Peace published in 1919 Thus to prevent a new crisis in the post war world the world economies deemed it imperative to establish a system that fostered international economic cooperation 7 However the U S and the U K the most influential parties in the conference hadn t decided whether such a system was in their national best interests Early in World War II John Maynard Keynes of the British Treasury and Harry Dexter White of the United States Treasury Department independently began to develop ideas about the financial order of the postwar world See below for Keynes s proposal for an International Clearing Union After negotiation between officials of the United States and the United Kingdom and consultation with some other Allies a Joint Statement by Experts on the Establishment of an International Monetary Fund was published simultaneously in a number of Allied countries on April 21 1944 8 On May 25 1944 the U S government invited the Allied countries to send representatives to an international monetary conference for the purpose of formulating definite proposals for an International Monetary Fund and possibly a Bank for Reconstruction and Development IBRD 9 The word International was added to the Bank s title late in the Bretton Woods Conference The United States also invited a smaller group of countries to send experts to a preliminary conference in Atlantic City New Jersey to develop draft proposals for the Bretton Woods conference The Atlantic City conference was held from June 15 30 1944 The agreements EditThe Bretton Woods Conference had three main results 1 Articles of Agreement to create the IMF whose purpose was to promote stability of exchange rates and financial flows 2 Articles of Agreement to create the IBRD whose purpose was to speed reconstruction after the Second World War and to foster economic development especially through lending to build infrastructure 3 Other recommendations for international economic cooperation The Final Act of the conference incorporated these agreements and recommendations Within the Final Act the most important part in the eyes of the conference participants and for the later operation of the world economy was the IMF agreement Its major features were An adjustably pegged foreign exchange market rate system Exchange rates were pegged to gold Governments were only supposed to alter exchange rates to correct a fundamental disequilibrium 10 Member countries pledged to make their currencies convertible for trade related and other current account transactions There were however transitional provisions that allowed for indefinite delay in accepting that obligation and the IMF agreement explicitly allowed member countries to regulate capital flows 11 The goal of widespread current account convertibility did not become operative until December 1958 when the currencies of the IMF s Western European members and their colonies became convertible As it was possible that exchange rates thus established might not be favourable to a country s balance of payments position governments had the power to revise them by up to 10 from the initially agreed level par value without objection by the IMF The IMF could concur in or object to changes beyond that level The IMF could not force a member to undo a change but could deny the member access to the resources of the IMF 12 All member countries were required to subscribe to the IMF s capital Membership in the IBRD was conditioned on being a member of the IMF Voting in both institutions was apportioned according to formulas giving greater weight to countries contributing more capital quotas Encouraging open markets EditThe seminal idea behind the Bretton Woods Conference was the notion of open markets In his closing remarks at the conference its president U S Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau stated that the establishment of the IMF and the IBRD marked the end of economic nationalism This meant countries would maintain their national interest but trade blocs and economic spheres of influence would no longer be their means The second idea behind the Bretton Woods Conference was joint management of the Western political economic order meaning that the foremost industrial democratic nations must lower barriers to trade and the movement of capital in addition to their responsibility to govern the system Structure of the conference EditThe highest body of the Bretton Woods Conference was the plenary session which met only in the first and last days of the conference and existed mainly to confirm decisions reached by the lower bodies 13 The conference conducted its major work through three commissions Commission I dealt with the IMF and was chaired by Harry Dexter White Assistant to the Secretary of the U S Treasury and the chief American negotiator at the conference Commission II dealt with the IBRD and was chaired by John Maynard Keynes economic adviser to the British Chancellor of the Exchequer and the chief British negotiator at the conference Commission III dealt with other means of international financial cooperation and was chaired by Eduardo Suarez Mexico s Minister of Finance and the leader of the Mexican delegation It was a venue for ideas that did not fall under the other two commissions Each commission had a number of committees and some committees had subcommittees Every country at the conference was entitled to send delegates to all meetings of the commissions and the standing committees but other committees and subcommittees had restricted membership to allow them to work more efficiently Except when registering final approval or disapproval of proposals the work of the conference generally proceeded by negotiation and informal consensus rather than by formal voting When voting occurred each country had one vote The main goal of the conference was to achieve an agreement on the IMF Enough consensus existed that the conference was also able to achieve an agreement on the IBRD Doing so required extending the conference from its original closing date of July 19 1944 to July 22 Because the United States was the world s largest economy at the time and the main prospective source of funds for the IMF and IBRD the U S delegation had the largest influence on the proposals agreed to at Bretton Woods The Bank for International Settlements controversy EditThe Bank for International Settlements BIS became an object of scrutiny when the Norwegian delegation put forth evidence that the BIS was involved in war crimes The BIS formed in 1930 was originally primarily intended to facilitate settling financial obligations arising from the peace treaties that concluded the First World War During the Second World War it helped the Germans transfer assets from occupied countries Moreover now that IMF was to be established the BIS seemed to be superfluous Commission III of the Bretton Woods Conference therefore considered Norway s proposal for liquidation of the Bank for International Settlements at the earliest possible moment 14 The proposal passed Commission III without objection 15 and was adopted as part of the Final Act of the conference Momentum for dissolving the BIS faded after U S President Franklin Roosevelt died in April 1945 Under his successor Harry S Truman the top U S officials most critical of the BIS left office and by 1948 the liquidation had been put aside 16 Monetary order in a post war world EditThe need for post war Western economic order was resolved with the agreements made on monetary order and open system of trade at the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference These allowed for the synthesis of Britain s desire for full employment and economic stability and the United States desire for free trade The Bretton Woods system of pegged exchange rates lasted into the early 1970s citation needed Failed proposals EditInternational Trade Organization Edit The Bretton Woods Conference recommended that participating governments reach agreement to reduce obstacles to international trade 17 The recommendation was later embodied in the proposed International Trade Organization ITO to establish rules and regulations for international trade The ITO would have complemented the IMF and IBRD The ITO charter was agreed on at the U N Conference on Trade and Employment held in Havana Cuba in March 1948 but the charter was not ratified by the U S Senate As a result the ITO never came into existence The less ambitious General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade GATT was adopted in its place However in 1995 the Uruguay Round of GATT negotiations established the World Trade Organization WTO as the replacement body for GATT The GATT principles and agreements were adopted by the WTO which was charged with administering and extending them International Clearing Union Edit Main article International Clearing Union John Maynard Keynes first proposed the ICU in 1941 as a way to regulate the balance of trade His concern was that countries with a trade deficit would be unable to climb out of it paying ever more interest to service their ever greater debt and therefore stifling global growth The ICU would effectively be a bank with its own currency the bancor exchangeable with national currencies at a fixed rate It would be the unit for accounting between nations so their trade deficits or surpluses could be measured by it On top of that each country would have an overdraft facility in its bancor account with the ICU Keynes proposed having a maximum overdraft of half the average trade size over five years If a country went over that it would be charged interest obliging a country to reduce its currency value and prevent capital exports But countries with trade surpluses would also be charged interest at 10 if their surplus was more than half the size of their permitted overdraft obliging them to increase their currency values and export more capital If at the year s end their credit exceeded the maximum half the size of the overdraft in surplus the surplus would be confiscated Lionel Robbins reported that it would be difficult to exaggerate the electrifying effect on thought throughout the whole relevant apparatus of government nothing so imaginative and so ambitious had ever been discussed However Harry Dexter White representing the United States which was the world s biggest creditor said We have been perfectly adamant on that point We have taken the position of absolutely no Instead White proposed an International Stabilization Fund which would place the burden of maintaining the balance of trade on the deficit nations and impose no limit on the surplus that rich countries could accumulate White also proposed the creation of the IBRD now part of the World Bank which would provide capital for economic reconstruction after the war The IMF as agreed to at Bretton Woods was much closer to White s proposal than to Keynes s Bretton Woods Conference Participating Nations Flag Display Case located within the Gold Room at the Mount Washington HotelNegotiators EditState Delegation members 18 Australia Leslie Melville Frederick Wheeler Arthur Tange Belgium Camille Gutt Georges Theunis Rene Boel Bolivia Rene Ballivian Calderon Brazil Artur de Sousa Costa Francisco Alves dos Santos Filho Roberto de Oliveira Campos British India Jeremy Raisman C D Deshmukh R K Shanmukham Chetty Canada James Lorimer Ilsley Louis St Laurent Douglas Abbott and Lionel Chevrier Chile Luis Alamos Barros Republic of China H H Kung Tsiang Tingfu Kuo Ping Wen Colombia Carlos Lleras Restrepo Miguel Lopez Pumarejo Costa Rica Francisco de Paula Gutierrez Ross Cuba Eduardo I Montoulieu Czechoslovakia Ladislav Feierabend cs Dominican Republic Anselmo Copello Ecuador Esteban F Carbo Egypt Sany Lackany Bey El Salvador Agustin Alfaro Moran Ethiopia Ephrem Tewelde Medhen France Pierre Mendes France Greece Kyriakos Varvaressos Guatemala Manuel Noriega Morales Haiti Andre Liautaud Honduras Julian R Caceres Iceland Magnus Sigurdsson Iran Abol Hassan Ebtehaj fa Iraq Ibrahim Kamal Liberia William E Dennis Sr Luxembourg Hugues Le Gallais Mexico Eduardo Suarez Victor Urquidi Netherlands Johan Willem Beyen New Zealand Walter Nash Edward Coldham Fussell Nicaragua Guillermo Sevilla Sacasa Norway Wilhelm Keilhau Panama Augusto Guillermo Arango Paraguay Celso R Velazquez Peru Pedro Beltran Espantoso Philippines Andres Soriano Poland Ludwik Grosfeld South Africa S Frank N Gie Soviet Union Mikhail Stepanovich Stepanov United Kingdom John Maynard Keynes United States Henry Morgenthau Jr Fred Vinson Dean Acheson Harry Dexter White Uruguay Mario La Gamma Acevedo Venezuela Rodolfo Rojas Yugoslavia Vladimir RybarRatification of Bretton Woods Final Act and Savannah Conference EditThe Articles of Agreement for the IMF and IBRD signed at Bretton Woods did not come into force until ratified by countries with at least 80 percent of the capital subscriptions quotas The threshold was reached on December 27 1945 The institutions were formally organized at an inaugural meeting in Savannah Georgia on March 8 18 1946 19 Notably absent from Savannah was the USSR which had signed the Bretton Woods Final Act but had then decided not to ratify it rejecting the inclusion of the dollar alongside gold and citing that the institutions they had created were branches of Wall Street 20 The USSR never joined the IMF and IBRD though its successor the Russian Federation did in 1992 Australia and New Zealand were likewise absent from formal participation at Savannah Australia sent observers though they joined the IMF and IBRD later Influence EditBecause of its success in founding two international organizations that have had long and influential lives the Bretton Woods Conference is sometimes cited as an example worthy of imitation by whom In particular since the collapse in the early 1970s of the system of pegged exchange rates agreed to at Bretton Woods there have been a number of Calls for a New Bretton Woods See also EditBretton Woods system Bretton Woods Committee Atlantic Charter 1941 pre UN Exchange rates Fixed exchange rate Gold standard International Clearing Union Proposed by Keynes at Conference International monetary systems including The Bretton Woods Era 1945 1971 The post Bretton Woods system 1971 present The Revived Bretton Woods system identified in 2003 Calls for a New Bretton Woods International Trade Organization Proposed at Conference but not ratified by U S Senate later revived in the WTO List of World War II conferences Marshall Plan Nixon Shock 1971 Protectionism Franklin D Roosevelt World War IIReferences Edit Markwell 2006 Creation of the Bretton Woods System Federal Reserve History Retrieved 2021 04 17 Benn Steil 2014 The battle of Bretton Woods John Maynard Keynes Harry Dexter and the making of a new world order ISBN 978 0 691 16237 9 OCLC 876136552 Blume Lawrence Steven N Durlauf eds 2008 The new Palgrave dictionary of economics 2nd ed Basingstoke Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan pp 544 546 ISBN 978 0 333 78676 5 OCLC 181424188 clarification needed Hyperinflation Econlib Retrieved 2021 04 17 Taylor Fred 2013 The downfall of money Germany s hyperinflation and the destruction of the middle class First U S ed New York ISBN 978 1 62040 236 8 OCLC 827256847 Creation of the Bretton Woods System Federal Reserve History Retrieved 2021 04 17 https fraser stlouisfed org title 430 item 7569 start page 506 Archived 2018 08 10 at the Wayback Machine pp 1629 36 Invitation of the United States of America to the Conference https fraser stlouisfed org title 430 item 7570 start page 12 Archived 2018 08 10 at the Wayback Machine pp 3 5 IMF Articles of Agreement Article IV https fraser stlouisfed org title 430 item 7570 start page 954 pp 945 48 IMF Articles of Agreement Articles VI VIII and XIV https fraser stlouisfed org title 430 item 7570 start page 960 pp 951 52 954 57 965 66 IMF Articles of Agreement Article IV Sections 5 6 https fraser stlouisfed org title 430 item 7570 start page 960 pp 946 47 On the points discussed in this section see Kurt Schuler and Andrew Rosenberg The Bretton Woods Transcripts pp 7 9 New York Center for Financial Stability 2013 ISBN 978 1 941801 01 7 United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference Final Act London et al 1944 Article IV Schuler and Rosenberg The Bretton Woods Transcripts p 566 A brief history of the BIS 1930 2005 PDF bis org Bretton Woods Final Act Section VII International Economic Problems https fraser stlouisfed org title 430 item 7570 start page 950 p 941 A full list of conference attendees is in Kurt Schuler and Mark Bernkopf Who Was at Bretton Woods Center for Financial Stability Paper in Financial History July 1 2014 http www centerforfinancialstability org bw Who Was at Bretton Woods pdf IMF IMF Chronology https www imf org external np exr chron chron asp Edward S Mason and Robert E Asher The World Bank Since Bretton Woods The Origins Policies Operations and Impact of the International Bank for Reconstruction Washington DC Brookings Institution 1973 29 Bibliography EditMarkwell Donald 2006 John Maynard Keynes and International Relations Economic Paths to War and Peace Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 198 29236 4 Mikesell R F 1994 The Bretton Woods Debates A Memoir Essays in International Finance 192 Princeton International Finance Section Dept of Economics Princeton University ISBN 978 0 881 65099 0 Van Dormael Armand 1978 Bretton Woods Birth of a Monetary System New York Holmes amp Meier ISBN 978 0333233696 Further reading EditSteil Benn 2013 The Battle of Bretton Woods John Maynard Keynes Harry Dexter White and the Making of a New World Order Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 14909 7 External links Edit Media related to Bretton Woods Conference at Wikimedia Commons Proceedings and Documents of the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference Bretton Woods New Hampshire July 1 22 1944 Documents relating to the Bretton Woods Conference and Bretton Woods Agreement Act on FRASER Transcripts and other resources for the conference hosted at the Center for Financial Stability Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bretton Woods Conference amp oldid 1143785145, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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