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Edited by Michael D. Bordo and Barry Eichengreen

A Retrospective on the Bretton Woods System

Lessons for International Monetary Reform

690 pages, 116 line drawings, 56 tables  6 x 9  © 1993
Series: National Bureau of Economic Research Project Report

Cloth $105.00

ISBN: 9780226065878   Published March 1993

E Book from $5.00 to $105.00 (about ebooks)

ISBN: 9780226066905

At the close of the Second World War, when industrialized nations faced serious trade and financial imbalances, delegates from forty-four countries met in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, in order to reconstruct the international monetary system. In this volume, three generations of scholars and policy makers, some of whom participated in the 1944 conference, consider how the Bretton Woods System contributed to unprecedented economic stability and rapid growth for 25 years and discuss the problems that plagued the system and led to its eventual collapse in 1971.

The contributors explore adjustment, liquidity, and transmission under the System; the way it affected developing countries; and the role of the International Monetary Fund in maintaining a stable rate. The authors examine the reasons for the System's success and eventual collapse, compare it to subsequent monetary regimes, such as the European Monetary System, and address the possibility of a new fixed exchange rate for today's world.
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