Bretton Woods: Nationalism, populism creating instability 75 years after
World Bank

Bretton Woods: Nationalism, populism creating instability 75 years after

The world still struggles after 75 years of the Bretton Woods agreement, notable economists across the world have noted.

They say issues and challenges that brought about the conference in 1944 are yet to be fully resolved.

Bretton Woods Committee said that “Now, 75 years later, the world is again struggling with many of the same challenges that brought those delegates together”.

On July 1, 1944, 730 delegates from 44 Allied nations congregated in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, to determine the structure of the international monetary system and a plan for postwar economic reconstruction that would lead to stability and growth for all.

Bretton Woods: Nationalism, populism creating instability 75 years after

“As the trusted advisor, advocate and constructive critic for the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, the Bretton Woods Committee is calling on world leaders to use the same foresight and fortitude exhibited by those pioneering delegates to strengthen the global economic system as it faces deepening and rapidly accelerating changes”, said the Bretton Woods Committee.

“Nationalism and populism were part of the problem seventy-five years ago, and these forces are still creating instability around the world today,” said Bretton Woods Committee Executive Director Randy Rodgers.

“That’s why we’re publishing a compendium of 50 essays written by finance ministers, bankers, policymakers, and academics from around the world: to protect and strengthen the Bretton Woods mission established by the original conference, and to accelerate the evolution of the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization for a rapidly changing world.”

The compendium, Revitalizing the Spirit of Bretton Woods: 50 Perspectives on the Future of the Global Economic System, is part of a year-long initiative called Bretton Woods@75.

In addition to celebrating the establishment and successes of the institutions that helped the world’s nations recover following World War II, the Bretton Woods@75 initiative and compendium spotlight the alarming global challenges that are threatening growth and stability in the modern era.

In the face of these threats, the compendium authors pose solutions and issue a call to action to address these problems as an international community.

These great challenges include rapid population growth that could outstrip natural resources already under pressure from climate change, and mounting sovereign and corporate debt that is threatening the stability of an increasingly interconnected global financial system.

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Also, technologies that present nations with opportunities as well as privacy and social-stability costs, the reemergence of nationalist and populist movements that amplify anxieties and weaponize fear, the overall acceleration of the pace of change itself, and more.

“The spirit of Bretton Woods is alive—but not yet fully secure,” Paul A. Volcker, chair emeritus of the Bretton Woods Committee and former chair of the Federal Reserve System, wrote in the opening essay of the compendium.

“The rise of new economic powers—first Japan, then China—and now the internal tensions within the Eurozone—pose new challenges for cooperation. The political uncertainties within the United States itself could become the greatest threat.”

He observed that while the global economic landscape has changed dramatically since 1944, the Bretton Woods institutions remain vital to keeping the international economic system stable yet agile.

He noted that that’s why the Bretton Woods Committee continues to engage in congressional education and policy outreach, produce publications, provide expert testimony, facilitates public dialogues and private advisory meetings, and help international economic institutions evolve in their effectiveness and efficiency.

“There will always be leaders who from time to time emerge with messages that seek to distort or undermine or ignore the need for global economic stability in favour of their own nationalist agendas,” said Richard Debs, chair of the Bretton Woods Committee’s International Council.

The Bretton Woods Committee takes the long view, tempered by 75 years of history and motivated by our commitment to international economic cooperation far into the future.

It said, “That is why the Committee helps ensure that the World Bank, IMF and world trade organisation,WTO, remain strong. The Bretton Woods@75 initiative and compendium represent an opportunity for world leaders to recommit to the value of international cooperation.”

Bretton Woods: Nationalism, populism creating instability 75 years after

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VIAJulius Alagbe
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