------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (August 2004)
Robert Leeson, _Ideology and the International Economy: The Decline
and Fall of Bretton Woods_. New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2003. xii +
242 pp. $70.00 (cloth), ISBN: 1-4039-0370-0.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Peter B. Kenen, Department of Economics,
Princeton University.
Robert Leeson is Associate Professor in Economics at Murdoch
University in Australia and has written extensively on the history of
economic thought and policy in the twentieth century. Here, he
explores the influence of economic ideas on the collapse of the
Bretton Woods System in the early 1970s. Readers should be warned,
however, that his book is not mainly about the collapse of the
Bretton Woods System. It is mainly about the influence of Milton
Friedman, direct and indirect, on the policy debates of the early
1970s -- debates about wage and price controls and the conduct of
monetary policy, as well as the reform of the international monetary
system -- and it does not provide a full account of the events and
decisions that led to the collapse of the Bretton Woods System.
Leeson does not apologize for failing to review those events and
decisions. His study, he writes, "does not attempt to replace but
rather to supplement the orthodox chronology and analysis" (Leeson,
p. 15). But readers who are not already familiar with the "orthodox"
analysis may have trouble judging the influence of ideology on the
drama played out from August 15, 1971, when Richard Nixon announced
his New Economic Policy (NEP) and closed the gold window, to March 1,
1973, when European central banks withdrew from the foreign-exchange
markets and let their currencies float against the dollar.
Parts I and II of Leeson's book describe the intellectual environment
of the 1950s and early 1960s. There was, he writes, strong
intellectual support for three policy objectives -- full employment,
free trade, and fixed exchange rates -- but growing awareness of the
ways in which they would come into conflict. It was Friedman, he
says, who "raised the standard of revolt" against the labor standard
underlying the Keynesian case for full-employment policies, as well
as the Bretton Woods standard of fixed exchange rates (Leeson, pp.
21, 22). For Friedman and his colleagues at the University of
Chicago, notably Harry Johnson, the IMF was "an integral part of the
post-war planning system which sought to override market forces"
(Leeson, p. 31). Leeson then traces the emergence of an academic
consensus favoring exchange-rate flexibility.
Unfortunately, Leeson's account of the process producing that
consensus attaches too little importance to a distinction that played
a large role in the academic debates of the period and in official
discussions as well. He demonstrates clearly that academics became
increasingly critical of the official commitment to rigidly fixed
exchange rates. He cites, for example, the widespread academic
criticism of the 1966 report on the balance-of-payments adjustment
prepared by Working Party 3 of the OECD -- a report that made no
mention of exchange-rate changes when listing the ways to deal with
balance-of-payments problems. Yet many economists who came to favor
more frequent recourse to exchange-rate changes did not yet favor
freely floating rates. (I say that with some confidence, having
attended most of the conferences described by Leeson in Chapters 7-8,
as well as many meetings of the Bellagio Group, in which academics
and officials exchanged views informally on the reform of the
monetary system; see also James, 1996, p. 213).
Parts III and IV of Leeson's book turn to the policy process in an
effort to show how Friedman's views and personal involvement in the
policy process helped to bring down the Bretton Woods System and thus
led to the adoption of floating exchange rates. Some of the
"orthodox" accounts of the period also mention Friedman, as "an
occasional adviser to Republican presidential candidates" (Volcker
and Gyohten, 1992, p. 46), but Leeson's detailed account shows that
Friedman was far more active than that. Leeson also stresses the
close relationship between Friedman and George Shultz, who had been
his colleague at Chicago and held key policy positions in the Nixon
administration. Yet Leeson's account does not explain why Shultz, who
shared Friedman's strong preference for floating exchange rates,
presented a U.S. plan for reform of the monetary system that
emphasized the need for exchange-rate changes and the use of a
reserve indicator to signal the need for them but fell short of
proposing the substitution of freely floating rates. For an
explanation, we must turn to Paul Volcker:
I knew from experience that Shultz had no hesitation in expressing
monetarist views forcefully during policy debates within the
administration. But ... I found that when he assumed full
responsibility for a problem, what came to the fore was the side of
his background that marked him as a conciliator and consensus
builder, rather than an ideologue. Time and again, he would work with
almost inhuman patience to bring a group into agreement upon a
decision that all could support, submerging his own preferences
(Volcker and Gyohten, p. 118).
The need for compromise, within and between governments, attracts too
little of Leeson's attention. He treats the collapse of the Bretton
Woods System as a process driven strongly by ideology, not by the
asymmetries of the system itself nor by market forces.
There were, in fact, two asymmetries built into the Bretton Woods
System. The Europeans wanted to rectify one of them -- the one that
Charles de Gaulle had described as the "exorbitant privilege"
conferred on the United States by the reserve-currency role of the
dollar; the United States was the only country able to finance a
balance-of-payments deficit in its own currency and thus enjoyed more
policy autonomy than other countries. The Americans wanted to rectify
a different asymmetry -- the one resulting from the fact that dollar
exchange rates were set by foreign governments, depriving the United
States of any direct control over the foreign-currency value of the
dollar and thus giving it an interest in greater exchange-rate
flexibility, rule-based or market-based, as a way to achieve more
symmetrical balance-of-payments adjustment.
Furthermore, the final collapse of the Bretton Woods System reflected
the power of money, not the power of ideas. It occurred in March
1973, when the continental Europeans were forced to choose between
massive intervention in foreign-exchange market and letting their
currencies float against the dollar. The currency crisis posing that
choice resulted in part from an attempt by the United States to
engineer a second devaluation of the dollar -- an attempt that was
not designed to provoke a crisis but rather to forestall one.
Leeson has tried to cram two books into one -- a book about the role
of Milton Friedman and the Chicago School, and a book about the
collapse of the Bretton Woods System. As a result, he dwells at
length on issues that had little bearing on the collapse of that
system -- the debates about wage and price controls and the conduct
of U.S. monetary policy under Arthur Burns -- while saying too little
about the events and structural defects that undermined the Bretton
Woods System.
References:
Harold James (1996), _International Monetary Cooperation since
Bretton Woods_ (Oxford University Press).
Paul A. Volcker and Toyoo Gyohten (1992), _Changing Fortunes: The
World's Money and the Threat to American Leadership_ (Times Books).
Peter B. Kenen, Walker Professor of Economics and International
Finance Emeritus, Princeton University, is the author of a dozen
books including _The International Financial Architecture: What's
New? What's Missing?_ (Institute for International Economics, 2001).
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