------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (June 2007)
Filippo Cesarano, _Monetary Theory and Bretton Woods: The
Construction of an International Monetary Order_. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2006. xiii + 248 pp. $80 (hardback),
ISBN: 0-521-86759-2.
Reviewed for EH.NET by John H. Wood, Department of Economics, Wake
Forest University.
This is a timely thought-provoking account by a central banker (the
head of the Historical Research Office of the Bank of Italy) of the
long and often uncertain transition from the classical gold standard
to the unprecedented fiat monetary system prevailing at the end of
the twentieth century. The suspensions of national currencies from
gold forced by the economic and social disruptions of World War I and
the Great Depression shattered the old system - forever, it seems to
us now - but governments did not give up on a return until after the
final breakdown of the Bretton Woods arrangements in the early 1970s.
The 1936 Tripartite Agreement between Britain, France, and the United
States was an attempt to work back to the gold standard, as
conditions permitted, through exchange controls, negotiated fixed
rates, and mutual assistance. The more rigid Bretton Woods System
that was agreed upon at the end of World War II sought a quick return
to gold (or rather a gold-exchange standard based on the U.S.
dollar), with fixed exchange rates and free trade and exchange, but
never came into play because of its several contradictions. The
author's relative emphases on the Tripartite Agreement and Bretton
Woods are the reverse of mine, but the primary historical point is
the same: they were among the several schemes for returning to the
monetary system of 1914.
Many economists of the 1920s and 1930s wanted it both ways: the gold
standard with a managed currency, which after World War II became
expansionist Keynesian policies domestically with fixed exchange
rates externally. This proved impossible without severe and
eventually unacceptable controls, and the combination of inflation
and unemployment, together with the actual and intellectual collapses
of the Phillips Curve, compelled governments to focus their monetary
attention on price stability.
The author describes the present system as one of competitive monies
in an international context similar to Benjamin Klein's ("The
Competitive Supply of Money," _Journal of Money, Credit and Banking_,
1974). The purpose of the book as stated at the beginning is to show
that "monetary theory [has] been crucial in determining the evolution
of [monetary] systems" (p. ix), although the connection is often
unclear. His examples indicate that theory has more often followed
than influenced events. He states that the Bretton Woods monetary
order "was unique to monetary history," in being designed by experts
"from scratch" (pp. 133, 188), but also sees it as a "vain attempt to
revive ??? commodity money" (p. 189). He reasonably follows much of the
literature in using "Bretton Woods" as a convenient label for a
period rather than as a system in actual operation.
He might have followed up the implications of his description of the
new system by pointing out that with "inflation targeting" we have
returned to commodity money. A dollar, pound, or Euro is convertible
into a basket of goods. Of course inflation targeting is subject to
the government's discretion, but that was also true of the gold
standard. The new system is also like the old in rejecting the
managed-money theories that prevailed during much of the transition,
and delayed it.
One can argue over the book's interpretations of the causes of the
evolution of the monetary system and its defining characteristics,
but I recommend it as an efficient account of the relevant theories
and policies during the transition from the classical gold standard.
Recent works by John H. Wood are "Independent Central Banks: New and
Old," _Cato Journal_, Fall 2006, _A History of Central Banking in
Great Britain and the United States_ (Cambridge University Press,
2005), and _Ideas, Interests, and Macroeconomic Policies in the
United States_, in process.
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Published by EH.Net (June 2007). All EH.Net reviews are archived at
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