“野蛮遗迹”:法国人、黄金和布雷顿森林体系的消亡

M. Graetz, Olivia Briffault
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引用次数: 2

摘要

法国大革命时期,金本位使法国免于恶性通货膨胀,自那以来,法国一直希望黄金成为国际货币安排的关键。事实上,从最早使用纸币和硬币作为货币到1971年8月,货币至少在原则上是对黄金的索取权。1944年7月,在新罕布什尔州的布雷顿森林(Bretton Woods),来自44个国家的730名代表齐聚一堂,旨在建立战后国际金融秩序。法国人认为,黄金——约翰•梅纳德•凯恩斯(John Maynard Keynes) 20年前曾将其描述为“野蛮的遗迹”——是国际货币稳定的关键。法国人对黄金的依赖至少植根于政治和经济,尤其是法国试图从美国手中夺取国际经济权力,并将其置于一个更强大、更强大的法国。1971年8月15日星期日,理查德·尼克松宣布美国不再愿意用美元兑换黄金。短短几句话,这位总统就废除了现有的国际货币体系,废除了布雷顿森林体系的协议,该协议要求每个国家将本国货币的汇率维持在特定的黄金价值之内。没有人确切知道这对国际货币体系意味着什么,但法国人尤其不高兴。在国际货币体系从固定汇率向浮动汇率转变的过程中,法国很快成为美国的主要对手。这篇论文将作为Naomi Lamoreaux和Ian Shapiro编辑的一个章节发表。,布雷顿森林协定连同学术评论和基本历史文件(即将出版,耶鲁大学出版社),追溯了法国的努力,以保持黄金在国际货币安排的核心作用,直到1976年,当国际货币基金组织的条款被修改,以反映浮动汇率的新现实。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A 'Barbarous Relic': The French, Gold, and the Demise of Bretton Woods
Since the time of the French Revolution, when a gold standard saved the nation from hyperinflation, France has wanted gold to be the linchpin of international monetary arrangements. And, indeed, from the earliest use of bills and coins as money until August 1971, money was, in principle at least, a claim on gold. At Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, where in July 1944 730 delegates from 44 countries met to create the post-war international financial order, the French argued that gold -- which John Maynard Keynes had described two decades earlier as a “barbarous relic” -- was the key to international monetary stability. The French attachment to gold was rooted at least as much in politics as in economics, in particular in France’s efforts to take international economic power away from the United States and lodge it in a stronger and more powerful France. On Sunday, August 15, 1971, Richard Nixon announced that the United Sates was no longer willing to exchange dollars for gold. In a few short sentences, the president had dismantled the existing international monetary system and abrogated the agreements of Bretton Woods, which had required each country to maintain its currency’s exchange rate within a specified value of gold. No one knew exactly what this would mean for the international monetary system, but the French were especially unhappy. France soon became the principal antagonist to the United States in the transformation of the international monetary system from fixed to floating exchange rates. This paper, to be published as a chapter in Naomi Lamoreaux and Ian Shapiro, eds., The Bretton Woods Agreement together with Scholarly Commentaries and Essential Historical Documents (forthcoming, Yale University Press), traces France’s efforts to maintain a central role for gold in international monetary arrangements until 1976 when the IMF Articles were amended to reflect the new reality of floating exchange rates.
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