by Rachel E. Cononi and
Rebecca Hellerstein
July/August 1994
On March 18, 1994, the Eastern Economic Association sponsored a
roundtable discussion at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, to examine
the future of the international monetary system in light of the aims of
the Bretton Woods agreement of 1944. The title of the roundtable
captured the central concern of each speaker: to what extent can the
ideals of the founders of the Bretton Woods system be implemented
today?
It was agreed that a return to a fixed-rate system, as envisioned by
the founders of the Bretton Woods system, is not possible today given
the changes in underlying economic conditions since that time, in
particular, the high degree of integration of financial markets. Each
speaker examined the damaging effects of fiscal imbalance and volatility
on current exchange rate regimes and on the world economy. To limit
volatility, some recommended improving domestic fiscal policy while
others emphasized the need for stronger institutional arrangements
internationally. This article offers an overview of each speaker’s remarks
and of the discussion that followed.
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