|
|
History of the Forex
Money, in one form or another, has been used by man for centuries. At
first it was mainly Gold or Silver coins. Goods were traded against other
goods or against gold. So, the price of gold became a reference point.
But as the trading of goods grew between nations, moving quantities of
gold around places to settle payments of trade became cumbersome,
risky and time consuming. Therefore, a system was sought by which
the payment of trades could be settled in the seller’s local currency.
But how much of buyer’s local currency should be equal to the seller’s
local currency?
The answer was simple. The strength of a
country’s currency depended on the amount of gold reserves the
country maintained. So, if country A’s gold reserves are double the
gold reserves of country B, country A’s currency will be twice in value
when exchanged with the currency of country B. This became to be known
as The Gold Standard. Around 1880, The Gold Standard was accepted and
used worldwide. During the first WORLD WAR, in order to fulfill the
enormous financing needs, paper money was created in quantities that far
exceeded the gold reserves. The currencies lost their standard parities
and caused a gross distortion in the country’s standing in terms of
its foreign liabilities and assets.
After the end of the second
WORLD WAR the western allied powers attempted to solve the problem at
the Bretton Woods Conference in New Hampshire in 1944. In the first
three weeks of July 1944, delegates from 45 nations gathered at the
United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference in Bretton Woods, New
Hampshire. The delegates met to discuss the postwar recovery of
Europe as well as a number of monetary issues, such as unstable
exchange rates and protectionist trade policies.During the 1930s, many
of the world’s major economies had unstable currency exchange rates.A
recovery of Europe in the hopes of avoiding the problems that arose
after the First World War.The delegates at Bretton Woods reached an
agreement known as the Bretton Woods Agreement to establish a postwar
international monetary system of convertible currencies, fixed exchange
rates and free trade. To facilitate these objectives, the
agreement created two international institutions: the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and the International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (the World Bank). The intention was to
provide economic aid for reconstruction of postwar Europe. An initial
loan of $250 million to France in 1947 was the World Bank’s first act.
Under the Bretton Woods Exchange System, the currencies of
participating nations could be converted into the US dollar at a
fixed rate, and foreign central banks could convert the US dollar into
gold at a fixed rate. In other words, the US dollar replaced the then
dominant British Pound and the parities of the world’s leading
currencies were pegged against the US Dollar.
|
Statistics |
|---|
Total online: 1 Guests: 1 Members: 0 |
|