- home
- facet
- Bretton Woods
Bretton Woods
ai generated text
The Bretton Woods system of monetary management was established in 1944 after the Bretton Woods Agreement, requiring countries to guarantee convertibility of their currencies into US dollars at fixed parity rates, with the dollar convertible to gold. The system also established the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to monitor exchange rates and lend reserve currencies to countries with balance of payments deficits. The system operated successfully until August 15, 1971, when the United States ended the convertibility of the US dollar to gold, effectively bringing the Bretton Woods system to an end and leading to an era of floating exchange rates.learn more on wikipedia
perspectives
- 1.Trade Agreement
- 2.Canada under Mark Carney
- 3.Steel industry
- 4.US-India relations
- 5.Immigration to the US
- 6.US-EU relations
- 7.Inflation
- 8.US-China Relations
- 9.Mexico under Claudia Sheinbaum
- 10.US-Canada relations
- 11.Mining industry
- 12.World Economy
countries
organizations
- 1.World Bank
- 2.White House
- 3.Walmart
- 4.US Trade Representative
- 5.US Court of International Trade
- 6.Tesla
- 7.Target
- 8.S&P Global
- 9.Ministry of Agriculture
- 10.Linerlytica
- 11.International Monetary Fund
- 12.Goldman Sachs
persons
- 1.Zongyuan Zoe Liu
- 2.Zhao Chenxin
- 3.Xi Jinping
- 4.Scott Bessent
- 5.Kristalina Georgieva
- 6.Kris Mayes
- 7.Joerg Wuttke
- 8.Jenny Kane
- 9.Ilham Aliyev
- 10.He Yadong
- 11.Guo Jiakun
- 12.Elon Musk