International monetary cooperation : lessons from the Plaza Accord after thirty years / C. Fred Bergsten and Russell A. Green, editors.

Contributor(s): Bergsten, C. Fred, 1941- [editor.] | Green, Russell Aaron [editor.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Washington, DC : Peterson Institute for International Economics and Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy, 2016Description: xi, 312 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780881327113; 0881327115Uniform titles: International monetary cooperation (Peterson Institute for International Economics) Subject(s): Foreign exchange rates -- Government policy -- History -- 20th century | Devaluation of currency -- United States -- History -- 20th century | Monetary policy -- International cooperation | Economic policy -- International cooperation | International finance | International trade | Devaluation of currency | Economic policy -- International cooperation | Foreign exchange rates -- Government policy | International finance | International trade | Monetary policy -- International cooperation | United States | Internationale Kooperation | Währungspolitik | Geldpolitik | 1900-1999Genre/Form: History.DDC classification: 332.4/5 LOC classification: HG3851 | .I526 2016Summary: The issue of countries artificially manipulating the value of their currencies is at the center of most debates about trade in the United States today. Critics of liberalizing trade have charged, for example, that China has suppressed the value of its currency in order to make its exports cheaper and imports more expensive. Thirty years ago, however, the Reagan administration confronted Japan with the same accusation. Then in a secret meeting in 1985, finance ministers from the United States, Japan and three other major economies in the world gathered in New York City at the Plaza Hotel in an effort to resolve a crisis caused by that criticism. The Plaza Accord coordinated exchange rates among the countries present, in turn depreciating the dollar and restoring some equity to the global market. Was that meeting a success? Or did it usher in 30 years of tensions that have hurt, rather than helped, the cause of improved trade? In late 2015, policymakers and academics held a Plaza Retrospective conference in Houston to evaluate the accord's successes and drawbacks, and how its collaborative spirit can be applied to today's increasingly integrated world economy. This volume, with contributions by former Treasury Secretary James A. Baker III and former Federal Reserve chairman Paul A. Volcker, presents their analyses.-- Provided by publisher.
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Books Books Female Library
HG3851 .I526 2016 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) 1 Available STACKS 51952000325628
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HG3851 .I526 2016 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) 1 Available STACKS 51952000325635

Includes bibliographical references and index

The issue of countries artificially manipulating the value of their currencies is at the center of most debates about trade in the United States today. Critics of liberalizing trade have charged, for example, that China has suppressed the value of its currency in order to make its exports cheaper and imports more expensive. Thirty years ago, however, the Reagan administration confronted Japan with the same accusation. Then in a secret meeting in 1985, finance ministers from the United States, Japan and three other major economies in the world gathered in New York City at the Plaza Hotel in an effort to resolve a crisis caused by that criticism. The Plaza Accord coordinated exchange rates among the countries present, in turn depreciating the dollar and restoring some equity to the global market. Was that meeting a success? Or did it usher in 30 years of tensions that have hurt, rather than helped, the cause of improved trade? In late 2015, policymakers and academics held a Plaza Retrospective conference in Houston to evaluate the accord's successes and drawbacks, and how its collaborative spirit can be applied to today's increasingly integrated world economy. This volume, with contributions by former Treasury Secretary James A. Baker III and former Federal Reserve chairman Paul A. Volcker, presents their analyses.-- Provided by publisher.

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