
The Original Conference
In 1944 in the sleepy New Hampshire town of Bretton Woods 730 delegates from allied nations met to discuss and set world monetary policy. Previous to the meeting economic policies were determined by a myriad of individual, and often conflicting, treaties and trade agreements and progress was often hampered by tradition. During the great depression inflation made the currencies of many countries worthless which only exacerbated the effects of the global depression. The intent of the conference was to rebuild the world monetary system with some semblance of predictability and security.
IMF Established
The conference was the beginning of the International Monetary Fund which was to set monetary policy for decades to come. The nations involved agreed to allow free markets to work with minimal government intervention, limit trade barriers, and accept the intervention of the IMF to regulate the finances of member nations. Many nations involved would have preferred more regulation of markets and state intervention in their respective economies but the devastation of the war prompted the signing of the Bretton Woods agreement. The US demanded, and got, a leadership role in the IMF.


