The Case for a New Bretton Woods. Kevin P. Gallagher
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Название: The Case for a New Bretton Woods

Автор: Kevin P. Gallagher

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Экономика

Серия:

isbn: 9781509546558

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ financial crisis of 2008–9 and the Covid-19 health and economic crises have exposed the fragilities of this system. The international community has, on both occasions, failed to respond appropriately.

      As will be further elaborated in the following chapters, there are four main takeaways from Bretton Woods that, we believe, remain relevant when thinking about governance in relation to contemporary global challenges:

      1 Face up to failure. Austerity does not work; the gold standard and the outsized influence of financial interests had triggered widespread depression, insecurity, and conflict. A new order would require an ideological break with laissezfaire and adjustment through austerity.

      2 Treat markets as means not ends. Economic security, personal safety, social justice, energy choices, and political representation should not be left to the dictates of markets. Prices and property rights can help to achieve more inclusive growth and development but require complementary institutions, effective regulation, and shared values that the market doesn’t itself provide.

      3 Forge a set of shared national goals and common global interests. The international order was constructed to support the national goals of full employment and social welfare by providing five key global public goods: a stable monetary and exchange rate system; a global lender of last resort to provide liquidity to distressed nations; counter-cyclical and long-term lending; open markets’ including under recession; and a coordinated international economic policy.

      4 Nurture cooperation. Rather than ad hoc summitry and bilateral policy negotiations, a set of permanent institutions is needed to monitor, coordinate, and guide the interdependent economic system into the future.

      These ideas underpinned the creation of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), and their subsequent extensions and offspring. While far from perfect, this was a powerful attempt to globalize economic relations while maintaining sufficient policy autonomy for nation states to pursue a broad set of economic and social goals.

      These efforts achieved some early success, but not enough to reverse the ideological tide in support of social solidarity and interventionism that had emerged from the wartime experience and continued to animate policy discussions over the following three decades. They began to yield more bountiful returns from the early 1980s with the abandonment in advanced countries of full employment, the privatization of state-owned assets, and the deregulation of financial markets, with further gains as these measures were adopted and spread by the Bretton Woods institutions.

      The resulting “liberal international order,” often lauded as “rules-based,” now serves gargantuan and increasingly footloose firms in their endless pursuit of higher rents in heavily concentrated markets across the globe. The result is a polarized world economy in which instability and insecurity have become the norm for more and more households in rich and poor countries alike.

      Figure 1.1 The Elephant Curve: Global Income Distribution and Real Income Growth, 1980–2016

      Source: World Inequality Report 2020

      The World Inequality Lab estimates that since 1980 inequality has risen or remained extremely high nearly everywhere in the global economy, with some of the sharpest rates of increase occurring in India and China and among emerging-market and developing countries, showing that even in the places СКАЧАТЬ