Three Days at Camp David
How a Secret Meeting in 1971 Transformed the Global Economy
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- 22,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
"The former dean of the Yale School of Management and Undersecretary of Commerce in the Clinton administration chronicles the 1971 August meeting at Camp David, where President Nixon unilaterally ended the last vestiges of the gold standard – breaking the link between gold and the dollar – transforming the entire global monetary system.
Over the course of three days – from August 13 to 15, 1971 – at a secret meeting at Camp David, President Richard Nixon and his brain trust changed the course of history. Before that weekend, all national currencies were valued to the U.S. dollar, which was convertible to gold at a fixed rate. That system, established by the Bretton Woods Agreement at the end of World War II, was the foundation of the international monetary system that helped fuel the greatest expansion of middle-class prosperity the world has ever seen.
In making his decision, Nixon shocked world leaders, bankers, investors, traders and everyone involved in global finance. Jeffrey E. Garten argues that many of the roots of America's dramatic retrenchment in world affairs began with that momentous event that was an admission that America could no longer afford to uphold the global monetary system. It opened the way for massive market instability and speculation that has plagued the world economy ever since, but at the same time it made possible the gigantic expansion of trade and investment across borders which created our modern era of once unimaginable progress.
Based on extensive historical research and interviews with several participants at Camp David, and informed by Garten's own insights from positions in four presidential administrations and on Wall Street, Three Days at Camp David chronicles this critical turning point, analyzes its impact on the American economy and world markets, and explores its ramifications now and for the future."
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
President Richard Nixon's high-wire economic policy of monetary anarchy, tariffs, and government wage-and-price controls is dissected in this incisive history. Yale economist Garten (From Silk to Silicon) recaps the August 1971 Camp David meeting at which Nixon and his advisors crafted a "New Economic Policy" to address a stagnant economy, rising inflation, and soaring trade deficits. The program's drastic steps included ending the convertibility of the dollar into gold, which demolished a pillar of the Bretton Woods international monetary system; slapping a 10% surtax on imports; and imposing a 90-day freeze on wages and prices, a "breathtaking" intervention, Garten writes, that led to controls lasting into 1974. Garten vividly sketches the personalities behind the policy—especially the charismatic, "movie-star handsome" Treasury Secretary John Connally, who pushed radical proposals by playing to Nixon's love of bold initiatives—and the political optics that preoccupied them. Garten's lucid, easy-to-grasp exposition focuses on international turmoil in exchange rates and trade—Nixon's moves "shook to the core U.S. relations with Western Europe and Japan," he writes—but, disappointingly, says little about the workings of Nixon's revolutionary wage-and-price controls. Still, this is an enlightening study of an era when previously unthinkable economic measures suddenly went mainstream. Photos.