© 1st Forex Trading Academy 2004
7
Introduction
Fortunately, this currency war did not last long and by the first half of the 1970’s leading world
economies gave up the fixed exchange rate system for good and floated their currencies in the
open market. The idea was to let the market decide the value of a given currency based on the
demand and supply of the currency and the economic health of the currency’s nation. This market
is popularly known as the International Monetary Market or IMM.
This IMM is not a single
entity. It is the collection of all financial institutions that have any interest in foreign currencies, all
over the world. Banks, Brokerages, Fund Managers, Government Central Banks and sometimes
individuals, are just a few examples.
This is very much the present system of exchange of foreign currencies. Although the currency’s
value is dependent on the market forces, the central banks still try
to keep their currency in a
predefined (and highly confidential) fluctuation band. They accomplish this by taking one or more
of various steps.
The International Trade Organization that had been planned in the Bretton Woods Agreement
could not be realized in the form initially envisaged - the US Congress would not endorse it.
Instead, it was created later, in 1947, in the form of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade,
which was signed by the US and 23 other countries including Canada. The GATT would later
become known as the World Trade Organization. In recent years, the two international institutions
created at Bretton Woods the World Bank and the IMF have faced a major challenge in helping
debtor nations to get back on stable financial footing.
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