Philippe Naughton
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Gordon Brown today threw his weight behind calls for "a new Bretton Woods" agreement to set the rules and direction for global trade and finance in the 21st century.
Fresh from pumping £37 billion into emergency bank nationalisations, the Prime Minister told a City audience that he would be pushing his fellow European leaders this week on the need to rewrite the rules of the international financial system after the current market shock.
“Around us we must build a new Bretton Woods - a new financial architecture for the years ahead," Mr Brown said. "Sometimes it does take a crisis for people to agree that what is obvious and should have been done years ago can no longer be postponed."
The Bretton Woods conference, held in July 1944 at a hotel in New Hampshire, helped draw up the post-war financial order, establishing both the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and GATT, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
Mr Brown is not the first major figure to propose a Bretton Woods 2: President Koehler of Germany, a former IMF head, and President Sarkozy have both made similar demands, but his call will carry extra weight given his record as Chancellor and his role in negotiating a co-ordinated approach to the current crisis.
Referring to the original conference, where the British economist John Maynard Keynes wielded immense infuence, Mr Brown said today: “With the same courage and foresight of their founders, we must now reform the international financial system around agreed principles of transparency, integrity, responsibility, good housekeeping and cooperation across borders.
“First transparency. We must now insist on openness and disclosure, with an immediate adoption of the internationally agreed accounting standards - and the standards being brought forward for the valuation of assets. And transparency must extend also to markets, including the trillion dollar credit insurance markets which now play such a central role in shifting risk around the system.
“Second integrity. We must tackle once and for all the conflicts of interest which have distorted behaviour and undermined trust, and now lie at the heart of public concern."
He went on: “We will not stop at immediate measures to stabilise the system. We also need measures to reshape the global financial system to make it fit for purpose for the future. This work is important for building confidence and this work must start today.
"And we must start by recognising that we are now in a global financial system and that while we have already global flows of capital we have supervision only at a national level.
“And just as we need new global coordination to deal with the waves of change that are defining the new global age from energy supply to climate change, so we need enhanced global cooperation to monitor and then supervise financial flows that know no borders.
“The global financial system is too clouded with opacity, conflicts of interest, irresponsible risk taking, and when problems occur countries have tended to look inwards and deal with them in isolation when it is clear they should look outwards and join in international cooperation.
“This cannot simply be a short term rescue to paper over the cracks. Only a surgical approach that gets to the root of the problem will now work to ensure the problems do not return.”
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Revalue gold to a much higher price and move to a asset backed fiat money. Gone would be any future bubbles of credit and inflation along with creating accountability of federal budget spending. Governments hate accountability, but this would be great for the people.
Bruce M, Tampa, USA
I am a volunteer historic tour guide at Mount Washington Hotel - the site of the first Bretton Woods conference.
Have a new Bretton Woods - in the quiet thoughtftul place - of Bretton Woods - not in the glare of the New York City spotlight
Mary Ann Seidler, Bretton Woods,
Nullias - yes. Animal Farm and !984. And you ??
Rick, London, England
The fixed exchange rates of Bretton Woods are the road to hell. If you doubt it, ask John Major. This is code for "lets join the euro".
It took the UK economy almost thirty years to break free of the original Bretton Woods- this is no time to make such a massive mistake again.
Chris, Brussels, Belgium
Well Ok- transparency and integrity. The last debt-fuelled bubble burst because the banks could no longer borrow. So, now Govt. borrows more money to give them. How does adding to the national debt help, and who lends us these billions? Well, I only ask. Tell me if I've got it wrong.
M, Highgate,
Rick - have you read any Orwell? In fact have you read the new Nobel laureate, Paul Krugman today, who has been saying the same things for a while? What this situation may well militate for, however, is UK entry to the euro - the sooner the better I say.
Nullius, London, UK
And which would be the principal economy on which the New Bretton Woods would evolve?
The Euro area which does not have its own reserves but coordinated intentions, or a global coordination based on exporting economies and empoverished internal markets, once again sponging trade off Uncle Sam.
Arnold Attard, Bergamo, Italy
We must take this opportunity to make the free market much more perfect, and hence more efficient and fair. The first rule in a perfect free market is "No Free Lunch", and if people(bankers) are eating yours, then be very suspicious of market imperfection, never be "intensely relaxed".
Paul Hield, Bristol,
Who would have thought they would live to see the day Brown recanted his liberal market philosophy as if he never believed it in the first place. This is the biggest about face any politician has made and he's getting away without being punished. Instead he wants to punish others!
John Walter, bonn, germany
I had to read that line about Brown's record as Chancellor twice to make sure it was there. Yep, sure enough Brown had nothing to do with creating this crisis. On the contrary he is King Arthur and Sarkozy his Lancelot (minus, er, that little business with Gwen of course).
John Walter, bonn, germany
Better get ready for your chip implant folks.
A Mercer, Wantage, England
Gordon Brown would like to goose-step this country and the whole of Europe into some kind of Marxist system where the State would control every aspect of people's lives. This is dangerous Orwellian territory into which he would take us.
If you value freedom, reject this Stalinist dogma
Rick, London, England
It is hard to see the US agreeing to any new Bretton Woods system if it meant adjusting one of the most successful hallmarks of the original Bretton Woods: the dollar as an international currency, which, after all, survived the breakup of Bretton Woods in the early 1970s.
michael scarlatos, New York,