Main Stages of Recent of Foreign Exchange Development


Main Stages of Recent of Foreign Exchange Development
Main Stages of Recent of Foreign Exchange Development
The main phases of the further development of the Forex in modern times were:
• signing of the Bretton Woods Accord
• constitution of the international monetary fund (IMF);
• emergency of the free-floating foreign exchange markets;
• creation of currency reserves;
• constitution of the European Monetary Union and the European
• Monetary Cooperation Fund;
• Introduction of the Euro as a currency.
The Bretton Woods Accord was signed in July 1944 by the United States, Great Britain, and France which agreed to make the currency market stable, particularly due to governmental controls on currency values. In order to implement it, two major goals were: emphasized: to provide the pegging (backing of prices) of currencies and to organize the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
In accordance to the Bretton Woods Accord, the major trading currencies were pegged to the U.S. dollar in the sense that they were allowed to fluctuate only one percent on either side of that rate. When a currency exceeded this range, marked by intervention points, the central bank in charge had to buy it or sell it, and thus bring it back into range. In turn, the U.S. dollar was pegged to gold at $35 per ounce. Thus, the U.S. dollar became the world's reserve currency. The purpose of IMF is to consult with one another to maintain a stable system of buying and selling the currencies, so that payments in foreign money can take place between countries smoothly and timely.
The IMF lends money to members who have trouble meeting financial obligations to other members, on the condition that they undertake economic reforms to eliminate these difficulties for their own good and the good of the entire membership. In total the main tasks of the IMF are:
• to promote international cooperation by providing the means for members to consult and collaborate on international monetary issues;
• to facilitate the growth of international trade and thus contribute to high levels of employment and real income among member nations;
• to promote stability of exchange rates and orderly exchange agreements, and [to] discourage competitive currency depreciation;
• to foster a multilateral system of international payments, and to seek the elimination of exchange restrictions that hinder the growth of world trade;
• to make financial resources available to members, on a temporary basis and with adequate safeguards, to permit them to correct payments imbalances without resorting to measures destructive to national and international prosperity.
To execute these goals the IMF uses such instruments as Reserve tranche which allows a member to draw on its own reserve asset quota at the time of payment, Credit tranche drawings and stand-by arrangements are the standard form of IMF loans, the compensatory financing facility extends financial help to countries with temporary problems generated by reductions in export revenues

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