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James Ceaser is the Harry F. Byrd Professor of Politics at the University of Virginia, director of the Program for Constitutionalism and Democracy, and was a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is the author of several books on American politics and American political thought, including...
How the Soviet System Cracked
Shifting incentives, miscalculation at the top
AmeriCorps the Beautiful?
Should conservatives support Clinton's national-service programs?
The Culture War That Isn't
The distorted history behind despairing politics
The Schools They Deserve
Howard Gardner and the remaking of elite education
Obama and the State of Progressivism, 2011
The Case against the International Monetary Fund
In July 1944, delegates from forty-four nations gathered in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, to design a postwar international monetary system that would promote world trade, investment, and economic growth. The framers created the International Monetary Fund (IMF or fund) to supervise the new "Bretton Woods monetary regime" that sought to keep national currencies convertible at stable exchange rates and to provide temporary, low-cost financing of balance-of-payments deficits resulting from misaligned exchange rates.
In reality, the framers of the Bretton Woods regime created an international price-fixing arrangement enforced by the IMF. After joining the fund, each member country declared a value for its currency relative to the U.S. dollar. The U.S. Treasury, in turn, tied the dollar to gold by agreeing to buy and sell gold to other governments at $35 an ounce; the inflation of the 1960s, however, made the U.S. commitment to sell gold at that price unsustainable. To preserve U.S. gold reserves, President Richard Nixon closed the gold window in August 1971, effectively uncoupling the dollar from gold and ending the fund's original mission of supervising a system of pegged exchange rates. Looking for a new mission, the IMF quickly evolved into a financial medic for developing countries. Beginning in the early 1970s, the IMF skillfully used a series of global economic crises to increase its capital base and financing activities.
Has the expansion of IMF financing activities alleviated the balance-of-payments problems of member countries and encouraged prudent, progrowth economic policies? The evidence, much of it supplied by the IMF, demonstrates that the fund does more harm than good. Historical studies as well as recent initiatives in Mexico, East Asia, and Russia reveal that IMF financing programs, which rarely prescribe appropriate economic policies or sufficient institutional reforms, are at best ineffective and at worst incentives for imprudent investment and public policy decisions that reduce economic growth, encourage long-term IMF dependency, and create global financial chaos.
It is time to scrap the IMF and strengthen market-based alternatives that would promote an orderly and efficient international monetary system. Key reforms include floating exchange rates, internationally accepted accounting and disclosure practices, unfettered private financial markets, and fundamental legal, political, and constitutional rules that would allow free markets to emerge and countries to achieve self-sustaining economic growth and development.
Britain’s Pugnacious Politicos
Henrik Bering on Pistols at Dawn by John Campbell
The Indispensable Talleyrand
Henrik Bering on Napoleon's Master: A Life of Prince Talleyrand by David Lawday and Talleyrand: Betrayer and Saviour of France by Robin Harris
Fighting Words
Craig S. Lerner on A Time to Fight: Reclaiming a Fair and Just America by Jim Webb
The Irish Prophet
Henrik Bering on Edmund Burke: Volumes I & II by F.P. Lock
The Birth of Brit Art
Henrik Bering on Hogarth, France and British Art by Robin Simon and Hogarth by Mark Hallett and Christine Riding.
The Fed's "Depression" and the Birth of the New Deal
Market failure reconsidered
Original Thomas, Conventional Souter
What kind of justices should the next president pick?
The Truth About Robber Barons
Woody West on Morgan: American Financier by Jean Strauss and Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller Sr. by Ron Chernow and Kevin A. Hassett
Wishing Away the Culture War
Stanley Kurtz
Modern Tomes
The best conservative writing of the last 20 years.
On Self-Government
Families, congregations, and civic associations are America’s "schools of liberty." Progressivism threatens them all
When Politics is a Laughing Matter
Jokes and tyrants and democrats around the world
Fight by Flight
Henrik Bering on The Age of Airpower by Martin van Creveld

