The Historical Origins of U.S. Exchange Market Intervention Policy

Working Paper: NBER ID: w12662

Authors: Michael D. Bordo; Owen Humpage; Anna J. Schwartz

Abstract: The present set of arrangements for U.S. exchange market intervention policy was largely developed after 1961 during the Bretton Woods era. However, that set had important historical precedents. In this paper we examine precedents to current arrangements, focusing on three historical eras: pre-1934 operations; the Exchange Stabilization Fund operations beginning in 1934; and the Bretton Woods era. We describe operations by the Second Bank of the United States in the pre-Civil War period and then operations by the U.S. Treasury in the post-Civil War period. After establishment of the Federal Reserve in 1914, the New York Fed engaged in isolated exchange market policies in the 1920s and 1930s, first under the direction of the Governor Benjamin Strong until his death in 1928, thereafter, under the direction of his successor, George Harrison. We then examine operations of the Exchange Stabilization Fund that the Gold Reserve Act of 1934 created as a Treasury Department agency. We exploit unique unpublished sources to analyze its dealings with the Banque de France and the Bank of England before and after the Tripartite Agreement. Finally, based on a unique data set of all U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve foreign-exchange transactions, we discuss U.S. efforts from 1961 through 1972 to defend the dollar's parity under the Bretton Woods system.

Keywords: exchange market intervention; Bretton Woods; U.S. monetary policy

JEL Codes: E42; N10


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
Historical origins of U.S. exchange market intervention policy (F31)Understanding modern practices regarding exchange market interventions (F33)
Understanding historical evolution (B15)Important insights for modern practices regarding exchange market interventions (F33)
U.S. Treasury's actions post-Civil War (N11)Early forms of intervention aimed at stabilizing the currency (F33)
Benjamin Strong's isolated exchange market operations in the 1920s (F33)Influence on exchange rates (F31)
Establishment of the ESF in 1934 (F33)Mechanism to stabilize the dollar's value (F31)
Past interventions (H84)Delay in currency crises (F31)
Past interventions (H84)Collapse of the Bretton Woods system (F33)
Historical practices (B15)Shaping of modern intervention strategies (C90)

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