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Old and new proposals for global monetary reform

Jan Priewe

Review of Keynesian Economics, 2022, vol. 10, issue 4, 533-558

Abstract: The post-Bretton Woods monetary system in characterised by the hegemony of the US dollar despite increasing features of a multi-currency system. There is no other currency in sight to succeed the dollar. Yet there are severe downsides that seem to increase on several fronts. The paper diagnoses five major challenges: exchange rates driven by non-fundamentals, current-account imbalances, a hierarchy of interest rates (including dependency from US monetary policy), commodity-price bonanzas, and lack of global liquidity in hard currency. Major reform proposals are reviewed, focusing on reforms of Special Drawing Rights on the one hand and on a new exchange-rate system on the other. Regarding the latter, a novel system is proposed, focused on the largest foreign-exchange market, the dollar–euro market. The proposal includes target zones, mutual interventions, and a Tobin tax on currency transactions. A precondition is strengthening the international role of the euro. The currency blocs on both sides of the North Atlantic could form a bloc of more than 80 countries. The new system of managed floating could later be extended by other reserve currencies. More exchange-rate stability around the globe would reduce the country risk premiums in the Global South and trigger other positive externalities.

Keywords: international monetary system; dollar standard; international monetary arrangements; foreign exchange; Bretton Woods (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: F00 F02 F31 F32 F33 G01 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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