Title: The League of Nations and the foreshadowing of the International Monetary Fund
Abstract:The very phrase of Nations is a metaphor for international organizational failure. In the wake of the war it was designated to prevent, the League became the example to be avoided in building new mult...The very phrase of Nations is a metaphor for international organizational failure. In the wake of the war it was designated to prevent, the League became the example to be avoided in building new multilateral institutions. Perhaps it is not surprising, then, that our textbooks on international relations and international economics leave the impression that the multilateral organizations established after World War II represented entirely new departures in history. This essay aims to refute that impression by examining important and commonly forgotten links between the League and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Despite the well-documented contribution of the British delegation at the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference, and the less well known input from the Canadians, the now-conventional view is that the IMF inevitably reflected a fresh and novel American vision for international monetary and financial relations. In this and other policy areas, the title of Dean Acheson's memoirs, Present at the Creation, seems to sum up the worldview of a generation of American policymakers and scholars. The global conflagration that began in the 1930s erased what had gone before. The Americans, with a little help from their friends, were painting on a blank canvass. The United States was, indeed, more than the first among equals after the war, but it was not the case that the postwar experiment in international economic institution building was entirely new. Largely forgotten now is the economic work of the League of Nations. We need to recover that memory, for as we shall see, the monetary and financial activities of the League foreshadowed the core mandate of the IMF as it developed over time. The League's economic activities also influenced the shaping of the IMF mandate in surprisingly directly ways. For this and other reasons, the evolution of those activities in the face of increasingly severe constraints continues to warrant study by those interested in the future of multilateralism in this field.Read More
Publication Year: 1996
Publication Date: 1996-12-01
Language: en
Type: book
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 40
AI Researcher Chatbot
Get quick answers to your questions about the article from our AI researcher chatbot