The Forex History
A Brief History Of Money And Exchange
Rates
Back in the days when kings thought they had a divine right
to rule, they often wanted more money than their parliaments
granted them. But most parliamentary bodies didn’t consist of
fools; they certainly knew better than to leave the powerful
tool of taxation solely in the king’s hands.
Without being able to tax to his heart’s content, the king’s
other financial weapon was to devalue his country’s currency
and recall all gold and silver coinage, melt it down, then
reissue it in a lighter weight or with base metals mixed in,
pumping up the royal treasury with the extra. Because the
currency was backed more by the citizens’ confidence in the
stability of their country than with anything else, many people
never even noticed, and the king got his way in the end.
But sometimes people did notice, and sometimes they weren’t
all that confident of the stability of their country, say, if a
powerful enemy was threatening to invade. When that happened,
often merchants refused to accept the devalued coinage in
trade, demanding real gold or silver instead and rendering the
king’s currency valueless. Such undermining of the currency
could lead to a rapid collapse of the king’s government.
In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the increasingly
republican governments of the western world began basing their
currencies, not on confidence in the government, but on gold.
This prevented their rulers from devaluing the currency, but it
had its own problems.
The gold standard lead to a cycle of boom and bust. A
financially strong nation would import the goods its citizens
wanted, leading to an outflow of capital until the money
supplies shrank too far, in turn leading to higher interest
rates and lower prices because nobody had enough money to buy
anything. Then other countries would see the low prices and
start importing the first nation’s goods, leading to an outflow
of production but an inflow of money, pushing down interest
rates and raising the standard of living again.
This boom-bust pattern continued in many western countries
until World War I interfered with trade and stopped the flow of
money across borders. The pattern resumed after the war and
throughout the Roaring Twenties, until the 1929 stock market
crash devalued the U.S. dollar and caused a worldwide
depression. It was only relieved in the U.S. by the economic
boom of World War II, when the production of war materials and
the drafting of men into the military forces cured the problems
of unemployment and high prices.
But although the Second World War eased economic ills in the
U.S., it caused them in other countries, which had to purchase
the war materials they couldn’t manufacture themselves. This
led to an agreement known as the Bretton Woods Accord, signed
in New Hampshire in 1944 and designed to create a stable
post-war economy where the nations of the world could recover
financially.
The Bretton Woods Accord “pegged” the value of the major
world currencies to the U.S. dollar, making it the benchmark
that measured all other currencies. It also pegged the U.S.
dollar to the price of gold at $35 per ounce, and it created
the International Monetary Fund (IMF), a confederation of 185
nations around the world, dedicated to fostering economic
stability and high employment.
For decades, the Bretton Woods Accord worked well. But in
the early 1970s, international trade grew to such an extent
that currency rates could no longer be contained. Finally, in
1973, President Richard Nixon allowed the U.S. dollar to be
taken off the gold standard, and the complex arrangement of
currency values was abandoned.
The major currencies of the world have come full circle:
just like in the old days of kings, the currencies are
controlled by the market forces of supply and demand, without
being pegged to any other currency or to any precious metal.
(Some of the smaller nations of the world prefer to peg their
currency to that of their major trading partner, like some
Caribbean nations with the United States.) This created the
Forex market, where one currency can be traded against another
with the expectation of earning profit from changes in their
relative values.
At first only major commercial and central banks traded the
Forex. But as it became better known, hedge funds, mutual
funds, large international corporations, and some super-wealthy
individuals discovered it. By the 1980s, about U.S. $70 billion
per day was changing hands.
The explosion of the Internet and the rise in computer
security systems brought Forex trading online. With trades able
to be placed independently of any bank, there was no longer any
need to wait for business hours, and traders began dealing
across time zones and around the globe.
In 2000, the U.S. Congress passed the Commodity Futures
Modernization Act, which opened the Forex to the average
investor. Retail brokerages sprang up across the Internet.
Today about U.S. $1.5 trillion is traded per day; 5% of that
amount is currency conversion by travelers, banks, and
international corporations. The remainder is trading for
profit.
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