:''For similar uses and terms, see
Smithsonian (disambiguation).''
The 'Smithsonian Agreement' was a December 1971 agreement that ended the
fixed exchange rates established at the
Bretton Woods Conference of 1944.
History
The
Bretton Woods Conference of 1944 established an international
fixed exchange rate regime in which currencies were pegged to the
United States dollar, which was based on the
gold standard.
By 1970, however, it was clear that the exchange rate regime was under threat, as the United States dollar was greatly overvalued because of heavy American spending on
Lyndon B. Johnson's
Great Society and the
Vietnam War. The American economy was also coming under serious
inflationary pressures.
In response, on
August 15,
1971,
Richard Nixon had the United States unilaterally
devalue the United States dollar. The United States then entered negotiations with its industrialized allies to
appreciate their currencies.
Meeting in December 1971 at the
Smithsonian Institution, the
Group of Ten signed the Smithsonian Agreement. In the Agreement, the countries agreed to appreciate their currencies against the United States dollar.
The Smithsonian Agreement ended the world's
fixed exchange rate regime and replaced it with a
floating exchange rate regime.
See also
★
Currency
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Sherman Silver Purchase Act
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United States Mint
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ISO 4217
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Exchange rate
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History of money
External links
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Britannica
★
ANZ