Financial Cold War. James A. Fok

Financial Cold War - James A. Fok


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schools, where he was not an exceptional student. His mother had died when he was aged just nine. His father Jacob was a peddler who made a living dealing in hardware and crockery. Through hard work and thrift, the family had eventually come to own four hardware stores by the time Jacob died, just two months after Harry graduated from high school. After school, he initially worked as a clerk in the family business, but upon President Woodrow Wilson's declaration of war on Imperial Germany in April 1917, the 25-year-old Harry White enlisted in the US Army and was commissioned as an infantry first lieutenant.

      As countries battled with the Depression era's high unemployment, they turned to competitive devaluations and tariff barriers in an effort to make their exports more competitive and to limit imports. These ‘beggar-thy-neighbour’ policies led to a collapse in global trade, significantly worsening the economic hardship. In the subsequent years and decades, the international trade and monetary policies of the interwar years became widely viewed as a major factor contributing to the outbreak of WW2.

      In 1935, Morgenthau despatched White on a trip to Europe to engage in fact-finding and exploratory talks on the matter of exchange rate stabilisation. This trip was to have great significance in Harry White's career, as his meetings with politicians, businessmen, bankers, civil servants and economists would help to position him later as the obvious candidate to coordinate and lead America's international negotiations on the post-war monetary system. It was also on this trip that he first met John Maynard Keynes, the famed British economist with whom he would later joust in the run-up to and during the 1944 Bretton Woods conference.


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