The Bretton Woods Conference (officially the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference) was a pivotal gathering of 730 delegates from all 44 Allied nations held in July 1944 in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, USA. With World War II still raging, these leaders met to design a new international economic order that would promote global cooperation and prevent the kind of economic warfare—competitive devaluations and trade barriers—that had contributed to the Great Depression and the outbreak of the war. The conference's crowning achievement was the creation of the Bretton Woods system, a framework of rules and institutions to govern international finance. This system anchored global currencies to the US dollar, which was, in turn, convertible to gold at a fixed rate of $35 per ounce. It also established two powerful institutions that shape our world to this day: the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. For nearly three decades, this arrangement provided a stable, predictable environment for international trade and investment to flourish, fueling the post-war economic boom.
Imagine a financial pyramid. At the very top was gold, the ultimate anchor of value. Just below it sat the US dollar, the only currency directly convertible to gold. All other member currencies were then pegged to the US dollar at a fixed exchange rate. This structure essentially made the dollar the world's reserve currency. The system was designed to offer the best of both worlds: the stability of the old gold standard with the flexibility needed to manage a modern economy.
For about 25 years, the system worked remarkably well. It fostered unprecedented global economic growth, reduced currency volatility, and expanded international trade. However, the system's stability depended entirely on the world's faith in the US dollar and America's ability to back its currency with gold. By the late 1960s, that faith began to waver. The US was printing vast sums of money to finance the Vietnam War and expansive domestic social programs, leading to a surge in dollars circulating outside the country. Foreign central banks, holding mountains of these dollars, grew nervous. They began to question whether the US had enough gold in Fort Knox to honor its promise of convertibility. A classic “run on the bank” began, with countries like France and Switzerland demanding gold in exchange for their dollar reserves. The breaking point came on August 15, 1971. In a move that became known as the Nixon Shock, President Richard Nixon unilaterally suspended the direct convertibility of the US dollar to gold. This single act severed the system's anchor, and by 1973, the Bretton Woods system had officially collapsed, ushering in the modern era of floating exchange rates where currency values are determined by market forces.
The ghost of Bretton Woods still haunts the modern financial world, and its collapse offers timeless lessons for every value investor.