Frashers book is an informative and fascinating analysis of how transatlantic policy-makers confronted structural changes in the system due to globalization, national and regional interests, and the decline of US hegemony during the transition from fixed to floating rates. Unlike a lot of other analyses on international relations, it does not take a one-side approach to the state (that the state was either retreating or advancing). Frasher shows how both actually occurred in this fascinating historical case study. While much has been written about Bretton Woods and its aftermath, few analyses have as many nuances to offer. Indeed, while Bretton Woods and is aftermath are old subjects, many new things can be said about them. Frasher has masterfully accomplished such a feat in this book.
Giulio M Gallarotti, Wesleyan University
The transition to todays international monetary system is often presented as a relatively straightforward structural adjustment process in a neoliberalizing world. Michelle Frashers meticulous analysis, in contrast, exposes the underlying and ongoing conflicts of interest and ideas involved in that transformation. These included painful and often improvised negotiations between states with competing aims, quarrels among domestic political, economic and bureaucratic interests, and rising pressures from globalizing market forces, usually resolved in ad hoc fashion. These conjunctural factors laid the groundwork for the continual renegotiations and endemic crises of the past half century. Based on deep archival research and groundbreaking interviews, Frasher recounts the messy and incomplete outcomes that are still shaping the 21st century international political economy.
Philip G. Cerny, University of Manchester and Rutgers University
Transatlantic Politics and the Transformation of the International Monetary System
With original archival documents and interviews from the US and Europe, Professor Frasher brings the reader into the negotiating room with American, German, and French officials as they confronted the collapse of the Bretton Woods monetary system and made decisions that affected the course of European integration and the contemporary neoliberal order.
She identifies crisis as the catalyst for change in international monetary policies, but argues that the causes of crisis originated from a multitude of factors such as market speculation, American hegemony, institutional flaws, and ideational conflicts among the leaders themselves. Far from a planned and consensual process, this book shows that the transformation to neoliberalism was riddled with discord and fret with trial and error. She argues that the resulting currency regime allowed governments to entrench themselves in national interests and facilitated the marketization of the state, where states have became both clients and participants in the financialized global economyto the detriment of international stability.
Frashers is the first work to connect the 1960s and 1970s to the difficulties of inter-state and inter-market cooperation that have plagued the system in the last decades, and it puts the 2008 debacle into historical perspective.
Michelle Frasher is assistant professor in the Department of History and Political Science at Molloy College. Dr. Frasher specializes in transatlantic relations, international monetary policy and global financial governance. A Fulbright-Schuman Scholar, she is currently examining the politics of US-EU financial data-sharing and privacy law in transatlantic counter-terrorism operations.
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22 Transatlantic Politics and the Transformation of the International Monetary System
Michelle Frasher
First published 2014
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Frasher, Michelle.
Transatlantic politics and the transformation of the international monetary
system / Michelle Frasher.
pages cm. (Routledge advances in international political
economy ; 22)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. International financePolitical aspects. 2. Monetary policy
United States. 3. Monetary policyEurope. 4. United States