Brussels International Financial Conference (1920) Explained

The International Financial Conference was an international economic conference held in Brussels from September 25 to October 8, 1920.

Background

The Brussels conference was convened in the context of severe economic, social, financial and sanitary dislocation immediately following World War I, especially in Central and Eastern Europe. Its trigger was an international petition published in January 1920 and signed by prominent individuals that included Gustave Ador, Gustav Cassel, Robert Cecil, Herbert Hoover, J. P. Morgan Jr., Richard Vassar Vassar-Smith, Gerard Vissering, Paul Warburg, and other signatories from Denmark, France and Norway. Because of the general sense of impending failure, national governments decided that delegates would not officially represent them, so that the governments would not be overly tainted if the conference came to nothing. Even so, nearly three-quarters of the delegates were government officials, the rest being central and private bankers, while the other participants including some non-financial businesspeople and academics.

Conference

Jean Monnet, at the time the deputy secretary-general of the fledgling League of Nations, was instrumental in the preparation of the conference. Preparatory technical materials included documents prepared by the staff of the League, including a reference volume on Currencies after the War and papers on themes such as Coal Statistics, Currency Statistics, Exchange Control, International Trade, or Public Finance. These were complemented by five papers commissioned by League Secretariat official Walter Layton from some of the most recognized economists of the era, namely Sweden's Gustav Cassel, the United Kingdom's Arthur Cecil Pigou, the Netherlands', France's Charles Gide, and Italy's Maffeo Pantaleoni.[1]

The conference was chaired by former Swiss President Gustave Ador and attended by 86 delegates from 39 countries. The venue for the conference proceedings was the Palace of the Nation, relying on a secretariat composed mainly of League staff and housed in the nearby Academy Palace. Discussions were held simultaneously in French and English.

Assessment

With hindsight, the conference was rather successful at defining a set of general principles for postwar stabilization around shared aspirations to fiscal discipline, free trade, and sound monetary policy led by independent central banks, a "standard of financial orthodoxy" on which the delegates reached a remarkably broad consensus.[2] While the medium-term objectives were clear, the delegates also stated that the return to the gold standard should only be envisaged after proper financial stabilization and structural adjustment. These principles guided, in particular, the early activity of the League's Economic and Financial Organization (EFO) that was being established at the same time.

The conference specifically called for the EFO to prepare a report on how the national governments would implement their recommendations. That report was duly published in 1922 and has been viewed as an early predecessor of surveillance reports issued decades later by the International Monetary Fund.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Conversation . The Brussels Finance Conference of 1920: a lesson in the perils of focusing on the past . . John Hawkins.
  2. do Vale . Adriano . 2021-09-03 . Central bank independence, a not so new idea in the history of economic thought: a doctrine in the 1920s . The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought . en . 28 . 5 . 811–843 . 10.1080/09672567.2021.1908393 . 0967-2567.