The deal that put the dollar at the centre of the world

使美元成为世界中心的交易

Behind the Money

2026-05-20

53 分钟
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Take 730 delegates from 44 countries, plus another 2,000 or so hangers-on. House them in a remote, dilapidated hotel with holes in the roof and broken furniture. Deliver a train wagon filled with alcohol. Throw in some Russian spies, German prisoners of war, a troupe of bombshell “secretaries” and a magician. And then have the lead protagonist, the world’s most famous economist, almost die of a heart attack. What does that give you? Only the most successful international monetary negotiation in history. This is the story of the Bretton Woods conference of 1944, as relayed by journalist and author Ed Conway to hosts Gillian Tett and Robin Wigglesworth. The three weeks of chaotic talks would deliver three decades of postwar peace and prosperity, and enthrone the US dollar as the global reserve currency. The discussions also nearly killed Britain’s lead negotiator, John Maynard Keynes, and would later disgrace his US counterpart, Harry Dexter White. Further reading: The Summit, by Ed Conway (2015) The Economic Consequences of the Peace, by John Maynard Keynes (1919) John Maynard Keynes, biography by Robert Skidelsky in three volumes (1983-2000) Treasonable Doubt: The Harry Dexter White Spy Case, by R Bruce Craig (2004) Credits: King’s College Cambridge, the IMF, Dreamstime, Getty Images, the Hulton Archive, Ullstein Bild, Bettmann, Shutterstock, the LIFE Picture Collection, Thomas D McAvoy, Alfred Eisenstaedt, and the Darling Archive. To enjoy future episodes, be sure to subscribe to The Story of Money wherever you get your podcasts, also on the show's dedicated YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@FTTheStoryOfMoney Hosts: Gillian Tett and Robin Wigglesworth Producer: Laurence Knight Executive Producers: Flo Phillips and Manuela Saragosa Original music: Breen Turner Broadcast engineers: Bianca Wakeman and Petros Giuompasis Podcast Development: Laura Clarke Video editor: Kristen Kenyon and Josh Divney at Podcast Discovery Learn more at ft.com/tsom or get in touch at thestoryofmoney@ft.com. Love listening to FT Podcasts? Join us live on Saturday June 20 at our inaugural NYC FT Weekend Festival at Spring Studios. Put your questions directly to our experts, experience your favourite podcast in person, and see the FT come to life. Register now and enjoy 10% off with code FTPodcast — this is one Saturday you won’t want to miss. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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  • He has this big argument with the American delegation.

  • It was actually over whether the Bank for International Settlements should be shut down.

  • And part of what the Americans wanted, they thought it was semi-corrupt

  • and they kind of wanted it to be shut down immediately.

  • Keynes did not want it to be shut down immediately.

  • And they were fighting over that.

  • Keynes got very angry about it.

  • He's running upstairs for a meeting and then has a heart attack.

  • Today on the story of money,

  • the origin story of what is perhaps the most important monetary agreement in modern history.

  • And yet, ironically, it was birthed in a remote

  • and dilapidated New England hotel with a leaky roof,

  • broken furniture and really bad paint job.

  • Ah, well, then I think I know which agreement you're talking about, Gillian.

  • It's the one that arguably provided the foundations for three decades of booming trade,

  • economic growth, all that good stuff at the end of World War II.

  • And yes, this agreement actually came out of three weeks of rushed negotiations among hundreds of delegates,

  • who I gather, frankly, spent more time drinking than sleeping.

  • Absolutely.

  • But the point is, it formally enshrined the US dollar