The Role of G8 Economic Summits in Global Monetary Architecture

 
Konstantinos J. Hazakis

 

The 1970s saw turbulent and dramatic economic transitions. The breakdown of the Bretton Woods System introduced new monetary conditions that ended a period of consensus among most capitalist states regarding ideal regimes to form their monetary relations. Until 1971, the interests of financial capital were embedded in domestic and global monetary regimes in what Ruggie termed the “compromise of embedded liberalism” (1982). After the first oil crisis (1974), industrial states faced severe obstacles to accommodate macroeconomic shocks, as well as to address persistent structural problems, substantial current account disequilibria and stagflation. Realizing the complex, and highly volatile nature of the post Bretton-Woods Monetary environment, six of the most industrial¬ized nations, decided to introduce a new informal and confidential instrument for International Economic Policy Coordination (IEPC), the Annual Economic Summits of the Group of Six Countries.


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Volume 3 / Issue 1 / May 2009
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Editor’s Note

The Idea of Europe

Europe has evolved beyond a simple geographic location; it is more than a set of institutions or a common economic area. Instead, Europe is a pervasive Idea based on notions of citizenship (re: political and social inclusion), human rights and justice, shared economic growth and prosperity and responsibility.


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The Convention on Cluster Munitions that prohibits all usage, stockpiling, production, and transfer of cluster munitions was adopted by 107 states on 30 May 2008 in Dublin. It was signed on 03 December 2008 and it entered into force on 01 August 2010.


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