Students of economic history are in for a treat. An official studying deep in the bowels of the US Treasury library has recently uncovered a prize of truly startling proportions – an 800 page plus transcript of
the Bretton Woods conference in July 1944, the meeting of nations which established the foundations of today's international monetary system.
Bizarrely, this extraordiary manuscript has never before come to light.
Professor Steve Hanke of John Hopkins University, whose former student it was who discovered the do ent, is now dashing to publish it in full in conjunction with his friend, Jacque de Larosiere. The first stage of the process, transcribing the type-written do ent into digital form is now complete, though it is not yet available. It's hoped eventually to produce a hard copy, book version.