An agreement, announced in December, 1971, that
created a new dollar standard whereby the major currencies of the mostly-highly
industrialized nations were pegged to the dollar at central rates, with the
currencies being allowed to fluctuate by 2.25 percent. The Smithsonian
Agreement by the Group of Ten (G-10) nations (Belgium, Canada, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, the Nether-lands, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United
States) raised the price of gold to $38, up from $35, which was the price at
which the U.S. government promised to redeem dollars for gold. In effect, the
changing gold price devalued the dollar by 7.9 percent.
Several months after
the agreement was announced, it began to unravel, as the dollar and some
European currencies were hit by traders and speculators. Fifteen months after
the Smithsonian Agreement was negotiated, the price of the dollar again was
devalued by 10 percent to $42.22 per troy ounce of gold. In March 1973, the
G-10 nations announced that they would let their currencies float.