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In 1944 delegates from 44 countries gathered in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire in the United States to agree on a system of economic order and global cooperation. Eighty years later, the seeds sown there for the likes of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank still dominate the world.
But with the rise of countries like China and the rest of the global south, many think it's time for a substantial rethink of those Bretton Woods institutions, especially in the wake of the recent meetings of APEC, G20 and COP29.
In this special edition of The Agenda, Juliet Mann gets the opinions of French Economist Professor Marc Uzan, Executive Director and Founder of the Reinventing Bretton Woods Committee.
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