An unusual if guarded optimism has descended upon Paris, along with hundreds of world leaders, bankers and climate activists.
The reference is to the 1944 gathering in New Hampshire where diplomats hammered out the monetary institutions to rebuild countries after World War II — the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
Now, the goal is to rebuild those systems to weather a looming crisis: the entwined dangers of poverty and climate change.
“We don’t have to choose between the fight against poverty and the fight for the climate and biodiversity,” the French president, Emmanuel Macron, argued last year.
Many believe a new international monetary system, one that offers developing countries facing climate crises not more crippling debt but financial support, might be in the making.
Persons:
Emmanuel Macron
Organizations:
World Bank, International Monetary Fund
Locations:
Paris, Woods, New Hampshire