Initially, the value of goods was expressed in terms of other goods,  i.e. an economy based on barter between individual market participants.  The obvious limitations of such a system encouraged establishing more  generally accepted means of exchange at a fairly early stage in history,  to set a common benchmark of value. In different economies, everything  from teeth to feathers to pretty stones has served this purpose, but  soon metals, in particular gold and silver, established themselves as an  accepted means of payment as well as a reliable storage of value. 
Originally, coins were simply minted from the preferred metal, but  in stable political regimes the introduction of a paper form of  governmental IOUs (I owe you) gained acceptance during the Middle Ages.  Such IOUs, often introduced more successfully through force than  persuasion were the basis of modern currencies. 
Before World War I, most central banks supported their currencies  with convertibility to gold. Although paper money could always be  exchanged for gold, in reality this did not occur often, fostering the  sometimes disastrous notion that there was not necessarily a need for  full cover in the central reserves of the government. 
At times, the ballooning supply of paper money without gold cover  led to devastating inflation and resulting political instability. To  protect local national interests, foreign exchange controls were  increasingly introduced to prevent market forces from punishing monetary  irresponsibility. 
In the latter stages of World War II, the Bretton Woods agreement  was reached on the initiative of the USA in July 1944. The Bretton Woods  Conference rejected John Maynard Keynes suggestion for a new world  reserve currency in favor of a system built on the US dollar. Other  international institutions such as the IMF, the World Bank and GATT  (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) were created in the same period  as the emerging victors of WW2 searched for a way to avoid the  destabilizing monetary crisis which led to the war. The Bretton Woods  agreement resulted in a system of fixed exchange rates that partly  reinstated the gold standard, fixing the US dollar at USD35/oz and  fixing the other main currencies to the dollar - and was intended to be  permanent.
The Bretton Woods system came under increasing pressure as national  economies moved in different directions during the sixties. A number of  realignments kept the system alive for a long time, but eventually  Bretton Woods collapsed in the early seventies following president  Nixon's suspension of the gold convertibility in August 1971. The dollar  was no longer suitable as the sole international currency at a time  when it was under severe pressure from increasing US budget and trade  deficits. 
The following decades have seen foreign exchange trading develop  into the largest global market by far. Restrictions on capital flows  have been removed in most countries, leaving the market forces free to  adjust foreign exchange rates according to their perceived values.
But the idea of fixed exchange rates has by no means died. The EEC  (European Economic Community) introduced a new system of fixed exchange  rates in 1979, the European Monetary System. This attempt to fix  exchange rates met with near extinction in 1992-93, when pent-up  economic pressures forced devaluations of a number of weak European  currencies. Nevertheless, the quest for currency stability has continued  in Europe with the renewed attempt to not only fix currencies but  actually replace many of them with the Euro in 2001.
The lack of sustainability in fixed foreign exchange rates gained  new relevance with the events in South East Asia in the latter part of  1997, where currency after currency was devalued against the US dollar,  leaving other fixed exchange rates, in particular in South America,  looking very vulnerable. 
But while commercial companies have had to face a much more  volatile currency environment in recent years, investors and financial  institutions have found a new playground. The size of foreign exchange  markets now dwarfs any other investment market by a large factor. It is  estimated that more than USD 3,000 billion is traded every day, far more  than the world's stock and bond markets combined.
 
 
 
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