Scenarios about 'financial crises'
Financial crises are significant disruptions in the normal functioning of financial markets, often characterized by sharp declines in asset values, banking failures, and economic contraction. Throughout history, these events have revealed structural weaknesses in economic systems, from the Tulip Mania of the 1630s to the 2008 Global Financial Crisis. In alternate history scenarios, different responses to financial crises serve as critical divergence points that can fundamentally reshape economic systems, political power structures, and international relations.
What If The International Monetary Fund Was Never Formed?
Exploring the alternate timeline where the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference failed to establish the IMF, fundamentally altering the post-WWII economic order and global financial stability mechanisms.