Abstract

This paper describes the formation of international treaties as an integral part of the relationships that develop in the monetary system. In these relationships of the monetary system there are relationships between States, which are relationships between big companies operating from certain States with key global currencies and with others normally economically weaker States and/or dependent on the strongest currencies in the monetary system. This conformation of the relationships of the monetary system is framed within the Theory of Corporate Governmentality or the theory of government of large corporations, characterised by the concentration of wealth and ownership of income present and future, with backed debt-money generated by the financial system, which has supported this concentration of wealth. This is how international treaties are part of the elements of submission and domination by big companies to certain States or groups of States that end up imposing certain internal changes, with significant loss of sovereignty and with the complicity of economic powers and local politicians in these States, plus the complicity of international organisations, also subject to this corporate governmentality.

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