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Globalizing Capital Barry Eichengreen

Globalizing Capital By Barry Eichengreen

Globalizing Capital by Barry Eichengreen


$19.99
Condition - Very Good
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Summary

This volume tells the story of the international financial system over the past 150 years. It demonstrates that insights into the international monetary system and effective principles for governing it can result only if is seen as a historical phenomenon.

Globalizing Capital Summary

Globalizing Capital: A History of the International Monetary System - New and Updated Edition by Barry Eichengreen

The importance of the international monetary system is clearly evident in daily news stories about fluctuating currencies and in dramatic events such as the recent reversals in the Mexican economy. It has become increasingly apparent that one cannot understand the international economy without knowing how its monetary system operates. Now Barry Eichengreen presents a brief, lucid book that tells the story of the international financial system over the past 150 years. Globalizing Capital is intended not only for economists but also for a general audience of historians, political scientists, professionals in government and business, and anyone with a broad interest in international economic and political relations. Eichengreen's work demonstrates that insights into the international monetary system and effective principles for governing it can result only if it is seen a historical phenomenon extending from the gold standard period to interwar instability, then to Bretton Woods, and finally to the post-1973 period of fluctuating currencies. Eichengreen analyzes the shift from pegged to floating exchange rates in the 1970s and ascribes that change to the growing capital mobility that has made pegged rates difficult to maintain. However, he shows that capital mobility was also high prior to World War I, yet this did not prevent the maintenance of fixed exchange rates. What was critical for the successful maintenance of fixed exchange rates during that period was the fact that governments were relatively insulated from democratic politics and thus from pressure to trade off exchange rate stability for other goals, such as the reduction of unemployment. Today pegging exchange rates would require very radical reforms of a sort that governments are understandably reluctant to embrace. The implication seems undeniable: floating rates are here to stay.

Globalizing Capital Reviews

This book by a prominent economic historian is a succinct and well-written history of the international monetary system--the general framework in which financial transactions among residents of different countries take place--and its evolution... [It] provides useful historical background for understanding current European efforts to create a monetary union. -- Richard N. Cooper Foreign Affairs Capital flows in the recent period, unlike those in the earlier one, proved to be incompatible with exchange rate stability. [Eichengreen's] reasons for the difference... constitute a unique insight and contribution... to the professional literature on a familiar topic. Choice

About Barry Eichengreen

Barry Eichengreen is the John L. Simpson Professor of Economics and Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of European Monetary Unification: Theory, Practice and Analysis.

Table of Contents

Preface
Ch. 2 The Gold Standard
Prehistory
The Dilemmas of Bimetallism
The Lure of Bimetallism
The Advent of the Gold Standard
Shades of Gold
How the Gold Standard Worked
The Gold Standard as a Historically Specific Institution
International Solidarity
The Gold Standard and the Lender of Last Resort
Instability at the Periphery
The Stability of the System
Ch. 3 Interwar Instability
Chronology
Experience with Floating: The Controversial Case of the Franc
Reconstructing the Gold Standard
The New Gold Standard
Problems of the New Gold Standard
The Pattern of International Payments
Responses to the Great Depression
Banking Crises and Their Management
Disintegration of the Gold Standard
Sterling's Crisis
The Dollar Follows
Managed Floating
Conclusions
Ch. 4 The Bretton Woods System
Wartime Planning and Its Consequences
The Sterling Crisis and the Realignment of European Currencies
The European Payments Union
Payments Problems and Selective Controls
Convertibility: Problems and Progress
Special Drawing Rights
Declining Controls and Rising Rigidity
The Battle for Sterling
The Crisis of the Dollar
Ch. 5 From Floating to Monetary Unification
Floating Exchange Rates in the 1970s
Floating Exchange Rates in the 1980s
The Snake
The European Monetary System
Renewed Impetus for Integration
The EMS Crisis
Understanding the Crisis
The Experience of Developing Countries
The Asian Crisis
Conclusions
Ch. 6 Conclusion
Glossary
References
Index

Additional information

GOR003286311
9780691002453
0691002452
Globalizing Capital: A History of the International Monetary System - New and Updated Edition by Barry Eichengreen
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Princeton University Press
19980802
240
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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