The British monetary authorities have traditionally focused on broader monetary aggregates than their counterparts elsewhere. The reasons include: the willingness of UK banks to allow customers to make payments by drawing on time deposits, the particularities of the UK approach to managing the national debt and the foreign exchange reserves, and the flow-of-funds system of national accounts developed after World War II. This article outlines these reasons, and explores the implications for the UK's often fractious relationship with the International Monetary Fund during the 1950s and 1960s. It explains why IMF conditionality on loans to the UK focused on broad aggregates.</jats:p
While the sterling area was not strictly an example of monetary integration, it did provide a sustai...
The devaluation of 1967 and the float of 1972 have become two of the key cornerstones in the analysi...
Domestic Credit Expansion, Confidence and the Foreign Exchange Market: Sterling in 1976 This pa...
The British monetary authorities have traditionally focused on broader monetary aggregates than thei...
This article reassesses the neo-liberal shift within British economic policy-making and the internat...
For twenty years before the famous crisis of 1976 Britain was a regular borrower from the Internatio...
The sterling area was an international monetary system that operated for almost 30 years after the e...
This article reassesses the neo-liberal shift within British economic policy-making and the internat...
This paper describes the origin, evolution, and results of two initiatives taken by the United Kingd...
Throughout the 1960s the international monetary system crumbled in a gradual process which was punct...
Group identification contributes to intimate international cooperation: lack of group identification...
The International Monetary Fund was designed during World War II by men whose worldview had been sha...
For twenty years before the famous crisis of 1976 Britain was a regular borrower from the Internatio...
This article challenges the claim that neglect of monetary policy was responsible for the unpreceden...
This article is concerned with the desirable functions of a central bank and the problem of its inde...
While the sterling area was not strictly an example of monetary integration, it did provide a sustai...
The devaluation of 1967 and the float of 1972 have become two of the key cornerstones in the analysi...
Domestic Credit Expansion, Confidence and the Foreign Exchange Market: Sterling in 1976 This pa...
The British monetary authorities have traditionally focused on broader monetary aggregates than thei...
This article reassesses the neo-liberal shift within British economic policy-making and the internat...
For twenty years before the famous crisis of 1976 Britain was a regular borrower from the Internatio...
The sterling area was an international monetary system that operated for almost 30 years after the e...
This article reassesses the neo-liberal shift within British economic policy-making and the internat...
This paper describes the origin, evolution, and results of two initiatives taken by the United Kingd...
Throughout the 1960s the international monetary system crumbled in a gradual process which was punct...
Group identification contributes to intimate international cooperation: lack of group identification...
The International Monetary Fund was designed during World War II by men whose worldview had been sha...
For twenty years before the famous crisis of 1976 Britain was a regular borrower from the Internatio...
This article challenges the claim that neglect of monetary policy was responsible for the unpreceden...
This article is concerned with the desirable functions of a central bank and the problem of its inde...
While the sterling area was not strictly an example of monetary integration, it did provide a sustai...
The devaluation of 1967 and the float of 1972 have become two of the key cornerstones in the analysi...
Domestic Credit Expansion, Confidence and the Foreign Exchange Market: Sterling in 1976 This pa...