The sterling area was an international monetary system that operated for almost 30 years after the end of the Second World War. Born from wartime exchange controls, it was initially a short-term response to global imbalances in the wake of the war and the failure of the new Bretton Woods institutions to support multilateral trade and payments. From 1945 to 1972, members of the sterling area agreed to maintain fixed exchange rates with sterling, to hold the bulk of their foreign exchange reserves in sterling, and to impose exchange control in common with Britain to protect against possible flight from sterling to other currencies. In return, members enjoyed freer trade with Britain and freer access to British capital than other countries. In...
We provide the first econometric study of foreign exchange market intervention for the UK during the...
This article examines the tense and complex monetary relationship between Britain, Singapore and Mal...
The pound sterling as an inter-regional medium of exchange Trans formations the economic structure o...
While the sterling area was not strictly an example of monetary integration, it did provide a sustai...
Following the November 1967 sterling devaluation, the British Labour government of Harold Wilson str...
Throughout the 1960s the international monetary system crumbled in a gradual process which was punct...
The contents of this thesis examine British management of the sterling area between 1950 and 1958, c...
The devaluation of 1967 and the float of 1972 have become two of the key cornerstones in the analysi...
The Sterling Area can be tentatively defined as the monetary union existing mainly between the Unite...
The sterling area was a financial alliance of countries using sterling as their principal internatio...
The purpose of this thesis is to assess postwar recovery and economic stability for Britain under th...
The British monetary authorities have traditionally focused on broader monetary aggregates than thei...
The thesis traces the retirement of sterling as a reserve currency amid the profound transformation ...
The paper analyses two fundamental questions of British monetary policy after Second World War and t...
We provide the first econometric study of foreign exchange market intervention for the UK during the...
We provide the first econometric study of foreign exchange market intervention for the UK during the...
This article examines the tense and complex monetary relationship between Britain, Singapore and Mal...
The pound sterling as an inter-regional medium of exchange Trans formations the economic structure o...
While the sterling area was not strictly an example of monetary integration, it did provide a sustai...
Following the November 1967 sterling devaluation, the British Labour government of Harold Wilson str...
Throughout the 1960s the international monetary system crumbled in a gradual process which was punct...
The contents of this thesis examine British management of the sterling area between 1950 and 1958, c...
The devaluation of 1967 and the float of 1972 have become two of the key cornerstones in the analysi...
The Sterling Area can be tentatively defined as the monetary union existing mainly between the Unite...
The sterling area was a financial alliance of countries using sterling as their principal internatio...
The purpose of this thesis is to assess postwar recovery and economic stability for Britain under th...
The British monetary authorities have traditionally focused on broader monetary aggregates than thei...
The thesis traces the retirement of sterling as a reserve currency amid the profound transformation ...
The paper analyses two fundamental questions of British monetary policy after Second World War and t...
We provide the first econometric study of foreign exchange market intervention for the UK during the...
We provide the first econometric study of foreign exchange market intervention for the UK during the...
This article examines the tense and complex monetary relationship between Britain, Singapore and Mal...
The pound sterling as an inter-regional medium of exchange Trans formations the economic structure o...