America and the World Political Economy: Atlantic Dreams and National Realities |
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Page 88
... reserve currency , " meaning that foreign governments and individuals proved will- ing to hold dollars rather than cash them in for gold from our reserves . Hence our dollar deficits were unredeemed . Instead , expatriate dollars came ...
... reserve currency , " meaning that foreign governments and individuals proved will- ing to hold dollars rather than cash them in for gold from our reserves . Hence our dollar deficits were unredeemed . Instead , expatriate dollars came ...
Page 105
... reserve currency , to be the principal new source for otherwise desperately short international liquidity . But if ... reserve currency was a cross , it was one we had embraced with alacrity and fought fiercely to retain . For it was the ...
... reserve currency , to be the principal new source for otherwise desperately short international liquidity . But if ... reserve currency was a cross , it was one we had embraced with alacrity and fought fiercely to retain . For it was the ...
Page 283
... currency " standard . The United States and the United Kingdom would agree initially on the sterling - dollar rate ... reserve currency all greatly strained the postwar British economy . De- valuation in 1949 was repeated in 1967 , after ...
... currency " standard . The United States and the United Kingdom would agree initially on the sterling - dollar rate ... reserve currency all greatly strained the postwar British economy . De- valuation in 1949 was repeated in 1967 , after ...
Contents
General Considerations | 3 |
Main Issues within the Atlantic | 85 |
Basic Balance of Payments 1970 | 98 |
Copyright | |
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abroad agricultural Ameri American policy Atlantic Community Atlanticism Atlanticist billion bloc Britain British Canada capital commercial Common Market competition corporations costs currency devaluation developed countries direct investment domestic dominant economic and political economic efficiency economic policy economic system economists EFTA Empire Eurodollar Europe's European Community exchange exports federalism foreign investments France free trade GATT Gaulle Germany growing growth hegemony Hence ideal imperial imports increasingly indifference curve industrial integration interdependence interests international economic Japan Japanese Kennedy Round Latin America less liquidity major manufactures ment mercantilist military millions of U.S. modern monetary system multinational nation-state nomic official overseas percent plural postwar Prebisch preferences production protectionism rates regional reserve reserve currency Ricardo role seemed social society special drawing rights Table tariffs Third World Third-World countries tion Trade Policy trade surplus U.S. dollars UNCTAD union United Western Europe Williams Report