ABSTRACT

First published in 1936, this book gives the reader an insight into the tendencies and spirit of the monetary reform movement as a whole, as accomplished or proposed since the First World War. The author marks the consideration of the overall reform as being more important than specifically looking at the actual proposals and measures involved, and the views he attributes to the various monetary reform schools are therefore composite views of the various factions of those schools. As a comparatively recent convert to the idea of monetary reform, at the time of writing, the author offers a balanced view of the subject as he also has extensive experience of the ideas of the orthodox monetary system. However, he does not believe that monetary reform alone can achieve the desired end without considerable economic planning. Indeed, he suggests that the monetary reform movement he discusses desperately needs to adopt a broader perspective and thus, he suggests a compromise.

part |336 pages

Monetary Reform in Theory and Practice

chapter Chapter I|7 pages

Introductory

chapter Chapter II|8 pages

The Automatic System

chapter Chapter III|7 pages

Can Money be Abolished?

chapter Chapter IV|8 pages

Demand for Monetary Reform

chapter Chapter V|10 pages

Post-War Reforms

chapter Chapter VI|7 pages

Reform Movements and the Crisis

chapter Chapter VII|9 pages

Monetary Reform during the Crisis

chapter Chapter VIII|9 pages

Policy of Cheap Money

chapter Chapter IX|9 pages

Cheap Money and the Crisis

chapter Chapter X|10 pages

The Credit Expansionist School

chapter Chapter XI|6 pages

Credit Expansion during the Crisis

chapter Chapter XII|7 pages

Purchasing Power Expansion

chapter Chapter XIII|6 pages

Purchasing Power Expansion during the Depression

chapter Chapter XIV|7 pages

The Spending School

chapter Chapter V|8 pages

Spending Policy during the Depression

chapter Chapter XVI|7 pages

Managed Currency

chapter Chapter XVII|9 pages

Managed Gold Standard

chapter chapter XVIII|7 pages

Managed Paper Currency

chapter Chapter XIX|7 pages

Monetary Management during the Depression

chapter Chapter XX|7 pages

Elastic Gold Standard

chapter Chapter XXI|7 pages

The “Rubber Dollar” in Practice

chapter Chapter XXII|11 pages

Alterable Gold Parities

chapter Chapter XXIII|11 pages

Forward Exchange Operations by Central Banks

chapter Chapter XXIV|6 pages

Official Forward Exchange Operations in Practice

chapter Chapter XXV|8 pages

Drastic Devaluation

chapter Chapter XXVI|10 pages

A Commodity Standard

chapter Chapter XXVII|8 pages

Bimetallism

chapter chapter XXVIII|7 pages

The American Bimetallist Experiment

chapter Chapter XXIX|8 pages

Consistent Deflation

chapter Chapter XXX|7 pages

Consistent Deflation in Practice

chapter Chapter XXXI|7 pages

Negative Interest Rates

chapter Chapter XXXII|6 pages

Dual Systems of Currency

chapter Chapter XXXIII|5 pages

Dual Currencies in Practice

chapter Chapter XXXIV|9 pages

International Co-Operation

chapter Chapter XXXV|7 pages

International Co-Operation in Practice

chapter Chapter XXXVI|9 pages

The Exchange Clearing System

chapter Chapter XXXVII|9 pages

Exchange Clearing in Practice

chapter Chapter XXXVIII|7 pages

Monetary Isolation

chapter Chapter XXXIX|5 pages

Monetary Isolation in Practice

chapter Chapter XL|8 pages

Co-Ordination of Reform Schemes

chapter Chapter XLI|6 pages

Monetary v. Economic Reform

chapter Chapter XLII|8 pages

Political Aspects of Monetary Reform

chapter Chapter XLIII|5 pages

Moral Aspects of Monetary Reform

chapter Chapter XLIV|6 pages

The Future of Monetary Reform