ABSTRACT

First published in 1932, this book discusses the suspension of the gold standard in Britain, and the economic events surrounding September 1931. It argues that despite specific errors made by individuals, groups, and individual nations, the attempts to save the pound had little chance of recovery. Indeed, years before its collapse, powerful, fundamental factors had been eroding its stability. Hence, the author does not entirely blame the influence of French policy, or Great Britain’s political and economic decline after the war, but states that the collapse of sterling was co-ordinated by several factors of importance.

chapter |8 pages

Introductory

chapter |10 pages

Fundamental Causes

chapter |12 pages

Return to Pre-War Parity

chapter |13 pages

The Rate of Stabilization

chapter |10 pages

Direct Causes

chapter |14 pages

Errors and Omissions

chapter |12 pages

The Defence of Sterling

chapter |7 pages

The Bank Rate Controversy

chapter |11 pages

Immediate Effects

chapter |9 pages

International Effects

chapter |9 pages

The Dollar “Crisis”

chapter |9 pages

Effect on World Prices

chapter |7 pages

Sterling v. Gold

chapter |10 pages

Future of the Gold Standard

chapter |14 pages

Future of the Pound

chapter |10 pages

Political aspects

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion