ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1937, this is a report by a study group of members of the Royal Institute of International Affairs and aims to fill a gap in the literature of international economics. It is an attempt, in the first place, to analyse objectively the conditions under which long-term capital may move between countries and to consider carefully the special factors in the world economy of to-day which tend to limit the extent to which such movements are possible or desirable. Secondly, the book contains a careful study of the post-war history of international investments which brings together facts and figures which are inaccessible to most students and businessmen.

part 1|109 pages

chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|14 pages

The Future of International Investment

chapter 4|13 pages

Types of International Investments

chapter 5|16 pages

The Balance of International Payments

chapter 7|26 pages

The State and International Investment

chapter 8|8 pages

Conclusion

part 2|219 pages

chapter 9|19 pages

Pre-War International Investment

chapter 10|34 pages

The Creditors—Great Britain

chapter 11|33 pages

The Creditors—The United States

chapter 12|22 pages

The Creditors—France

chapter 13|60 pages

The Debtors 1

chapter 14|49 pages

International Investments in Depression