Credibility and the international monetary regime:a historical perspective

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Bibliographic Details
Group Author: MacDonald Ronald. 1955-; Bordo Michael D.
Published: Cambridge University Press,
Publisher Address: Cambridge New York
Publication Dates: 2012.
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Series: Studies in macroeconomic history
Subjects:
Carrier Form: xiii, 240 p.: ill. ; 24 cm.
ISBN: 9780521811330 (hbk.)
0521811333
Index Number: F811
CLC: F811.6
Call Number: F811.6/C912
Contents: Includes bibliographical references (p. 223-234) and index.
Credibility and the international monetary regime : theoretical and historical perspectives / Michael D. Bordo and Ronald MacDonald -- Credibility and fundamentals : were the classical and inter-war gold standards well-behaved target zones? / Paul Hallwood, Ronald MacDonald, and Ian Marsh -- Interest rate interactions in the classical gold standard, 1880-1914 : was there any monetary independence? / Michael D. Bordo and Ronald MacDonald -- Realignment expectations and the US dollar, 1890-1897 : was there a peso problem? / by C. Paul Hallwood, Ronald MacDonald, and Ian W. Marsh -- The inter-war gold exchange standard : credibility and monetary independence / Michael D. Bordo and Ronald MacDonald -- Crash! : expectational aspects of the UK's and the USA's departures from the inter-war gold standard / C. Paul Hallwood, Ronald MacDonald, and Ian W. Marsh -- Did impending war in Europe help destroy the gold bloc in 1936? : an internal inconsistency hypothesis / Paul Hallwood, Ronald MacDonald, and Ian Marsh -- Sterling in crisis, 1964-1967 / Michael D. Bordo, Ronald MacDonald, and Michael J. Oliver -- On the mean-reverting properties of target zone exchange rates : some evidence from the ERM / Myrvin Anthony and Ronald MacDonald -- Credibility and interest rate discretion in the ERM / Hali Edison and Ronald MacDonald.
The present global monetary regime is based on floating among the major advanced countries. A key underlying factor behind the present regime is credibility to maintain stable monetary policies. The origin of credibility in monetary regimes goes back to the pre-1914 classical gold standard. In that regime, adherence by central banks to the rule of convertibility of national currencies in terms of a fixed weight of gold provided a nominal anchor to the price level. Between 1914 and the present several monetary regimes gradually moved away from gold, with varying success in maintaining price stability and credibility. In this book, the editors present ten studies combining historical narrative with econometrics that analyze the role of credibility in four monetary regimes, from the gold standard to the present managed float.