Epilogue
Patrick Collins
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Patrick Collins: Imperial College of Science and Technology
A chapter in Currency Convertibility, 1985, pp 213-218 from Palgrave Macmillan
Abstract:
Abstract In the following a number of key points from the argument of the foregoing chapters are recapitulated and emphasised. The foundation of the case for the implementation of the particular system of conditional currency convertibility formulated by Grondona, is the argument that only the resumption of some form of currency convertibility offers the prospect of returning to monetary and economic stability. The main reasons for reconsidering the classical mechanism of currency convertibility can be summarised as follows: 1. No mechanism other than currency convertibility acts directly to stabilise the real value of money, which is the fundamental objective of monetary policy, and no other mechanism has ever succeeded in preserving the value of currency in the long term. This fact bears emphasis at a time when the depreciation of money has been so rapid that on average in the major OECD countries money lost more than 60 per cent of its value in the first decade following the abandonment of gold convertibility of the US dollar in 1971. 2. No mechanism other than currency convertibility exerts a dual counter-cyclical influence on both the monetary and real economies in response to changes caused by market forces in the velocity of circulation of money. The system exerts this influence by permitting the withdrawal of commodities from the market and a corresponding increase in the supply of money when the demand for money is rising relative to the demand for goods, and by permitting an increase in the supply of commodities and a corresponding withdrawal of money from circulation when the demand for goods is rising relative to the demand for money. 3. No mechanism other than currency convertibility, and in particular no politically administered scheme, can bring about the same pattern of expansion and contraction of liquidity and its detailed international distribution according to market forces in a manner tending to stabilise the level of economic activity — even in theory. In practice, regardless of the intentions of governments, the unavoidable inefficiencies of the political policy-making process produce a result substantially poorer than even the best that is theoretically achievable.
Keywords: Monetary Policy; Market Force; International Monetary System; Bretton Wood System; Currency Convertibility (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1985
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:pal:palchp:978-1-349-07058-9_10
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DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-07058-9_10
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