Exchange Rates and Economic Recovery in the 1930s
- 3 March 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Economic History
- Vol. 45 (4) , 925-946
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022050700035178
Abstract
Currency depreciation in the 1930s is almost universally dismissed or condemned. This paper advances a different interpretation of these policies. It documents first that depreciation benefited the initiating countries. It shows next that there can be no presumption that depreciation was beggar-thy-neighbor. While empirical analysis indicates that the foreign repercussions of individual devaluations were in fact negative, it does not imply that competitive devaluations taken by a group of countries were without mutual benefit. To the contrary, similar policies, had they been even more widely adopted and coordinated internationally, would have hastened recovery from the Great Depression.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Great Depression, 1929-1938: Lessons for the 1980sJournal of Money, Credit and Banking, 1986
- The Political Economy of Germany in the Twentieth CenturyThe History Teacher, 1982
- A dynamic model of tariffs, output and employment under flexible exchange ratesJournal of International Economics, 1981
- The Constant Employment Budget Balance and British Budgetary Policy, 1929–391The Economic History Review, 1981
- The Depression in Sweden and the United States: A Comparison of Causes and PoliciesPublished by Springer Nature ,1981
- The Exchange Rate and the International Transmission of Business Cycle Disturbances: Some Evidence from the Great DepressionJournal of Money, Credit and Banking, 1980
- KEYNES, THE TREASURY AND UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE LATER NINETEEN-THIRTIES *Oxford Economic Papers, 1980
- Monetary and other explanations of the start of the great depressionJournal of Monetary Economics, 1976
- A General Equilibrium Approach To Monetary TheoryJournal of Money, Credit and Banking, 1969
- International Currency ExperienceThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1946