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Globalizing Capital

A History of the International Monetary System - Third Edition

Barry Eichengreen

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Princeton University Press img Link Publisher

Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Wirtschaft

Beschreibung

Essential reading for understanding the international economy—now thoroughly updated

Lucid, accessible, and provocative, and now thoroughly updated to cover recent events that have shaken the global economy, Globalizing Capital is an indispensable account of the past 150 years of international monetary and financial history—from the classical gold standard to today's post–Bretton Woods "nonsystem." Bringing the story up to the present, this third edition covers the global financial crisis, the Greek bailout, the Euro crisis, the rise of China as a global monetary power, the renewed controversy over the international role of the U.S. dollar, and the currency war. Concise and nontechnical, and with a proven appeal to general readers, students, and specialists alike, Globalizing Capital is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand where the international economy has been—and where it may be going.

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Schlagwörter

Tax, Balance of payments, Global imbalances, Gold reserve, Depreciation, Recession, Speculation, Money supply, Deutsche Mark, World economy, Investor, World War II, Bimetallism, Payment, Bretton Woods system, Central bank, Fiat money, Interest rate, Line of credit, Debt, Economy, Gold standard, Developed country, Monetary policy, Economic policy, Competitiveness, Provision (accounting), Unemployment, Floating exchange rate, 1997 Asian financial crisis, Inflation, Behalf, Exchange rate, United States dollar, Trader (finance), Bank, Current account, Tariff, Government bond, Credit (finance), Expense, Investment, Foreign direct investment, European Central Bank, Fixed exchange-rate system, Economic growth, Devaluation, Pound sterling, Asset, Funding, Austerity, Default (finance), Capital flight, Guarantee, Speculative attack, Currency, Deflation, Bank run, European Monetary System, Export, Foreign exchange market, Barry Eichengreen, Monetary authority, Economics, Receipt, Fiscal policy, International monetary systems, Policy, Capital control, Market liquidity