Britain and the Gold Exchange Standard of the 1920s (HOM 32-C)

12 days ago
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History of Money, Lecture 32, Pt. C: overview of the currency system of the United Kingdom in the aftermath of World War I. The UK government and Bank of England elected to overvalue the pound sterling in the 1920s with the Gold Standard Act of 1925, much to the detriment of British industry and British exports. Other countries, notably France, joined the Gold Exchange Standard in the latter half of the 1920s.
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Dr. Jonathan Barth received his PhD in history from George Mason University in 2014. He specializes in the history of money and banking in the early modern period, with corollary interests in early modern politics, empire, culture, and ideas. Barth is Associate Professor of History at Arizona State University and Associate Director of the Center for American Institutions at Arizona State University.
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