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International trade

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fullscreen: International trade

Monograph

Identifikator:
1758394757
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-136209
Document type:
Monograph
Author:
Taussig, Frank William http://d-nb.info/gnd/120199459
Title:
International trade
Place of publication:
New York, NY
Publisher:
Macmillan
Year of publication:
1927
Scope:
XXI, 425 Seiten
graph. Darst.
Digitisation:
2021
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
Part II. Problems of verification
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • International trade
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Part I. Theory
  • Part II. Problems of verification
  • Part III. International trade under inconvertible paper
  • Index

Full text

320 
INTERNATIONAL TRADE 
of exports had fallen markedly, the imports of gold reached dimen- 
sions comparable to the most extraordinary year of the war period. 
In the fiscal year 1916-17, the gold imports had been 685 millions. 
In the calendar year 1921 they were not less than 667 millions. 
While the “favorable” merchandise balance declined, the imports 
of gold rose — just the contrary of what would be expected under 
a naive conception of the theory of the case. 
These phenomena, like the equally striking ones of the war 
proper, were due to causes clearly of a transient character. In 1919 
heavy government payments on loan account were still made by 
the United States Treasury to foreign countries, the winding up 
of war transactions for which the government had made pledges.! 
There were also heavy government expenses abroad for the sup- 
port of the American military forces and their return homeward. 
In 1920, again, there was a transient cause of a different kind. In 
the United States one of the outstanding phases of the speculative 
expansion of 1919-20 was a veritable craze for exports. It is most 
astonishing that the business world failed to realize that sales to 
foreigners of the character and volume which the war loans had 
made possible could not continue when the war conditions had 
ceased. Even in the face of the new and altered conditions, goods 
were sold on credit to foreign buyers, or were fairly shovelled out 
to foreign countries in expectation of ready sale there. The real 
situation was not grasped until collapse came in the second half of 
1920. Then it appeared that many foreign buyers could not pay 
their debts, and that many goods sent in expectation of profitable 
sale had to be disposed of at sacrifice prices. Great sums were lost ; 
a large part of the “credit balance” which had been gloated over 
during 1919-20 simply disappeared. 
In the years succeeding there was a gradual return to conditions 
less abnormal. In 1921 there were still left-overs from the period 
of craze; but by 1922 something like order emerged, and was 
maintained for some years thereafter. Even so, it must remain 
1 See the figures on the Treasury advances after the armistice (Nov. 1918), given 
on pn. 315 above.
	        

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