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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 III. International trade under inconvertible paper
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

THE UNDERLYING PRINCIPLES 359 
With exchange at £1 = $10, the goods exactly pay for each other. Exchange 
remains at this rate so long as there are no other transactions. The barter 
terms of trade, be it observed, are 50 of American cotton for 50 British steel. 
(2) Great Britain next is called on to remit to the United States for loans 
the sum of £250,000 a year. The American borrowers can draw on London 
bankers to that amount. The amount of sterling exchange on sale in New 
York, which before was £1,000,000, now is raised to £1,250,000. The only 
persons who buy that exchange are the representatives in New York of the 
British steel firms which have sold steel for $10,000,000. That sum, no more 
and no less, these representatives have to convert into British funds; they want 
sterling exchange for remittance to London. And no one else wants sterling 
exchange. The amount offered for the sterling exchange on sale is then the 
precise sum of $10,000,000; the amount of exchange on sale is £1,250,000. 
The price of sterling bills — the rate of exchange — falls to $8.00; £1 = $8.00. 
At that rate the transactions balance. If exchange happened to be quoted the 
other way — if in London, say, it were quoted in terms of so many shillings to 
the dollar — the figure would be 2s. 6d. to the dollar, as compared with a pre- 
vious quotation (on the same basis) of 2s. to the dollar. The pound is worth 
less in dollars than before; the dollar is worth more than before in pounds 
and shillings. 
The barter terms of trade remain unchanged. The same quantities of goods 
pass between the two countries. Great Britain sends no more goods to the 
United States than before, and the United States no less goods to Great 
Britain : and yet Britain’s additional payments to the United States are met. 
By a stroke of the pen, so to speak, without any alteration in the substance of 
things, the loan remittances are provided for. 
(3) Consider now the consequences on the prices of the two commodities, 
cotton and steel. And here again begin by simplifying the case as regards the 
two articles. Suppose both to be primarily articles of export from the two 
countries, and their prices determined, in the first instance at least, by the 
conditions of the export market. Cotton continues to sell at 4.84. in London, 
and steel continues to sell at $0.20 in New York. But 4.84. in London, trans- 
lated into American currency at the new rate of exchange, means less American 
money than before. Before the disturbance of foreign exchange, 4.84. in 
London meant $0.20 in New York. Now, however, at the new rate of £1 
= $8.00, 4.84. in London means only $0.16 in New York. The price of cotton, 
while unchanged in London, falls to $0.16 in New York. On the other hand, 
the price of steel, remaining as before at $0.20 in New York, now realizes to the 
British seller more than before in London. At the new rate of exchange, the 
British seller gets for $0.20 in New York, not 4.84. in London, but 6d. 
Observe that these precise changes in prices — the one advantageous to the 
British steel sellers, the other disadvantageous to the American cotton sellers —
	        

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International Trade. Macmillan, 1927.
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