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Title: Monetary Sovereignty, Exchange Rates, and Capital Controls: The Trilemma in the Interwar Period
Author(s): Maurice Obstfeld, Jay C Shambaugh and Alan M. Taylor
Publication Date: April 2004
Keyword(s): exchange rates, monetary policy and trilemma
Programme Area(s): International Macroeconomics
Abstract: The interwar period was marked by the end of the classical gold standard regime and new levels of macroeconomic disorder in the world economy. The interwar disorder is often linked to policies inconsistent with the constraint of the open-economy trilemma - the inability of policy-makers simultaneously to pursue a fixed exchange rate, open capital markets, and autonomous monetary policy. The first two objectives were linchpins of the pre-1914 order. As increasingly democratic polities faced pressures to engage in domestic macroeconomic management, however, either currency pegs or freedom of capital movements had to yield. This historical analytic narrative is compelling - with significant ramifications for today?s world, if true - but empirically controversial. We apply theory and empirics to the interwar data and find strong support for the logic of the trilemma. Thus, an inability to pursue consistent policies in a rapidly changing political and economic environment appears central to an understanding of the interwar crises, and the same constraints still apply today.
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Bibliographic Reference
Obstfeld, M, Shambaugh, J and Taylor, A. 2004. 'Monetary Sovereignty, Exchange Rates, and Capital Controls: The Trilemma in the Interwar Period'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=4353