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2 - FROM CABINET AGREEMENT TO WHITE PAPER, 1942–1943

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2012

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Summary

During the period in which the Clearing Union made its way through the War Cabinet and its Reconstruction Committee, following the Anglo-American agreement on Article VII, the British began preparing the ground for conversations on post-war planning. Initially, the preferred channel of communication was through the American Ambassador, whom Keynes saw on 3 and 16 February.

At that stage, the Americans were far from ready for conversations and it was the spring before extensive discussion on the form of the conversations began in London. The initial impetus, as far as Keynes was concerned, seems to have come from a memorandum R. F. Harrod sent to Keynes on 15 April. In his memorandum Harrod emphasised the need to be forthcoming and open with the Americans, if only to overcome previous suspicions, to accept the necessity of a liberal trading world as a goal of post-war policy and to leave discussions of Britain's post-war difficulties to one side until the shape of the post-war economic order became clearer. He then proposed the establishment of an Anglo-American Economic Service which would take the initiative in organising the post-war world and to which other members of the Allies could associate themselves, as and when convenient and desirable. The Service, with the Clearing Union as its financial cornerstone, would also initiate a buffer stock scheme, an investment board to control the international flow of capital and therefore align the development of backward regions to the needs of contra-cyclical policy, and an agency for post-war relief and reconstruction. […]

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Publisher: Royal Economic Society
Print publication year: 1978

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