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Book contents
- There Will Be the Devil to Pay
- Studies in Macroeconomic History
- There Will Be the Devil to Pay
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Frontispiece
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Central Bankers and Their World
- 3 Preparing for Crisis (May 11–May 19)
- 4 Foreign Creditors (May 16–May 25)
- 5 Moratorium or Guarantee? (May 25–May 27)
- 6 Guarantee at Last? (May 26–June 1)
- 7 Releasing the BIS Credit (May 29–June 5)
- 8 Surrounded with Trouble (June 5–June 10)
- 9 Where and How to Place? (June 8–June 13)
- 10 A World Political Problem (June 11–June 16)
- 11 Francis Rodd Makes Sense – and a Plot (June 9–June 20)
- 12 To Act Now If We Are to Act at All (June 16–June 27)
- 13 Germany Will Collapse (June 19–July 10)
- 14 Anxiety within Germany at Climax (July 11–July 23)
- 15 Going Off the Gold Standard? (July 14–August 21)
- 16 We Must Not Fool Ourselves Now (August 21–September 17)
- 17 As for the Future of England (September 16–October 23)
- The End (2024)
- Timeline
- Actors in the 1931 Financial Crisis Archives
- Acknowledgements
- Archives
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
15 - Going Off the Gold Standard? (July 14–August 21)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 December 2024
- There Will Be the Devil to Pay
- Studies in Macroeconomic History
- There Will Be the Devil to Pay
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Frontispiece
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Central Bankers and Their World
- 3 Preparing for Crisis (May 11–May 19)
- 4 Foreign Creditors (May 16–May 25)
- 5 Moratorium or Guarantee? (May 25–May 27)
- 6 Guarantee at Last? (May 26–June 1)
- 7 Releasing the BIS Credit (May 29–June 5)
- 8 Surrounded with Trouble (June 5–June 10)
- 9 Where and How to Place? (June 8–June 13)
- 10 A World Political Problem (June 11–June 16)
- 11 Francis Rodd Makes Sense – and a Plot (June 9–June 20)
- 12 To Act Now If We Are to Act at All (June 16–June 27)
- 13 Germany Will Collapse (June 19–July 10)
- 14 Anxiety within Germany at Climax (July 11–July 23)
- 15 Going Off the Gold Standard? (July 14–August 21)
- 16 We Must Not Fool Ourselves Now (August 21–September 17)
- 17 As for the Future of England (September 16–October 23)
- The End (2024)
- Timeline
- Actors in the 1931 Financial Crisis Archives
- Acknowledgements
- Archives
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In chapter 15, Going off the gold standard? (July 14 - August 21) attention shifts to Great Britain and the weakness of sterling. As pressure on sterling increases, Norman fall sick with ’stress’ and he has to take leave of absence from the bank in late July, only to return after Britain has left gold on September 21, 1931. With Norman out of the picture, his deputy Ernest Harvey takes over as the Banque de France and the New York Fed arrange a $200 million credit to the Bank of England. Tensions arise between Harvey on the one hand and Clément Moret (Banque de France) and Harrison on the other, about the use of the credit. The weakening of sterling continues and in late August, Harry Siepmann writes an ominous note discussing the consequences of Great Britain leaving gold.
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- There Will Be the Devil to PayCentral Bankers, Uncertainty and Sensemaking in the European Financial Crisis of 1931, pp. 281 - 306Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025