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International Monetary Fund
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 May 2009
Extract
The Annual Report of the Executive Directors for the fiscal year ending April 30, 1951 indicated a general improvement in balance of payments, world production, and trade, although serious dollar shortages still existed in some countries. The outbreak of hostilities in Korea, however, and the expanded rearmament programs had produced shortages of raw materials and skilled labor, rises in prices and changes in the terms of trade of many countries. The report stressed the importance of using monetary and fiscal measures as well as measures of direct control to combat inflationary tendencies in order to prevent “situations of latent inflation”. It was believed that the present pattern of world payments was not a stable one and that it would become so only following an increase in production outside of the United States and a better relationship between prices of primary and industrial goods.
- Type
- International Organizations: Summary of Activities: II. Specialized Agencies
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The IO Foundation 1951
References
1 See also report of OEEC, International Organization, V, p. 335 and 336Google Scholar.
2 International Monetary Fund Annual Report … for 1951. For detailed summaries of the activities of the Fund for the year, see International Organization, IV, p. 322–323, 491–492, 678–680; V, p. 206–209, 380–381.
3 International Monetary Fund Press Release 167, August 1, 1951.
4 Ibid., 168, August 31, 1951.
5 The Times, London, 08 24, 1951Google Scholar.
6 Czechoslovakia was the only Soviet satellite country retaining membership in the Fund since the withdrawal of Poland in March 1950.
7 New York Times, September 11, 1950.
8 Ibid., September 12, 1951.
9 International Monetary Fund Press Release 166, July 3, 1951.
10 Ibid., 169, September 7, 1951.