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BRITAIN AND GLOBALISATION SINCE 1850: I. CREATING A GLOBAL ORDER, 1850–1914

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2006

Abstract

The world economy has experienced a cycle of globalisation, de-globalisation and re-globalisation since 1850. In each period, there has been a trade-off between various policies: fixed exchange rates, capital mobility, labour movement and free trade, and their international and domestic consequences. This essay establishes an analytical framework for understanding these trade-offs in the case of Britain, and proceeds to consider the choices made between 1850 and 1914. A case is made that the gold standard and fixed exchange rates secured widespread domestic support, and that they were not imposed by financial interests at the expense of domestic considerations.

Type
Presidential Address
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society2006

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