PRZEDMIOTEM OFERTY JEST KOD DOSTĘPOWY DO KSIĄŻKI ELEKTRONICZNEJ (EBOOK)
KSIĄŻKA JEST DOSTĘPNA NA ZEWNĘTRZNEJ PLATFORMIE. KSIĄŻKA NIE JEST W POSTACI PLIKU.
Current interest in the history of money and banking remains strong and it is opportune to survey developments both in the UK, USA, Europe and Asia. This set provides historical analysis which incorporates research from the early twentieth century onwards in a form that is both accessible to students of money & banking and economists, economic historians and bankersThis set re-issues38 volumes originally published between 1900 and 2000. It charts the history of early banking, discusses banking in the UK, Europe,Japan and the USA, analyses banks as multinationals, the UK mortgage market, banking policy and structure and examines specific sectors such as gilts and gold.
- Autorzy: Various
- Wydawnictwo: Taylor & Francis
- Data wydania: 2021
- Wydanie: 1
- Liczba stron:
- Forma publikacji: PDF (online)
- Język publikacji: angielski
- ISBN: 9781136264924
BRAK MOŻLIWOŚCI POBRANIA PLIKU. Drukowanie: OGRANICZENIE DO 2 stron. Kopiowanie: OGRANICZENIE DO 2 stron.
- Volume 01
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Foreword
- Illustrations
- Part I: The Daily Round
- Chapter 1: First Impressions
- Chapter 2: 'Ships, Towers, Domes'
- Chapter 3: An Adventurous Business
- Chapter 4: Feeling our Way
- Part II: Money at Work
- Chapter 5: A Useful Commodity
- Chapter 6: How We Invest It
- Chapter 7: Behind the Figures
- Chapter 8: Measuring Success
- Part III: A Wider View
- Chapter 9: Theory and Practice
- Chapter 10: Paying our Way
- Chapter 11: What We Earn
- Chapter 12: A Time to Speak
- Volume 02
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Preface
- Part I: Introduction
- Chapter 1: Housing tenure and housing finance
- Chapter 2: Financial intermediation and housing finance
- Part II: Housing Finance Systems
- Chapter 3: Informal housing finance
- Chapter 4: The deposit-taking system
- Chapter 5: The mortgage bank system
- Chapter 6: The contract system and loan packages
- Part III: The British Housing Finance Market
- Chapter 7: Government regulation and support of the housing finance market
- Chapter 8: Loan terms and instruments
- Chapter 9: The evolution of a competitive mortgage market
- Chapter 10: The emergence of securitization and secondary market activity
- Part IV: Policy Issues
- Chapter 11: Housing finance and the real economy
- Chapter 12: Housing subsidies
- Chapter 13: The internationalization of housing finance
- Part V: The Future
- Chapter 14: Future trends in owner-occupation and housing finance
- References
- Index
- Volume 03
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of Tables
- Preface to The First Edition
- Preface to The Second Edition
- Part I: Description and Analysis
- Chapter 1: An Introduction to Building Societies
- A Brief History of the Building Society Industry
- The Legal Framework
- The Building Societies Association
- The Chartered Building Societies Institute
- The Structure of the Building Society Industry
- Chapter 2: Building Societies and the Savings Market
- The Importance of the Savings Market to Building Societies
- The Nature of Personal Saving
- The Growth of Building Societies' Share of the Savings Market
- The Capital Structure of Building Societies
- Interest Rates and Tax on Shares and Deposits
- Building Society Investors
- Receipts, Withdrawals and Interest Credited
- Chapter 3: Building Societies and the Housing Market
- The Housing Stock
- Housing Tenure
- House Purchase Finance
- Building Society Lending Policy
- The Process of House-Purchase
- The Mortgage Loan
- The Distribution of Building Society Loans
- Trends in Building Society Lending
- Chapter 4: The Financial Management of Building Societies
- Balance Sheets: An Overview
- Liquidity
- Reserves
- Income and Expenditure
- Chapter 5: Rates of Interest and Levels of Activity
- The Importance of Interest Rates
- The Variable Rate Mortgage
- The Use of Liquidity to Stabilize Lending
- The Interest Rate Decision
- Changes in Interest Rates from 1983 Onwards
- Part II: Policy
- Chapter 6: Building Societies and Housing Policy
- A Brief History of Housing Policy up to 1970
- The Joint Advisory Committee
- The Labour Government 1974-79 and the Housing Policy Review
- The 1979 Conservative Government and the Sale of Council Houses
- Building Societies and the Sale of Council Houses
- The 1985 Inquiry into British Housing
- Chapter 7: The Determination and Control of House Prices
- The Theory of House Price Determination
- The 1971-73 Boom and the Memorandum of Agreement
- The Establishment of the Guideline System
- The Attempt to Control House Prices in 1978
- The Guideline System Report 1980
- Chapter 8: Building Societies and Housing Initiatives
- Co-operation Between Building Societies and Local Authorities
- Area Improvement Schemes
- The Establishment of Housing Associations
- New Legislation
- Chapter 9: Sources of Funds
- The Argument that Building Societies can Run Out of Investors
- The Stow Report
- The Gibbs Report
- Wholesale Funding
- Chapter 10: Competition in the Retail Savings Market
- The Traditional Position
- The Wilson Committee
- Forces for Change
- The New Financial Services Market
- Chapter 11: Building Societies and Monetary Policy
- The Rationale for Monetary Policy
- The Definition of Money
- Recent Developments in Monetary Policy
- Chapter 12: Prudential Supervision
- A Brief History of Prudential Supervision
- The Wakefield and Grays Building Societies
- The Chief Registrar's Evidence to the Wilson Committee
- Authorization
- A Deposit Protection Scheme
- The New Cross Building Society
- The 1984 Green Paper
- Supervision and New LegisLation
- Chapter 13: Building Societies and Taxation
- History of the Taxation of Interest Paid by Building Societies
- The Present Arrangements
- Composite Tax Rates and Revenue
- The Effects of the Composite Rate
- Other Changes in the Taxation of Building Society Interest
- Corporation Tax
- Corporation Tax on Income and Gains from Investments
- Fiscal Convergence
- Chapter 14: Collective Arrangements on Interest Rates
- Collective Arrangements up to 1980
- The Effects of the Cartel
- Pressures for Change
- A Loosening of Collective Arrangements
- The Consequences of the Free Market
- Chapter 15: The European Community and Housing Finance
- An Introduction to the European Community
- The Need for Harmonization of Housing Finance in the Common Market
- European Housing Finance Organizations
- The First EEC Directive on Credit Institutions
- The Draft Directive on Housing Credit
- Britain and the European Community
- The Likely Progress of the Harmonization of Housing Finance
- Chapter 16: New Legislation
- Developments up to the Early 1980s
- Pressures for Change
- The BSA Proposals
- The Green Paper, July 1984
- The Building Societies Bill
- Chapter 17: Building Societies: The Future
- Reasons for the Success of Building Societies
- The Change in the Competitive Environment
- The Importance of Diversification
- Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index
- Volume 04
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- Chapter I: Introduction
- Chapter II: A Review of Literature
- Chapter III: Weaknesses of Current Literature
- Chapter IV: An Outline of Our Approach
- Chapter V: Model Specification
- Chapter VI: Data and Estimation Procedure
- 1: Data
- 1.1: Sample Period
- 1.2: Sample Size
- 2: Empirical Procedure
- 2.1: Estimation of the Implied Volatilities, ?A
- 2.2: Estimation of Correlation
- 2.3: Estimation of the Expected Returns, MA
- 2.4: Estimation of Z Values
- Chapter VII: Empirical Results
- 1: Volatilities of Rates of Return on Assets, ?A
- 1.1: Unmerged Industries
- 1.2: Hypothetically Merged BHC Industries
- 2: Profitability in Terms of MA
- 2.1: Unmerged Industries
- 2.2: Hypothetically Merged BHC Industries
- 3: Z values
- 3.1: Unmerged Industries
- 3.2: Hypothetically Merged Industries
- 4: Results from Partial Mergers (5%, 20%, and 50%)
- 4.1: Volatilities of Asset Returns, ?A
- 4.2: Z values
- 4.3: Summary of Partial Mergers
- Chapter VIII: Conclusions
- Appendix 1 - 12: Quarterly ?A of the Sample Firms
- Appendix 13 - 16: Quarterly ?A of Partial Mergers
- Appendix 17 - 20: Quarterly Z Values of Partial Mergers
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Volume 05
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Preface
- Table of Contents
- A: How The World's Money Works
- Chapter 1: The uses of world money
- Chapter 2: How are payments made?
- Chapter 3: Why payments are made
- Chapter 4: Which currencies are stronger?
- Chapter 5: Why exchange rates vary
- Chapter 6: The art of avoiding crises
- Chapter 7: Why is gold used?
- Chapter 8: The gold markets
- Chapter 9: Who are the Gnomes?
- B: How It Has Worked
- Chapter 10: The days of the gold standard
- Chapter 11: 1929
- Chapter 12: The birth of currency blocs
- Chapter 13: Bretton Woods and after
- C: How It Will Work
- Chapter 14: Will 1929 recur?
- Chapter 15: Can gold be replaced?
- D: How Everything Works
- Chapter 16: How the IMF works
- Chapter 17: How the World Bank works
- Chapter 18: How the new 'World Money' works
- Chapter 19: How the City works
- Chapter 20: How the eurodollar market works
- Chapter 21: How to raise $3,000 million in 24 hours
- Chapter 22: How to read the press
- Index
- Volume 06
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of tables
- List of figure
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part I: 1826–1913
- Chapter 1: Banking in the Early Nineteenth Century
- Early banking history
- Economic crisis and the legislation of 1826
- Structure of the banking system
- Summary
- Notes
- Chapter 2: Growth of the Banking Sector, 1826–1913
- The importance and definition of money
- Components of the stock of money
- Financial institutions
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 3: The Commercial Banks: Institutional Change, 1826–1913
- Main trends
- The corporate structure
- Bank branching
- Bank amalgamations
- The stability of banks and economic fluctuations
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 4: The Business of Commercial Banking, 1826–1913
- Bank liabilities
- Bank assets
- Banking advice and financial services
- The commercial banks and economic development
- Notes
- Chapter 5: The Monetary Sector and the International Economy
- The importance of international factors
- Britain’s adoption of the gold standard in the early nineteenth century
- International exchange rates
- Stable exchange rates and the foreign exchange market
- Adjustment mechanisms
- Assessment of traditional adjustment mechanism under the international gold standard, 1870-1913
- The role of sterling
- The Bank of England and the monetary interpretation of balance of payments
- Notes
- Chapter 6: The Bank of England and Monetary Policy, 1826–1913
- Why did the Bank of England become a central bank?
- Legislation
- The Bank and the gold standard
- Techniques of monetary control
- Lender of last resort
- The Bank and the money markets
- Private v public interests
- Notes
- Part II: 1914–1939
- Chapter 7: Deposit Banking and Other Financial Institutions, 1914–1939
- Deposit bank expansion
- Affiliations and amalgamations
- Competition in banking
- Private sector liquidity and non-bank financial intermediaries
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 8: The Business of Commercial Banking, 1914–1939
- Clearing banks’ balance sheets
- Clearing bank liabilities
- Clearing bank assets
- Industrial and commercial finance
- Customer services
- Summary
- Notes
- Chapter 9: Monetary Policy, 1914–1939
- The 1914 banking crisis
- Impact of World War I
- Return to gold, 1925
- The 1931 crisis and devaluation
- Monetary policy in the 1930s
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Part III: 1939–1986
- Chapter 10: War and Post-War Adjustments, 1939–51
- Total war, 1939-45
- The years of recovery, 1945-51
- Notes
- Chapter 11: Non-Clearing Banks and Other Financial Intermediaries Since World War II
- Banks and other financial intermediaries
- Relative growth of financial institutions
- The London money market
- The discount market
- Parallel money markets and institutions
- Sterling money markets
- Eurocurrency markets
- Summary on developments in parallel markets
- Bank stability and prudential supervision
- Non-bank financial intermediaries
- Developments in retail banking
- Notes
- Chapter 12: The Clearing Banks, 1939–1986
- Amalgamations and institutional change
- Growth of the clearing banks since World War II
- Reasons for clearers’ relative decline
- The clearing banks’ balance sheets
- Liabilities
- Assets
- Banks and industry
- Summary
- Notes
- Chapter 13: Monetary Policy in the 1950s and 1960s
- Constraints on the operation of monetary policy
- The 1950s – revival of monetary policy
- Policy in the 1950s and 1960s
- Policy appraisal
- Notes
- Chapter 14 Monetary Policy in The 1970s and 1980s
- Prudential controls
- Greater market freedom
- Techniques of monetary control
- Reasons for the increased importance of monetary policy
- Validity of the new’ monetary policy
- Practical monetarism
- Notes
- Chapter 15: The United Kingdom and International Financial Arrangements Since 1951
- General background
- The 1950s: the sterling area and sterling balances
- The 1960s: exchange instability
- 1970s and 1980s: floating exchange rates
- Notes
- Chapter 16: Retrospective
- Commercial banking sector
- Monetary policy
- United Kingdom and the international financial system
- Notes
- Bibliography
- General Index
- Index of Names
- Volume 07
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- List of Tables
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1: Financial Institutions and Economic Growth
- Chapter 2: The Mobilisation of Savings in England, 1820?1860
- Chapter 3: The English Finance Companies of the 1860s
- Chapter 4: The Founding of the International Financial Society
- Chapter 5: The Capital of the Finance Companies, 1863?1866
- Chapter 6: The Boom of the 1860s and the English Finance Companies: an Introduction
- Chapter 7: The Operations of the Finance Companies: Foreign industrial and commercial flotations, 18
- Appendix: The Founding of the Anglo?Austrian Bank, 1863
- Chapter 8: The Operations of the Finance Companies: the financing of Railway Construction abroad, 18
- Chapter 9: The Operations of the Finance Companies: Foreign Government Loans, 1863?1866
- Chapter 10: The Operations of the Finance Companies: Domestic Industrial and Commercial flotations,
- Chapter 11: The Operations of the Finance Companies: the finance of domestic railway construction, 1
- Chapter 12: The Financial Boom of the 1860s, the crisis of 1866, and the Finance Companies
- Volume 08
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Chapter 13: Liquidation, 1866?1880
- Chapter 14: The Depression, 1866 to 1869
- Chapter 15: The boom of the early 1870s
- Chapter 16: The End of an Era, 1873?77
- Chapter 17: The International Financial Society, 1878?1882
- Chapter 18: The International Financial Society, the Finance Companies, and the development of the E
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Volume 09
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Tables
- Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: Multinational Banking
- 1.1: Banks and Their Services
- 1.2: Universal Multinational Banks
- 1.3: International Financial Intermediation
- 1.4: International Banking Markets
- 1.5: Structure of the Multinational Banking Industry
- 1.6: Regulation and Supervision
- Chapter 2: Commercial Bank Operations
- 2.1: Management Policies
- 2.2: Planning and Development
- 2.3: Financial Control
- 2.4: Marketing
- 2.5: Personnel Management
- Chapter 3: US Banks
- 3.1: Financial System
- 3.2: Strategic Development of Multinational Banks
- 3.3: Case Studies
- Chapter 4: Japanese Banks
- 4.1: Financial System
- 4.2: Strategic Development of Multinational Banks
- 4.3: Case Study Mitsubishi Bank
- Chapter 5: British Banks
- 5.1: Financial System
- 5.2: Strategic Development of Multinational Banks
- 5.3: Case Study Barclays Bank
- Chapter 6: French Banks
- 6.1: Financial System
- 6.2: Strategic Development of Multinational Banks
- 6.3: Case Study Société Générate
- Chapter 7: West German Banks
- 7.1: Financial System
- 7.2: Strategic Development of Multinational Banks
- 7.3: Case Study Deutsche Bank AG
- Chapter 8: Canadian Banks
- 8.1: Financial System
- 8.2: Strategic Development of Multinational Banks
- 8.3: Case Study Royal Bank of Canada
- Chapter 9: Swiss Banks
- 9.1: Financial System
- 9.2: Strategic Development of Multinational Banks
- 9.3: Case Study Swiss Bank Corporation
- Chapter 10: Review of Current Issues in Multinational Banking
- Index
- Volume 10
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- Chapter 1: Introduction to banking in the European Community
- Chapter 2: The European Community and the single market programme
- Chapter 3: The current position and the Commission's approach
- Chapter 4: The legislative measures
- Chapter 5: Banking strategies for 1992
- Chapter 6: Preparations and attitudes of the major UK banks
- Chapter 7: Economic aspects of a single market in financial services
- Chapter 8: Conclusions
- Chapter 9: Afterthought: breaking down the barriers
- Appendix I
- Appendix II
- Index
- Volume 11
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- Chapter I: Introductory
- Chapter II: A Banking Career
- Chapter III: Progress v. Traditions
- Chapter IV: The Mistake of 1925
- Chapter V: Monetary Policy
- Chapter VI: Towards International Stability
- Chapter VII: Central Banking Principles
- Chapter VIII: Central Bank Co-operation
- Chapter IX: The "Mystery Man" Myth
- Chapter X: Statesman v. Diplomat
- Chapter XI: Gathering Clouds
- Chapter XII: The Climax
- Chapter XIII: After the Defeat
- Chapter XIV: From Defeat To Triumph
- Chapter XV: The Future
- Appendix:Mr. Norman's Evidence before the Macmillan Committee on Finance and Industry
- Volume 12
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Preface
- Table of Contents
- Chapter I: Introductory
- 1: Preliminary Remarks
- 2: Progress of Economic Science
- 3: The Orthodox Attitude
- 4: "Currency Cranks"
- 5: How to Approach the Subject
- 6: Inflation, Stabilisation, Deflation and Reflation
- 7: Haphazard Movements
- 8: Problem of Excessive Fictitious Wealth
- 9: Failure of Efforts to reduce Fictitious Wealth
- Part I: Inflation
- Chapter II: What is Inflation?
- 1: The Orthodox View
- 2: The Radical View
- 3: Is Monetary Policy All-Powerful ?
- 4: Involuntary v. Deliberate Monetary Movements
- 5: The Meaning of "Inflation"
- 6: Inflation of Currency and Inflation of Prices
- 7: Cheap Money and Inflation
- 8: Inflation Through Budgetary Deficit
- Chapter III: Finance before and after 1914
- 1: Inflation before 1914
- 2: Increase of Purchasing Power
- 3: Fallacy of Financial Limitations of War
- 4: Increase of Fictitious Wealth
- 5: An Unconscious Change
- 6: The Mistake of August, 1914
- 7: Financing War Deficit
- Chapter IV: War Finance
- 1: World-Wide Tendencies
- 2: Difficulty of Normal Borrowing
- 3: Increasing Purchasing Power
- 4: Why Rise in Prices was Slow
- 5: No Wholesale Flight of Capital
- 6: Exchange Control
- 7: Mobilising Foreign Securities
- 8: The Degrees of Inflation
- 9: Deflationary Policy in Great Britain
- Chapter V: War Finance (Continued)
- 1: World-Wide Inflation
- 2: Need for Discrimination between Effects of War and of Inflation
- 3: Currency Depreciation Inevitable
- 4: Unproductive Inflation
- 5: Would Productive Inflation have been Possible ?
- 6: Ill-Considered Emergency Measures
- 7: A New Financial Conception
- Chapter VI: Inflation after The War
- 1: Anticipation of Return to "Normal" Conditions
- 2: Huge Public Debt
- 3: An Unconvincing Parallel
- 4: How to Pay for the War
- 5: Why Continental Belligerent Countries Inflated
- 6: Reducing Debt by Moderate Inflation
- Chapter VII: The Post-War Chaos
- 1: Optimism followed by Disappointment
- 2: Unpegging of Exchanges
- 3: Inflation had to continue
- 4: Difficulties of Disentanglement
- 5: Rise in Prices resumed
- 6: Deferred Use of Purchasing Power
- 7: Bank Credit Expansion
- 8: Political and Economic Effects
- Chapter VIII: The Post-War Slump
- 1: A Short-Sighted Policy
- 2: Attempt to Return to 1914
- 3: Fictitious Wealth v. Real Wealth
- 4: An Excess of Paper Wealth
- 5: Correcting the Excess
- 6: Rise in Prices Reversed
- 7: Effect of the Slump
- 8: Inflationary and Deflationary Group of Countries
- Chapter IX: Inflation Resumed
- 1: The Slumpan Interval in Inflation
- 2: Three Degrees of Inflation
- 3: Inflation in Germany
- 4: Why Germany Inflated
- 5: Was German Inflation Deliberate
- 6: Inflation in Russia
- 7: Inflation in Poland, Austria and Hungary
- 8: Why Depreciation was Delayed
- Chapter X: Limited Inflation
- 1: The Example of France
- 2: Flight from the Franc
- 3: Constructive Inflation
- 4: Inflation in Italy and Belgium
- 5: Intermediate Stage of Depreciation
- 6: Effect of Limited Inflation
- Chapter XI: Reparations and War Debts
- 1: Effect of the War on International Debts
- 2: Problem of Transfers Ignored
- 3: The Reparations Deadlock
- 4: "Political" Indebtedness
- 5: International Transfers and Trade
- 6: If the Dollar had been Devalued
- Chapter XII: Summary of Part I
- 1: Characteristics of War-Time Inflation
- 2: Post-War Inflation and Slump
- 3: Effects of Inflation
- 4: Effects on Banking and Exchange
- 5: Speculation in Exchanges
- 6: Is Inflation Necessarily Disastrous?
- 7: Inflation and Planning
- 8: Inflation and Fictitious Wealth
- Part II: Stabilisation
- Chapter XIII: What is Stabilisation?
- 1: The "Good Old Days"
- 2: No Return to Pre-War Conditions
- 3: Stability of Exchanges v. Stability of Prices
- 4: The Choice of Parities
- 5: Ill-Considered Stabilisation
- 6: Why Stabilisation Attempt was Doomed
- 7: Fundamental and Technical Conditions
- 8: International Co-operation
- Chapter XIV: Through Deflation to Stability
- 1: The Dollar's Supremacy
- 2: The Gold Stock of the United States
- 3: Deflation in Great Britain
- 4: Optimistic Assumptions
- 5: Following the British Example
- 6: Moral Aspects of Deflation
- 7: Consequences of Deflation
- Chapter XV: Through Inflation to Stabilisation
- 1: Arbitrary Choice of New Parities
- 2: Various Stabilisation Policies
- 3: Advantages of Under-Valuation of Currencies
- 4: Stabilisation Crises
- 5: Stabilisation Crises not Inevitable
- 6: Under-valued v. Over-valued Currencies
- 7: Deflationary Countries' Attitude
- Chapter XVI: International Co-Operation
- 1: Need for Co-operation
- 2: Reconstruction in Central Europe
- 3: Temporary or Permanent Results ?
- 4: A Welcome Respite
- 5: Closer Contact between Central Banks
- 6: Technical Collaboration
- Chapter XVII: The "Gold Rush"
- 1: Wholesale Adoption of Gold Standard
- 2: Inadequate Gold Supplies
- 3: Gold and Fictitious Wealth
- 4: Higher Gold Requirements
- 5: Demand exceeded Supply
- 6: Did Gold Rush cause Deflation ?
- Chapter XVIII: The Lending Fever
- 1: Lending and "Gold Rush"
- 2: Competition between Banks
- 3: Borrowers' Attitude
- 4: Priority of Commercial Debts
- 5: Short-Term Credits
- 6: Risk Ignored
- Chapter XIX: Floating Balances
- 1: Growth of Foreign Balances
- 2: Internationalisation of Finance
- 3: Central Banks' Foreign Balances
- 4: Effect of Gold Exchange Standard
- 5: Moderating the Fall of Prices
- 6: Lower Costs v. Higher Incomes
- 7: Stimulating Over-Lending
- Chapter XX: The Maldistribution of Gold
- 1: The Fact of Maldistribution Incontestable
- 2: Great Britain's Inadequate Supply
- 3: Did France and the United States Sterilise Gold ?
- 4: Degree of Credit Expansion
- 5: Britain Unable to Deflate
- 6: "Bank- Rate-Plus-Machine-Gun" Monetary Policy
- 7: The "Gold Standard Game"
- 8: Shortage and Maldistribution
- Chapter XXI: Finance and Politics
- 1: France and the Crisis
- 2: Big French Balances
- 3: Political Pressure
- 4: No Adequate Co-operation
- 5: The Bank for International Settlements
- 6: Selling Pressure on Sterling
- Chapter XXII: The Boom
- 1: Boom and Deflationary Propaganda
- 2: The New York Bank Rate Reduction of 1927
- 3: Speculation and Over-Production
- 4: Various Forms of Boom
- 5: Inadequate Official Intervention
- 6: Boom Mentality
- Chapter XXIII: Economic Factors
- 1: Monetary v. Economic Causes of the Slump
- 2: Was the Slump Unavoidable ?
- 3: Maldistribution of Purchasing Power
- 4: Time-Lag between Wholesale and Retail Prices
- 5: Over-Production in Individual Commodities
- 6: Freedom v. Restriction
- Chapter XXIV: Summary of Part II
- 1: Two Ways to Stabilisation
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