Chapter 6: An Unorthodox Genealogy on the Relation Between the Markets for Currency Exchange and Credit in Steuart, Thornton, Tooke, and Keynes (1923)
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Published:2020
Ghislain Deleplace, 2020. "An Unorthodox Genealogy on the Relation Between the Markets for Currency Exchange and Credit in Steuart, Thornton, Tooke, and Keynes (1923)", Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology: Including a Symposium on Sir James Steuart: The Political Economy of Money and Trade, Luca Fiorito, Scott Scheall, Carlos Eduardo Suprinyak
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Abstract
The chapter first emphasizes the aspects which Steuart (1767), Thornton (1802), Tooke (1844, 1838–1857), and Keynes (1923) have in common about the relation between the exchange rate and the short-term rate of interest: they all considered a temporary unfavorable foreign balance caused by an asymmetrical exogenous shock, which called for a discretionary policy favoring international short-term capital inflows to overcome the consequences of the deficit. These aspects draw an unorthodox genealogy on this issue between the four authors, contrary to the tradition originating in Hume and developed later by the British monetary orthodoxy. Secondly, the chapter shows that there was an analytical progress from Steuart (1767) to Keynes (1923), which however faced a limit: if it reinforced an unorthodox genealogy, it did not integrate the modern idea according to which international short-term capital movements may themselves be a source of external disequilibrium. The origin of this limit was probably in the question raised, which was the adjustment to an exogenous asymmetrical shock.
