Pricing theory, financing of international organizations and monetary history

Bibliographic Information

Pricing theory, financing of international organizations and monetary history

Lawrence H. Officer

(Routledge explorations in economic history, 35)

Routledge, 2007

  • : hbk

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Includes bibliographical references and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book presents the lifelong and ongoing research of Lawrence H. Officer in a systematic way. The result is an authoritative treatment of such issues as market structure and economic efficiency where more than one characteristic of a commodity is priced, both in general and in application to shipping conferences; financing of the United Nations and International Monetary Fund; monetary history of the UK and US; and central-bank preferences between gold and dollars, The book first examines multidimensional pricing, defined as pricing when a commodity or service has several characteristics that are priced. The second part is concerned with country-group conflicts in the United Nations and International Monetary Fund. The book then takes a fresh look at historical experiences of monetary-standard upheavals and the final part considers a crucial time (1958-67), during which central-bank gold-dollar decisions were power-politically determined.

Table of Contents

1. The Optimality of Pure Competition in the Capacity Problem 2. Monopoly and Monopolistic Competition in the International Transportation Industry 3. Discrimination in the International Transportation Industry 4. Demand Conditions under Multidimensional Pricing 5. Are International Monetary Fund Quotas Unfavorable to Less-Developed Countries?: A Normative Historical Analysis 6. An Assessment of the United Nations Scale of Assessments from a Developing-Country Standpoint 7. An Assessment of the United Nations Scale of Assessments, 1946-1994 8. Financing the United Nations and International Monetary Fund: A Country-Group Analysis 9. The Bullionist Controversy: A Time-Series Analysis 10. The U.S. Specie Standard, 1792-1932: Some Monetarist Arithmetic 11. The Quantity Theory in New England, 1703-1749: New Data to Analyze an Old Question 12. Reserve-Asset Preferences in the Crisis Zone, 1958-67 13. What Was the Price of Gold Then?: Importance, Measurement, and History 14. What Was the Price of Gold Then?: A Data Study

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