TY - JOUR
T1 - Sterling's farewell symphony
T2 - The end of the Sterling Area revisited
AU - de Bromhead, Alan
AU - Jordan, David
AU - Kennedy, Francis
AU - Seddon, Jack
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank Jerry Cohen, Barry Eichengreen, Catherine Schenk, Masato Shizume, and John Turner for extremely helpful comments and suggestions. Thanks also to audiences at events held at Waseda University and Queen's University Belfast. Gratitude is also due to Giovanni Federico for excellent editorial direction and to two anonymous reviewers for invaluable comments. We are indebted to archivists at the Bank of England and National Archives and IMF. Seddon (Principal Investigator) and de Bromhead (Co-Investigator) gratefully acknowledge financial support from the United Kingdom Economic and Social Research Council New Investigator Scheme, award ES/R005435/1.
Funding Information:
We would like to thank Jerry Cohen, Barry Eichengreen, Catherine Schenk, Masato Shizume, and John Turner for extremely helpful comments and suggestions. Thanks also to audiences at events held at Waseda University and Queen's University Belfast. Gratitude is also due to Giovanni Federico for excellent editorial direction and to two anonymous reviewers for invaluable comments. We are indebted to archivists at the Bank of England and National Archives and IMF. Seddon (Principal Investigator) and de Bromhead (Co‐Investigator) gratefully acknowledge financial support from the United Kingdom Economic and Social Research Council New Investigator Scheme, award ES/R005435/1.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Economic History Society.
PY - 2023/5
Y1 - 2023/5
N2 - When and why did Sterling Area countries stop holding sterling as the majority of their foreign exchange reserves? This paper takes a comparative approach to examine the relative importance of various determinants of adherence to sterling in its declining years as an international currency. Using an original cross-national panel dataset covering the period 1965–79, we conduct survival analysis which systematically evaluates a comprehensive set of economic and political factors, at the country level as well as in international relations, about when and why countries chose to diversify their reserves away from sterling. Our results highlight the significance of international transactional factors in influencing adherence to sterling, while the effects of British geopolitical retrenchment, Commonwealth cultural ties, and distributional issues were more ambiguous and sensitive to local conditions. We also find that domestic political and historical factors, such as democracy and imperial legacy, played a role in sterling's international unravelling. Finally, we use our results to examine the experience of individual sterling countries and their decisions to diversify.
AB - When and why did Sterling Area countries stop holding sterling as the majority of their foreign exchange reserves? This paper takes a comparative approach to examine the relative importance of various determinants of adherence to sterling in its declining years as an international currency. Using an original cross-national panel dataset covering the period 1965–79, we conduct survival analysis which systematically evaluates a comprehensive set of economic and political factors, at the country level as well as in international relations, about when and why countries chose to diversify their reserves away from sterling. Our results highlight the significance of international transactional factors in influencing adherence to sterling, while the effects of British geopolitical retrenchment, Commonwealth cultural ties, and distributional issues were more ambiguous and sensitive to local conditions. We also find that domestic political and historical factors, such as democracy and imperial legacy, played a role in sterling's international unravelling. Finally, we use our results to examine the experience of individual sterling countries and their decisions to diversify.
KW - decline
KW - disintegration
KW - international currency
KW - international monetary regime
KW - sterling
KW - the Sterling Area
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85134069490&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85134069490&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/ehr.13175
DO - 10.1111/ehr.13175
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85134069490
SN - 0013-0117
VL - 76
SP - 415
EP - 444
JO - Economic History Review
JF - Economic History Review
IS - 2
ER -