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Dr Robert A. Mundell's Nobel Lecture: "A Reconsideration of the 20th Century" (53 min.)

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Interview with Dr Robert A. Mundell, December 1999 (Hosted by the Nobel Foundation)


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Nobel Monetary Duel (pdf)

World Currency
A few economists have recently recognized the merits of and need for a world currency. Whether that can be achieved or not in the near future will depend on politics as well as economics. But it is nevertheless a project that would restore a needed coherence to the international monetary system, give the International Monetary Fund a function that would help it to promote stability, and be a catalyst for international harmony. As Paul Volcker has put it, "A global economy needs a global currency."

The benefits from a world currency would be enormous. Prices all over the world would be denominated in the same unit and would be kept equal in different parts of the world to the extent that the law of one price was allowed to work itself out. Apart from tariffs and controls, trade between countries would be as easy as it is between states of the United States. It would lead to an enormous increase in the gains from trade and real incomes of all countries including the United States.

Another dimension of the benefits from a world currency would be a great improvement in the monetary policies of perhaps two-thirds of the countries of the world. The benefits to each country from a stable currency that is also a universal currency would be enormous. If the whole world were dollarized, there would be a common inflation rate and similar interest rates, a considerable increase in trade, productivity and financial integration, all of which would produce a considerable increase in economic growth and well-being.
RAM
 

"My ideal and equilibrium solution would be a world currency (but not a single world currency) in which each country would produce its own unit that exchanges at par with the world unit. We could call it the international dollar or, to avoid the parochial national connotation, the intor, a contraction of "international" and the French word for gold."
RAM

Everything would be priced in terms of intors, and a committee -- in my view, say, a G3 open market committee designated by the Board of Governors of the International Monetary Fund -- would determine how many intors produced each year would be consistent with price stability."
RAM
 


 


Evolution of the International Monetary System and its Implications for China (Powerpoint Presentation) ▪ September ▪ 2006

Origin :

Presentation at the Capital University of Economics and Business in Beijing, September 6, 2006 (Note: this is a powerpoint presentation in Adobe PDF format)

57 pages - Price: $10.00 Help



The International Monetary System and the Case for a World Currency ▪ October ▪ 2003

Origin :

Leon Kozminski Academy of Entrepreneurship and Management (WSPiZ) and TIGER Distinguished Lectures Series n. 12 Warsaw, 23 October 2003

34 pages - Price: $10.00 Help



The International Monetary System: The Missing Factor ▪ 1995

Published in:

The Journal of Policy Modeling , 17(5): 479- 492



The Future of the International Monetary System ▪ 1995

Origin :

Paper presented at a Conference in Geneva, Switzerland, September 1993

Published in:

The Future of the Internatioanl Monetary SystemGeneva: International Center of Money and Banking Studies

Edited by:

Hans Genberg and Alexander Swoboda



Prospects for the International Monetary System ▪ 1994

Published in:

The World Gold CouncilGeneva



International Monetary Options ▪ Spring ▪ 1993

Published in:

The Cato Journal , vol. 3, no. 1, 189-210



The International Monetary Dilemma ▪ 1979

Published in:

The Inter-American Institute of Capital MarketsCaracas, Venezuela: Instituto Americano de Mercados de Capital



World Money and the Optimal Policy Mix ▪ May ▪ 1975

Published in:

First Chicago Report



Toward a Better International Monetary System ▪ August ▪ 1969

Published in:

Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking



A Plan for a World Currency ▪ September ▪ 1968

Published in:

Joint Economic Committee HearingsWashington, D.C



Transport Costs in International Trade Theory ▪ August ▪ 1957

Published in:

The Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science, XXIII, No.3

20 pages - Price: $10.00 Help

Also in :

International Economics



Money and the Sovereignty of the State

Origin :

Paper prepared for the International Economic Association Conference in Trento, September 4-7, 1997

Edited by:

Axel Leijonhufvud