This landmark study of economic history since World War II
systematically explores why postwar trade and payments have evolved
as they have, the prospects for their future evolution, and the
range of policy adjustments likely to be required. Through a
rigorous examination and analysis of historical records, the author
makes two significant and unique contributions to the scholarship
on the subject. First, he reveals the existence of distinct cycles
in world trade and payments, beginning in 1959. While scholars have
recognized postwar business cycles, none have identified--until
now--trade and payments cycles which seem to run parallel. Second,
Cohen utilizes newly researched data to explore the much-heralded
J-curve and its relevance in relating exchange rates to trade
balances, and he identifies several important factors which have
slowed the maturation of the J-curve effect on U.S. balances.
The study is divided into four parts and begins by looking at
the forces that have shaped the postwar trade and payments order.
Cohen then turns to an investigation of the period of advance in
the trade and payments order from 1945-1967, describing three
distinct stages that reflect the emergence, the establishment, and
the peak of this period. Section three begins with an analysis of
the structure and causes of the four postwar trade and payments
cycles and includes an examination of the differences among them.
Subsequent chapters address the different cycles themselves,
reviewing the history of each and evaluating the growing challenges
to the postwar trade and payments order. In the concluding section,
Cohen explores why the J-curve in the U.S. has been so weak during
the current cycle and assesses the likely consequences of the
failure of existing policies to reduce external imbalances.
Finally, the author offers a set of recommendations to reduce such
imbalances through a new Cycle of Adjustment. Students of economic
history, policy makers, and investors will find in Cohen's work
significant new insights into economic processes and the probable
future economic terrain.
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