Herbert Hoover, as Secretary of Commerce, and Benjamin Strong,
as Governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, played a
critical role in the formulation of American monetary policy during
the 1920s. Yet little attention has been given to the relationship
between them--at first cooperative, then increasingly one of
conflict and factionalism--or to the impact of that relationship on
policy formulation. This book sheds new light on their roles in
policy making and relates those roles to larger conflicts over
where policy should be made, how the Federal Reserve System should
be structured, and the balance that should be struck between
international, national, and regional considerations.
Focusing on the Hoover-Strong relationship from a political
rather than a purely economic perspective, the book's scope
includes both domestic and international aspects of Federal Reserve
policy formulation. New sources have enabled the author to provide
both fresh details and a broader interpretation. Elaborating on the
belief that the Depression resulted from policies developed during
the autumn of 1927, the author contends that the foundation for
those policies was laid with America's decision to underwrite the
Dawes plan, the decision to underwrite England's return to the gold
standard, and the involvement in European monetary
stabilization--all issues over which Hoover and Strong
disagreed.
General
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