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In England's Cross of Gold, James Ashley Morrison challenges the
conventional view that the UK's ruinous return to gold in 1925 was
inevitable. Instead, he offers a new perspective on the struggles
among elites in London to define and redefine the gold
standard—from the first discussions during the Great War; through
the titanic ideological clash between Winston Churchill and John
Maynard Keynes; to the final, ill-fated implementation of the "new
gold standard." Following World War I, Churchill promised to
restore the ancient English gold standard—and thus Britain's
greatness. Keynes portended that this would prove to be one of the
most momentous—and ill-advised—decisions in financial history.
From the vicious peace settlement at Versailles to the Great
Depression, the gold standard was central to the worst disasters of
the time. Economically, Churchill's move exacerbated the
difficulties of repairing economies shattered by war. Politically,
it set countries at odds as each endeavored to amass gold, sowing
the seeds of further strife. England's Cross of Gold, grounded in
masterful archival research, reveals that these events turned
crucially on the beliefs of a handful of pivotal policymakers. It
recasts the legends of Churchill, Keynes, and their collision, and
it shows that the gold standard itself was a metaphysical
abstraction rooted more in mythology than material reality.
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