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International monetary economics essentially deals with three
problems, viz. the nature and stability of the international
monetary system, the balance of payments adjustment process, and
international liquidity (reserves and credit facilities). All three
categories are interrelated. The exchange rate system has an
important bearing on the manner in which the adjustment process
functions, as well as on the need for international liquidity. The
adjustment process is an important determinant of the need for
international liquidity. The adequacy of international liquidity
influences the working of the adjustment process. Ultimately,
developments in international liquidity and in the adjustment
process determine the nature and stability of the international
monetary system; a sustained malfunctioning of the adjustment
process - brought about by a serious imbalance in international
liquidity or by other causes - will bring about a new international
monetary system, either through collapse or reform of the old
system. This study deals only with the problem of international
liquidity. However, it touches on the two other main aspects of
international monetary economics insofar as they have a bearing on
international reserves and credit facilities. In the literature
international liquidity is most often defined as including
international reserves (gold, SDRs, foreign exchange and claims on
the IMF) and international credit facilities (IMF drawing rights,
EEC support arrangements and central bank multilateral and
bilateral credit facilities). This definition will also be followed
in this study.
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