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1 Introduction: The Reshaping of US Foreign Financial and Monetary Policies from the 1960s to the 1970s
2 Capital Account, Foreign Trade and Development Assistance: US Foreign Economic Policy in the 1960s
3 Oil, Private Capital Markets, Inflation: The Tottering of the International Payments System 1968-1973
4 The Rise of Energy Finance and the Quest for Capital Supply in the US Foreign Economic Policy 1973-1976
5 The Linkage Between Petrodollar Recycling and Demand Side Policies: Its Rise and Fall Under the Carter Administration
6 Conclusion: Dissecting the Interrelationship Between Transnational Capital Markets, Energy Finance, and Development Policies
Glossary of Events
Author Index
Subject Index

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Before the neoliberal turn : the rise of energy finance and the limits to US foreign economic policy 이용현황 표 - 등록번호, 청구기호, 권별정보, 자료실, 이용여부로 구성 되어있습니다.
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0002520773 337.73 -A19-1 서울관 의원열람실(회관) 이용불가
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This book pinpoints continuities and changes in U.S. foreign economic policy from the fixed exchange rate system of the 1960s through to the period between the two oil crises of the 1970s. Chapters pay close attention to the interconnectedness between the long lasting decline of the U.S. Dollar on foreign exchange markets and the U.S. balance of payments, transformations in international capital markets, and international oil developments. The book charts the prolonged failure of Washington’s foreign economic policies to restore U.S. financial and monetary leadership through to the Carter Administration.

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This book pinpoints continuities and changes in U.S. foreign economic policy from the fixed exchange rate system of the 1960s through to the period between the two oil crises of the 1970s. Chapters pay close attention to the interconnectedness between the long lasting decline of the U.S. Dollar on foreign exchange markets and the U.S. balance of payments, transformations in international capital markets, and international oil developments. The book charts the prolonged failure of Washington’s foreign economic policies to restore U.S. financial and monetary leadership through to the Carter Administration.