182 results on '"C. Fred Bergsten"'
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2. 46. European Integration and Greater Flexibility of Exchange Rates
3. 52. Government and the Corporation: A Fallacious Analogy
4. Part VI. Potential Impact of Exchange-Rate Flexibility on Different Countries or Groups of Countries
5. Contributors
6. 50. The Concept of Optimum Currency Areas and the Choice Between Fixed and Flexible Exchange Rates
7. Part VII. Miscellany
8. 51. Import Border Taxes and Export-Tax Refunds Versus Exchange-Rate Changes
9. 43. Japan's Twenty-Year Experience with a Fixed Rate for the Yen
10. 49. The Agricultural Regulations of the European Economic Community as an Obstacle to the Introduction of Greater Flexibility of Exchange Rates
11. 48. Comments on the Papers by Messrs. Mosconi and Kasper: Red Herrings, Carts, and Horses
12. 47. Comments on Mr. Kasper's Paper: Requiem for European Integration
13. 45. Balance-of-Payments and Exchange-Rate Problems in Sweden, Denmark, and Finland
14. 42. A Floating German Mark: An Essay in Speculative Economics
15. 39. Comments on Mr. Batt's Paper
16. 44. The Problem of Floating Exchange Rates from the Swiss Viewpoint
17. 40. Flexible Exchange Rates and Forward Markets
18. 31. Some Implications of Flexible Exchange Rates,Including Effects on Forward Markets and Transitional Problems
19. 41. Canada's Experience with a Floating Exchange Rate, 1950-1962
20. 38. The Effect on the Forward-Exchange Market of More Flexible Rates
21. 24. The International Monetary Game: Objectives and Rules
22. 34. The Forward-Exchange Market: Misunderstandings Between Practitioners and Economists
23. 26. A Realistic Note on Threefold Limited Flexibility of Exchange Rates
24. 37. Exchange Risks and Forward Coverage in Different Monetary Systems
25. 27. Asymmetrical Widening of the Bands Around Parity
26. 36. Comments on Mr. Watts's Paper
27. Part V. Exchange-Rate Flexibility and the Forward Market
28. 35. Forward Currency Costs: A Zero Sum Game?
29. 30. Rules for a Sliding Parity: A Proposal
30. 33. Short-Term Capital Movements and the Interest-Rate Constraint Under Systems of Limited Flexibility of Exchange Rates
31. 32. A Technical Note on the Width of the Band Required to Accommodate Parity Changes of Particular Size
32. 29. The Fixed-Reserve Standard: A Proposal toReverse Bretton Woods
33. 28. Sliding Parities: A Proposal for Presumptive Rules
34. Part III. The Case Against Flexible Exchange Rates
35. 22. Selected Case Studies Relating to Foreign-Exchange Problems in International Trade and Money Markets
36. 23. Comments on Mr. Kuster's Paper
37. 25. When and How Should Parities Be Changed?
38. 18. Could the Crises of the Last Few Years Have Been Avoided by Flexible Exchange Rates?
39. 17. Comments on Mr. Oppenheimer's Paper: A More Optimistic View
40. Part IV. Practical Proposals and Suggestions for Implementation
41. 20. Why I Am Not in Favor of Greater Flexibility of Exchange Rates
42. 21. Greater Flexibility of Exchange Rates: Effects on Commodities, Capital, and Money Markets
43. 19. Notes for the Bürgenstock Conference
44. 16. The Outlook for the Present World Monetary System
45. 15. The Business View of Proposals for International Monetary Reform
46. 14. The Wider Band and Foreign Direct Investment
47. 13. Entrepreneurial Risk under Flexible Exchange Rates
48. 12. The Adjustment Process, Its Asymmetry, and Possible Consequences
49. 5. Comments on Mr. Roosa's Paper
50. 11. Fixed Exchange Rates and the Market Mechanism
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