Abstract
INTRODUCTIONAdherence to fixed parities and convertibility of national currencies into gold served as a signal of financial rectitude or a “good housekeeping seal of approval” during the classical gold standard era from 1870–1914. Peripheral countries that adhered faithfully to the gold standard rule had access at better terms to capital from the core countries of Western Europe than did countries with poor records of adherence (Bordo and Rockoff 1996). In this chapter we extend the approach to ascertain whether the “good housekeeping seal” was also an important institution under the interwar gold exchange standard, which prevailed only from 1925 to 1931.In simplest terms, the “good housekeeping seal” hypothesis views the gold standard as a commitment mechanism. Adherence to the fixed parity of gold required that members follow domestic monetary and fiscal policies and have other institutions of financial probity (such as having a monetary authority that holds gold reserves) consistent with long-run maintenance of the fixed price of gold. It also signaled to potential overseas lenders that the borrowers were “good people.”An important part of the hypothesis is that the gold standard should be viewed as a contingent rule or a rule with escape clauses. Members were expected to adhere to convertibility except in the event of a well-understood emergency such as a war, a financial crisis, or a shock to the terms of trade.