Managing crises and de-globalisation : nordic foreign trade and exchange, 1919-39 edited by Sven-Olof Olsson - London : Routledge, 2014. - xi, 228 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. - Routledge explorations in economic history ; 47 .

Formerly CIP.



British-German rivalry in Northern Europe revisited / Patrick Salmon -- Nordic trade cooperation in the 1930s / Sven-Olof Olsson -- why did Norwegian trade policy become more active in the interwar period? / Monica Værholm -- Effective protection, prices and GDP growth : tariffs in Finland during the interwar period / Jari Kauppila -- Re-examining Norwegian monetary policy in the 1930s / Lars Fredrik Oksendal -- Danish exchange rate policy and the trades : the interwar experience / Hans Kryger Larsen -- Bilateral exchange clearing with Germany during the 1930s : the experiences of the Scandinavian countries / Peter Hedberg -- The Scandinavian food system between organisation and state / Flemming Just -- Trade crisis and regulation of the farm sector : Sweden in the interwar years / Mats Morell -- Comparing the Icelandic and Norwegian fisheries' responses to the economic crisis of the 1930s / Guðmundur Jónsson -- The state and the formation of the fishing industry : Denmark in the interwar period / Morten Karnøe Søndergaard -- Cartels in the Swedish forest industry in the interwar period / Birgit Karlsson -- Big business, market power and small nations : the Norwegian aluminium and nickel industry, 1920-39 / Pål Thonstaf Sandvik & Espen Storli.

This text examines the effects of the Great Depression on the Nordic states in the interwar years, focusing on commercial and monetary policies but also important industries such as forestry, agriculture and fishing. As small, open economies the Nordic states have always been more dependent on foreign trade than larger powers, and have thus had a historic preference for free trade. But during the inter-war period the Nordic countries were squeezed between powerful and aggressive trading partners: above all Great Britain and Germany. Although the period between the end of the First World War and 1929 was marked by a return to a liberal world economy, the Great Depression ushered in a decade of protectionism. The bilateralisation of international trade was especially evident after Britain's Ottawa treaties in 1932 and the Nazi seizure of power in 1933. Their dependence on trade with Britain and Germany meant that the Nordic countries were exposed to the full force of British and German bilateralism. The paradox is that in spite of international trade wars and regulated exchange the Nordic countries managed better than other European states during the interwar period, and that the Great Depression was not as deep or long lasting as in other countries. The chapters in this book discuss why and how this rather successful Nordic experience was achieved. The topics covered include commercial and monetary policies but also important industries such as forestry, agriculture and fishing. Many of the chapters are comparative and discuss economic developments in two or more Nordic countries.

9781138805149 9780203864456 (ebk.) 0415561728 (hbk.) : 020386445X (ebk.)

2009022248


Monetary policy--History--Scandinavia--20th century
Foreign exchange--History--Scandinavia--20th century

382.094809042

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