Gold Standard Amendment Act of 1931 (England)
The Gold Standard Amendment Act of 1931 is a rather
euphemistic title for an act that marked the end of the international gold
standard. The gold standard had provided the world with a stable monetary system
from the 1870s until 1914, and was regarded as the ideal monetary system in the
aftermath of World War I. In the pre–World War I era, Britain had been the major
proponent and custodian of the gold standard, and the departure of Britain from
the gold standard permanently removed the world from the gold standard.
Despite the interruption of World War I the world had by the mid-1920s
returned to a gold standard that combined elements of a gold bullion and gold
exchange. Countries held international reserves to redeem national currencies at
official rates, and these reserves took the form of gold or leading foreign
currencies, mainly British pounds and American dollars, which were “as good as
gold.” The United States held gold reserves well in excess of what was needed to
satisfy foreign claims, but in Britain foreign claims exceeded domestic gold
reserves, making Britain vulnerable to an international liquidity crisis.
After World War I Britain not only committed itself to returning to the gold
standard, but also sought to fix the pound at its pre–World War I value, which
was equivalent to $4.86 in the United States. In 1925 Britain returned to the
gold standard with the pound at pre–World War I parity in terms of gold and
foreign currencies, leaving the pound overvalued in the new international order.
The overvaluation of the pound made British exports more expensive in foreign
markets and foreign imported goods less expensive in British markets, increasing
the supply of goods in Britain relative to demand. Deflationary effects of
overvaluation in Britain caused strikes, unemployment, and recession, and forced
on the British government added social spending, leading to larger budget
deficits. The Bank of England kept interest rates high to attract foreign
capital, and discourage withdrawal of foreign funds, together minimizing
pressure to redeem pounds into gold. High interest rates also helped keep the
British economy depressed.
With the onset of the Great Depression of the 1930s many smaller countries
lost export markets and began to draw on reserves of foreign currencies to pay
for imports. Bank failures in Austria and Germany weakened confidence in foreign
currencies, encouraging redemption of foreign currencies into gold. France,
perhaps sensitive to the feeling that the leading powers held reserves in gold
and that secondary powers held reserves in foreign currency, took every
opportunity to convert its holding of pounds and dollars into gold.
Britain first negotiated loans with the central banks of France and the
United States, seeking to bolster its reserves and weather a mounting crisis of confidence
in the pound. Later the British government arranged another loan from private
sources, but only after restricting government deficit spending, and curbing
expenditures on unemployment compensation and wages of government workers. The
loans, however, were only stopgap measures, and the drain on Britain’s gold
reserves continued.
On Saturday, 19 September 1931, the British government decided to suspend
gold payments, effective the following Monday, 21 September. The act was rushed
through Parliament on 21 September and read, “Until His Majesty by Proclamation
otherwise directs subsection 2 of section one of the Gold Standard Act of 1925
shall cease to have effect.” The Gold Standard Act of 1925 had returned Britain
to the gold standard.
Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay, Venezuela, and Peru
had already suspended gold payments. Within a few weeks most of the world’s
trading partners abandoned the gold standard or restricted foreign currency
transactions. By the end of 1932 only the United States, France, Belgium,
Switzerland, and the Netherlands remained on the gold standard and maintained
freedom of transaction in foreign currencies. The United States abandoned the
gold standard in 1933, followed by the remaining European countries in 1936.
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