Price stability vs. exchange rate stability Keynes's central thesis in
A Tract on Monetary Reform was that countries should prioritize domestic price stability over exchange rate stability. He argued that maintaining fixed exchange rates under the gold standard had too high a cost to domestic economic stability. Instead, he advocated for a managed monetary policy that would focus on maintaining stable domestic prices.
Monetary policy tools Keynes contended that the
Bank of England possessed adequate policy instruments to achieve price stability through: •
Interest rate management: Using
discount rates to influence credit conditions and economic activity •
Banking sector reserves: Managing commercial bank reserves to control lending and the money supply •
Active monetary policy: Moving away from automatic gold standard mechanisms toward discretionary policy-making
Exchange rate policy Rather than supporting freely
floating exchange rates, Keynes proposed what would later be recognized as a "crawling peg" system. Under this arrangement, exchange rates would adjust gradually rather than being allowed to fluctuate freely or remaining rigidly fixed. This represented a middle path between the extremes of fixed and floating exchange rate regimes.
Critique of the gold standard The book contains a significant critique of the gold standard, which Keynes famously described as a "barbarous relic." He argued that the automatic adjustment mechanisms of the gold standard imposed unnecessary costs on domestic economies and that managed monetary systems could achieve better outcomes. == Content ==