Sterling area

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The Indian Rupee was one of the currencies of the sterling area.

The sterling area (or sterling bloc, legally scheduled territories)

pegged their currencies to sterling
, or actually used sterling as their own currency.

The area began to appear informally during the early 1930s, after sterling had left the

pegged to sterling instead of to gold. A large number of these countries were part of the British Empire
; however, a significant minority were not.

Early in the

exchange control area to protect the external value of sterling, among other aims. Canada and Newfoundland were already linked to the US dollar and did not join the sterling bloc.[3]

The Bank of England in London guided co-ordination of monetary policy in the currency area. Member countries with their own currency held a large portion of their foreign currency reserves as sterling balances in London.

After the Second World War, the

US dollar (convertible to gold) gave the sterling area a second lease of life as Commonwealth of Nations kinship and trading loyalties were maintained after Britain's withdrawal from Empire by keeping a sterling peg and staying in the sterling area, rather than maintaining a direct dollar peg. Despite this, sterling did not regain anything like its place in international commerce that it had had before the war, and a devastated and financially exhausted Britain could not defend the international value of sterling to maintain confidence in the system, resulting in its devaluation of the pound sterling against the dollar in 1967 that was not reflected in other sterling area currencies. In the end the US dollar's inability to hold to the Bretton Woods gold standard precipitated the end of the era of fixed exchange rates: with all major currencies including the pound floating against the US dollar, the sterling area had lost its final raison d'être
.

In June 1972, the British government unilaterally applied exchange controls to the other sterling area countries, with the exception of Ireland, the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands. This arguably marked the end of the sterling area. During the rest of the 1970s and early 1980s, the remaining sterling balances were wound down to a level that represented the significance of Britain in contemporary world trade.

Purpose

Before the

postwar era in an attempt to preserve the British Empire's superpower status during the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union.[5]

Canada and Newfoundland

US dollar (since 1858). In 1931, Britain and its Dominions abandoned the gold standard during the Great Depression. But while Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa all responded to the end of the gold standard by pegging their pounds to the pound sterling, Canada and Newfoundland instead pegged their dollars to the US dollar. So Canada and Newfoundland did not stand to gain by joining an exchange control bloc intended to protect the external value of sterling. The absence of Canada and Newfoundland from the sterling area was beneficial to Britain, as it curtailed capital flight to the North American mainland. Canada nevertheless introduced its own exchange controls at the outbreak of war; these were maintained until 1953. Canada's exchange controls were 'sterling area-friendly', in that their purpose was more to prevent capital flight to the US than to prevent flight to the sterling area.[citation needed
]

Hong Kong

1967 sterling crisis
, Hong Kong only partially followed Britain in devaluing its currency. In 1972, Hong Kong finally ended the currency peg with sterling.

Member benefits

At the end of the war in 1945 the sterling area remained the largest and most coherent currency bloc in the world,[citation needed] and it provided its members with freedom to settle payments in sterling anywhere within the area without exchange controls. Members enjoyed the benefits of stable exchange rates and permanent access to the financial resources of the City of London. Meanwhile, the British government was able to use the pooled reserves of the entire area's membership to back sterling at times when there was a US dollar shortage.[citation needed]

Demise

Towards the end of the 1950s with the decline of the British Empire, political opinion rapidly shifted towards the view that trade with Europe was more important to the future of the United Kingdom rather than the

Anthony Barber, this was to halt a recent increase in capital outflow to other parts of the sterling area.[citation needed
]

Opponents of these changes argued that the real reason for them was Britain's impending entry to the EEC, and that France was concerned about Britain's close economic ties with the Commonwealth and the sterling area,[9] even though France continued to have special economic relations with its less successful former colonies in the CFA and CFP franc zones. The attempts by the United Kingdom to join the European Economic Community in 1961 and 1967 were blocked by the French, but eventually, on 1 January 1973, the United Kingdom became a European Communities member state after France formally lifted its veto on UK membership.[8]

One of the issues covered in the negotiations about the United Kingdom's entry to the EEC was the problem of "sterling balances", balances held in sterling in London by governments of countries which were members of the sterling area, in many cases the result of debts incurred by Britain during the war. France argued that these obligations were potentially a threat to the stability of the pound, and that this could cause turbulence for the whole of the EEC. Agreement on winding down these balances was thus a necessary part of the agreement for Britain to join the EEC, and removed the main reason for continuing the area.[citation needed]

Gibraltar was re-included into the new miniature sterling area on 1 January 1973, and the other sterling area countries responded as they chose – in fact, some of these countries had already taken similar measures throughout the 1950s and 1960s.[citation needed][clarification needed] Following the British government's decision in June 1972, some countries immediately copied the British government, and others did so over the next few months. Singapore continued operating sterling area exchange controls until as late as 1978, and Brunei did not alter its sterling area exchange controls until the year 2001.

After 1972 the sterling area was no longer what it had been, but the United Kingdom still recognised the existence of the 'overseas sterling area' as a distinct group of countries for the purposes of exchange control policy. In 1979, due to an improving economic situation and changed patterns of trade between Britain and the rest of the Commonwealth, Britain removed all its exchange controls: the sterling area had effectively ceased to exist.

The United Kingdom's pursuits to join EEC, from 1961 till its attainment of EEC membership in 1973, slowly phased out the privileged commercial ties of Commonwealth and UK. A period after 1973 saw further decline to the special trade links the Commonwealth nations had with the United Kingdom, and ended their privileged access to UK markets. Most members of the sterling area left the bloc to peg their currencies with the United States dollar.[8][10]

List of original member countries

References

  1. . it was not until 1947, under the aegis of the British Exchange Control Act, that the area acquired some degree of legal formality. In that Act the members of the sterling area are referred to as the "scheduled territories" [...]
  2. . The [Exchange Control Act] identified members of the sterling area as 'scheduled territories'.
  3. ^ "Sterling Area (Hansard, 18 July 1972)". api.parliament.uk.
  4. ^ The National Archives: The Cabinet Papers 1915–1981 (Catalogue Reference CAB 24/256).
  5. .
  6. ^ Latter, Tony (2007). Hong Kong's Money: The History, Logic and Operation of the Currency Peg. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. p. 43.
  7. ^ Goodstadt, Leo (2009). Uneasy Partners: The conflict between public interests and private profit in Hong Kong. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. p. 59.
  8. ^ a b c "Commonwealth Of Nations 1947–Present". atlasofbritempire.com. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
  9. ^ "Sterling area". Britannica.com. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
  10. ^ Brenchley, Frank, "Britain and the Middle East:an economic history 1945–1987" [1]
  11. ^ "United Nations Conciliation Commission for Palestine".

Further reading

  • The New Palgrave Dictionary of Money and Finance (1992)

See also