This volume contains the papers presented and comments made at two
conferences on the controversial subject of greater flexibility of
exchange rates. The first of the conferences was held at Oyster Bay, New
York, early in 1969, the second at Bürgenstock, Switzerland, in the
summer of 1969. One half of the 40 conferees were academic economists,
the others were practitioners of the foreign exchange markets, mostly
bankers and a few executives of international business firms. Both the
opposition to greater flexibility of exchange rates and the advocacy of
more flexible systems are represented in these papers. The contrast
between fixed or jumping exchange rates and gliding exchange rates is
clearly described and the various systems of increased flexibility, such
as the "wider band" and the "crawling peg," are explained and examined.
Originally published in 1970.
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