1. The Constant Employment Budget Balance and British Budgetary Policy, 1929–39;Middleton;Economic History Review,1981
2. This experiment is analyzed as Case IV in the appendix, available on request. We stress immediate effects. By raising the price of gold in terms of commodities, an increased flow supply of new gold could be elicited in the long run. For contemporary discussion of this mechanism, see Gold Delegation of the League of Nations. Report (Geneva, 1932).
3. The relationship is strengthened when a further dummy variable is added for Italy, the other country with stringent capital and exchange market controls. ΔCBDR = −4.77 + 0.040 ΔER − 2.31 GERMANY − 1.55 ITALY (5.37) (4.19) (2.73) (1.92) R2 = .51
4. The same picture would emerge were we to construct measures of the real exchange rate and plot them against export volume, since each country's real exchange rate is dominated by the movement of its nominal exchange rate.
5. Kim Frank , “The German Economy during the Interwar Period: Preparation for War?” (thesis, Harvard College, 1983).