Building a Canadian-American free trade area: Papers
In: Brookings dialogues on public policy
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In: Brookings dialogues on public policy
In: The Brookings review, Band 6, Heft 3, S. 36
In: The Brookings review, Band 4, Heft 3, S. 32
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Band 406, Heft 1, S. 80-85
ISSN: 1552-3349
U.S. military cooperation with Western Europe and Japan is intermittently threatened by controversy over who should assume responsibility for the foreign exchange costs of stationing forces abroad. This question has been the cause of a long-standing dispute between the United States and its allies. At home, the need "to strengthen the dollar" by eliminating the foreign exchange drain on military account is frequently cited as a major reason for withdrawing U.S. forces from Western Europe, Korea, and Japan. There may well be compelling political, military, or budgetary reasons to revise U.S. mutual defense arrangements and reduce forces stationed abroad, but to make the decision on balance of payments grounds is to confuse means and ends. Our allies might appropriately be asked to mitigate the effect of this problem by cost-sharing arrangements and by military procurement in the United States, but the case for their doing so should meet the test of efficiency as well as equity. In the last analysis, however, the military balance of payments deficit should be viewed not as a military or security issue, but as part of the general process through which nations correct payment imbalances—surpluses as well as deficits. For this reason the stability of U.S. mutual defense arrangements over the future will depend in part on the success achieved in current negotiations to reform the international monetary system.
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Band 406, S. 80-85
ISSN: 0002-7162
World Affairs Online
In: Interplay: a magazine of international affairs, Band 3, S. 42-44
ISSN: 0020-9600
In: Foreign affairs, Band 48, S. 139-149
ISSN: 0015-7120
In: Foreign affairs: an American quarterly review, Band 48, Heft 1, S. 139
ISSN: 2327-7793
In: Brooking dialogues on public policy
World Affairs Online
In: Brookings Dialogues on Public Policy
This volume is the record of a conference held in March 1989 that centered on a departure from the basic U.S. policy toward the long-standing problem of third world debt.Secretary of the Treasury Nicholas Brady took the occasion of the conference to announce that officially sponsored reduction of debt principal and debt interest should henceforth be an integral part of debt strategy. Promptly labeled the Brady Plan, the secretary's statement has since been the subject of extensive debate at home and abroad. Now that it has been given official sanction, debt service reduction has become an inescapable feature of the ongoing effort to manage and resolve the debt problem. This volume considers the implications of introducing debt and debt service reduction into the preexisting menu of policies and, more specifically, to suggest the conditions under which it can be expected to hasten the removal of the third world debt problem from the international economic agenda.
In: Brooking dialogues on public policy
In: The Brookings review, Band 7, Heft 4, S. 24
In: Foreign affairs, Band 54, S. 233-249
ISSN: 0015-7120