11 Comments

Thank you, Jan. Your articles get ever better, and this is one of the best. Much appreciated.

Expand full comment

Thank you!!

Expand full comment

This is probably the most comprehensive and informative article I have read on the real politics underlying post-war international monetary policy. It deserves a wide circulation.

Expand full comment

Thanks Clive!

Expand full comment

Hier lijkt heel wat tijd en research in vooraf gegaan. Mijn complimenten voor dit artikel. Blijven onderzoeken en schrijven Jan.

Warme groet uit Belgie van een trouwe lezer.

Expand full comment

Het was idd veel werk. Gelukkig is Gainesville Coins bereidt om voor dit soort onderzoek middelen vrij te maken. Dank voor het lezen!

Expand full comment

Informative historical review. Clearly Germany is a country under occupation, aren't the Netherlands too?

Expand full comment

I don’t Germany is still under occupation (re gold), let alone the Netherlands

Expand full comment

Thanks!

Expand full comment

Another fascinating essay, Jan.

So, is it fair to say that despite the persistent movement of physical from west to east, most European nations are hodling? If so, that suggests private holdings in the west are being seriously eroded.

Quite a few commentators have made the point that gold has held up remarkably well in the face of much higher real rates, mostly due to official buying from the Global South, in particular China. If ever western investors shift to the buy side, seems to me gold may become a "no offer" market. Not literally of course, but in broad brush stroke terms.

The temptation for at least some European countries to assert their independence from the US may become irresistible in the not too distant future. Certainly, their subjugation doesn't seem to have been profitable, either economically or geopolitically.

Set to be a truly fascinating period.

Expand full comment

Those are topics for a next article.

Expand full comment