Under a gold exchange standard, a
nation’s unit of money is convertible at an
official rate into a unit of money of a pure
gold standard nation—that is, a nation
that maintains the convertibility of its unit
of money into gold at an official rate.
A gold exchange standard became a
popular monetary standard after World
War I when many nations could not
marshal the gold reserves to support a
gold standard. In 1922, Britain proposed
at a Genoa conference the adoption of an
international monetary system organized
with major nations holding reserves only
in gold and the remaining nations holding
reserves in foreign currencies. Governments
(or central banks) would hold
reserves to redeem domestic currencies at
official rates as a means of guaranteeing
currency value. Although the adoption of
an international monetary system failed to
materialize from the Genoa conference,
many countries individually went on a
gold exchange standard. Nations of the
British Commonwealth often defined
their currencies in terms of the British
pound. Other nations defined their currencies
in terms of the currencies of nations
they were dependent on politically. The
gold exchange standard of the post–War
World I era ended when the world’s major
trading partners abandoned the gold standard
early in the 1930s.
Critics of the gold exchange standard
following World War I and World War II
contend that it encouraged dominant
nations to incur balance of payments
deficits as a method of infusing the rest
of the world with additional monetary
reserves. Britain ran balance of payments
deficits in the post–World I era
and the United States ran balance of payments
deficits under the Bretton Woods
system.
A balance of payments deficit
allows a nation to buy goods and investments
from the rest of the world with
payment in domestic currency never
used to claim domestic goods. Historically,
the gold exchange standard helped
the world maintain the discipline of a
gold standard when world supplies of
gold were not keeping pace with the
need for international monetary reserves.