Paul Einzig

Paul Einzig
Born 1897
Died 1973
Occupation Writer
Years active 1897 - 1973

Paul Einzig (25 August 1897 - 8 May 1973) was an economic and political writer and journalist. He wrote 57 books, alongside many articles for newspapers and journals, and regular columns for the newspapers Financial News (which became Financial Times) and Commercial and Financial Chronicle.[1]

He was born in Braşov, Transylvania [2] (then a part of Hungary, now Romania), into a Jewish family,[3] and educated in Hungary, England and France. He took a degree in Doctor of Political and Economic Sciences at the University of Paris from 1921 to 1923. He moved to England in 1919, becoming a citizen in 1929. He had a wife, Ruth, a son, Richard and a daughter. [4]. He died in London.

Works

  • International Gold Movements, 1929
  • The Bank for International Settlements, 1930
  • Behind the Scenes of International Finance, 1931
  • The World Economic Crisis, 1929-1931, 1931
  • Montague Norman: A Study in Financial Statesmanship, 1932
  • The Comedy of the Pound, 1933
  • The Tragedy of the Pound, 1932
  • The Economic Foundations of Fascism, 1933
  • The Sterling-Dollar-Franc Tangle, 1933
  • The Economics of Rearmament, 1934 (reprint 2014)
  • Exchange Control, 1934
  • France’s Crisis, 1934
  • The Future of Gold, 1934
  • Germany’s Default, 1934
  • Bankers, Statesmen and Economists, 1935
  • World Finance Since 1914, 1935
  • Monetary Reform in Theory and Praxis, 1936
  • The Theory of Forward Exchange, 1937
  • Will Gold Depreciate?, 1937
  • Foreign Balances, 1938
  • Bloodless Invasion : German Economic Penetration Into The Danubian States & The Balkans, 1939
  • Economic Problems of The Next War, 1939
  • World Finance, 1938-1939, 1939
  • Europe in Chains', 1940
  • Can We Win the Peace?, 1942
  • The Japanese New Order in Asia, 1943
  • Currency after the War: The British and American Plans, 1944
  • Freedom from Want, 1944
  • Primitive Money, in its Ethnological, Historical and Economic Aspects, 1949 (1951; 1963; 1966)
  • Inflation, 1952
  • How Money is Managed: The Ends and Means of Monetary Policy, 1954 (new version: Monetary Politics: Ends and Means, 1964)
  • The Economic Consequence of Automation, 1956
  • The Control of the Purse: Progress and Decline of Parliament’s Financial Control, 1959
  • In the Centre of Things, 1960
  • A Dynamic Theory of Forward Exchange, 1961
  • The History of Foreign Exchange, 1962
  • The Euro-Dollar System: Practice and Theory of International Interest Rates, 1964 (reprint 1967)
  • Foreign Dollar Loans in Europe, 1965
  • Textbook on Foreign Exchange, 1966
  • Leads and Lags, 1968
  • Foreign Exchange Crises: An Essay in Economic Pathology, 1968
  • Decline and Fall? Britain’s Crisis in the Sixties, 1969
  • The Euro-Bond Market, 1969
  • The Case Against Floating Exchanges, 1970
  • The Case Against Joining the Common Market, 1971
  • Parallel Money Markets. 1. The New Markets in London, 1971
  • Parallel Money Markets. 2. Overseas Markets, 1972
  • Destiny of Gold, 1972
  • Destiny of the Dollar, 1972
  • Textbook on Monetary Policy, 1972

References

  1. The History of Foreign Exchange | Book Reviews | EH.Net Archived 2013-10-19 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. "The Papers of Paul Einzig". Janus. Cambridge University.
  3. William D. Rubinstein, Michael Jolles, Hilary L. Rubinstein, The Palgrave Dictionary of Anglo-Jewish History, Palgrave Macmillan (2011), p. 241
  4. Paul Einzig, How Money is Managed. London: Pelican, 1954
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