Clift, Ben and
Jim Tomlinson. November 2008. Negotiating credibility: Britain
and the International Monetary Fund, 1956-1976. Contemporary
European History, 17 (4): 545(23).
Abstract:
For
twenty years before the famous crisis of 1976 Britain was a regular
borrower from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Through
this lending role, the Fund in these years played a key part in determining
the credibility of British policies. Borrowing from the Fund
meant
that British policy had to be seen as conforming to certain norms,
but these norms were always negotiable, albeit within shifting
limits. This article uses archival material from London and Washington
to
examine these processes of negotiation, showing how far British
policy was shaped by the desires of the IMF, and how far it was
able to
maintain autonomy in national economic policy.