British imperialism and portfolio choice in the currency boards of Palestine, East Africa, and West Africa
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Supplementary Files

Accompanying Spreadsheets (Palestine)
Accompanying Spreadsheets (East Africa)
Accompanying Spreadsheets (West Africa)

Keywords

British colonialism
British imperialism
Palestine Currency Board
East African Currency Board
West African Currency Board.

How to Cite

BOGER, T. (2018). British imperialism and portfolio choice in the currency boards of Palestine, East Africa, and West Africa. Journal of Social and Administrative Sciences, 5(4), 296–308. https://doi.org/10.1453/jsas.v5i4.1801

Abstract

Abstract. Did British colonial policy primarily benefit Britain, or its colonies? Wadan Narsey, in British Imperialism and the Makings of Colonial Currency Systems (2016),claims that Britain established currency boards to help itself at the expense of the colonies. Examining the history of several currency boards and their assets for select years, Narsey finds that under British influence, they held lower-yielding, shorter-maturity British assets than they need have done, costing colonial governments revenue. We explore this idea by analyzing full annual data on the securities and assets of the currency boards of Palestine, East Africa, and West Africa. An accompanying spreadsheet workbook shows the details of the analysis.

Keywords. British colonialism, British imperialism, Palestine Currency Board, East African Currency Board, West African Currency Board.

JEL. E10, E13, E40.
https://doi.org/10.1453/jsas.v5i4.1801
PDF

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