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Lecture notes

1J The British Empire Notes – Chapter 21 Trade and Commerce

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These notes cover how important the empire was to Britain post WW2, the formation of the EEC and the Stirling Devaluation. They are for the new a level specification and are to an A*standard.

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Uploaded on
July 27, 2019
Number of pages
3
Written in
2018/2019
Type
Lecture notes
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Unknown
Contains
All classes

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Section 4: The Winds of Change 1947-67 Chapter 21: Trade and Commerce

Chapter 21: Trade and Commerce
How Important was the Empire/ Commonwealth to the Post-War Reconstruction of
Britain?
Statistics




Rest of the world 717 34.6 927 27.5 2009 43.2 2281 39.6




Rest of the World 475 29.1 646 24 1427 37.7 1939 39.6
• Trade outside the commonwealth and outside Western Europe was very important – as it always had been
• Europe was of growing importance to Britain
• Britain had had to sell its overseas investments overseas and lost income from its invisibles which used to make up the
trade deficit

Background
• 1947 – devaluation of the pound – made exports cheaper (encourages exports), however, it reduced investment
• Try to develop their colonies with the CDaWAs

In what ways did the USA rise to global economic predominance after WW2?
• The world was dominated economically by the USA – only nation that wasn’t damaged economically by the war. Lots of
nations had borrowed from the USA – came out as the world’s creditors
• Dollars become the main currency
• The US Marshall plan of 1948-52 provided Britain with $3.3bn

How did Britain attempt to meet the challenge to pay for vital imports in the post-war period?
• In order to buy vitally needed goods, Britain needed to earn dollars and build up foreign exchange reserves with which to
pay for imports
• It counited rationing at home to reduce food imports and prioritised British industrial production for the export rather
than the domestic market
• They also tried to develop the productive and export capacities of the colonies, particularly in Africa, where the relative
under-development of local resources offered huge opportunities for growth

Why was trade with the Empire and Commonwealth important up to the 1960?
• Areas like Malaya were a major contributor to the Hard Currency Pool (Hard Currency Pool – having to keep some
reserves in another currency so you trade with other nations)

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