According to reviewers at Cambridge University Press , the book captures three distinct phases of Kindleberger's career:
The central narrative explores how the global economy transitioned from the British pound sterling system to the American dollar-led system.
His early career at the New York Fed, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), and his wartime role in the OSS and the Marshall Plan. Money and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and t...
Kindleberger argued that for a global economy to remain stable, there must be a single "stabilizer" or leader that maintains open markets for goods and provides counter-cyclical lending as a lender of last resort.
Kindleberger viewed the U.S. role not as one of exploitation but of necessary leadership to provide "international public goods," such as global financial stability and crisis management. Kindleberger’s Three "Lives" According to reviewers at Cambridge University Press ,
In , Perry Mehrling provides an intellectual biography that doubles as a "biography of the dollar". The book traces the life and career of Charles P. Kindleberger (1910–2003), a former MIT economist and policymaker whose work defined the architecture of the modern international monetary system . Core Themes and Key Arguments
His tenure at MIT, where he wrote the standard textbook on international economics and fought intellectual battles against both Monetarists and Keynesians. Kindleberger viewed the U
Unlike many peers who favored mathematical models, Kindleberger’s economics was deeply rooted in history, institutional detail, and the real-world experiences of practitioners.