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This profile was automatically generated using 22 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 22 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 22 references Web References
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1. www.monthlyreview.org
www.monthlyreview.org/080430va - [Cached]Published on: 4/1/2008 Last Visited: 6/1/2008
8. James Boughton, "North West of Suez: The 1956 Crisis and the Suez,"IMF Staff Papers 48, 3 (2001): 425,46. -
2. sify.com
sify.com/finance/fullstory.php - [Cached]Published on: 10/20/2007 Last Visited: 10/20/2007
Prof James Boughton, the IMF historian, observes: "It is clear from the record of deliberations on the Second Amendment in the mid-1970s that the Fund's governors did not agree on the precise meaning of "firm surveillance" and even that phrase was introduced as a substitute for agreement on a more precise reform of the exchange rate system."As he goes on to elaborate, "both sides recognised that the principles and procedures of surveillance would have to be worked out gradually through experience." -
3. The Witherspoon Institute
www.winst.org/seminars/faith_a - [Cached]Published on: 2/1/2007 Last Visited: 3/3/2008
As session chairs, Harold James, professor at Princeton University and Senior Fellow of the Witherspoon Institute, and James Boughton, Assistant Director of the Policy Development and Review Department at the International Monetary Fund, will structure and moderate the dialogue.
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Participants: Harold James, James Boughton, Michel Camdessus, Anwar Ibrahim, Emma Rothschild, and Amartya Sen.
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James Boughton (moderator) is Assistant Director of the Policy Development and Review Department at the International Monetary Fund.He also has been an Advisor in the Research Department at the IMF, and from 1992-2001 he was the Fund's Historian.Dr. Boughton holds a Ph.D. in economics from Duke University, and before going to the IMF in 1981, he was Professor of Economics at Indiana University and had served as an economist at the OECD in Paris.His publications include a textbook on money and banking, a book on the U.S. Federal funds market, two IMF books that he co-edited, and articles in professional journals on international finance, monetary theory and policy, and international policy coordination.His latest book, Silent Revolution, on the history of the IMF from 1979 to 1989, was published in October 2001.

