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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 May 2009
The Annual Report of the Executive Directors of the International Monetary Fund for the fiscal year ended April 30, 1952 was presented to the Board of Governors by its chairman (Rooth) on June 24, 1952. The report indicated that, despite a remarkable growth in production and one widespread adjustment of exchange rates over the previous seven years, international payments were still far from having attained a state of balance and exchange difficulties and restrictions existed again over large parts of the world, for countries constituting a large part of the world had followed policies aimed at achieving higher levels of consumption and investment than could be covered out of real resources available. This had resulted in a situation of inflationary pressures that in certain countries had been aggravated by rearmament programs, pressures which created excessive demands for imports and reduced the quantities of goods available for export. In this situation the use of exchange restrictions and quantitative import controls, frequently of a discriminatory nature, seemed inevitable to many countries; and during the past year there had been a tendency to extend and intensify these restrictions and controls.
1 For information on the Fund loan to Belgium, see International Organization, VI, p. 476.
2 International Monetary Fund, Annual Report of the Executive Directors for the Fiscal Year Ended April 30, 1952, Washington, D.C., 1952Google Scholar; United Nations, Bulletin, XXIII, p. 415. For detailed summaries of the activities of the Fund for the year, see International Organization, V, p. 602, 797; VI, p. 121, 446.