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by Norman S. Fieleke
November/December 1996
Among the major categories of international transactions,
perhaps none is usually farther from the limelight than
unilateral, or unrequited, transfers. This obscurity
is puzzling, because countries' net receipts or payments
of unrequited transfers often exceed their international
balances on both trade and current account and sometimes
amount to sizable fractions of their national incomes,
and maintaining equilibrium in international payments
in the face of sizable transfers is a challenging issue.
This article discusses the singular nature of unrequited
transfers, recalls an historic, and still relevant,
controversy over their economic impact, and recounts
an effort by the United States to neutralize their balance-of-payments
consequences. The size of these transfers in recent
years, and some plausible explanations for them, are
then evaluated, with most attention given to those of
the United States.
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