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Does anybody here know how a Britisher named Montagu Norman used Indian gold to save Europe ?
Lol Just google for the images for heavy jewelry ...... Most of this gold will reach its ultimate destination..... Bank locker.......
Rich will keep it in their locker.... Poor will keep it in bank's locker after taking a loan......
Its not Halfi heard south india has half the worlds gold locked away
When my sister was married, she only wore a gold necklace and gold bangles and other light jewellery with it. But South Indian brides are heavily loaded with gold, no part of the body is left without gold.
fortunately, in todays mallu weddings the bride can get through a metal detectorforget it one of my colleague got married, and since the gold was so much that she couldnt wear it, and then they packed it in a suitcase and gave it in wedding.......
Could be since October to Feb is the main wedding season in India and most families shop for gold before the marriage
fortunately, in todays mallu weddings the bride can get through a metal detector
View attachment 150815
Most Asians are gold lovers, more so in the subcontinent.
This is a 7 year old blog, but one of the best about India's history with gold.
Indian Gold Reserves. Forgotten History! New Opportunity? | 2ndlook
Modern restrictions on gold exports to India
Between WWI end and the start of the WWII, it was clear that India would not stay a colony for long. Indian independence would happen sooner than later. Between 1920-40, in a series of measures, policy decisions were taken, which made Indian interests subsidiary and inferior to Western interests. Central bankers from the USA, Britain, France and Germany had many meetings to “coordinate monetary policy.” The agenda – gold flow management between themselves and an obvious understanding - don’t let Indians get the gold.
Indians were paid, with inflated and abundant silver stock, instead of gold. This silver was the same silver released by the Pittman Act – a “buffer to protect Western gold reserves against the Indian drain …” Of course, later the British Raj decided to settle Indian debts with promissory notes – and not even silver. It was this Indian ‘sacrifice’ which enabled the recovery of the West.
They (Hjalmar Schacht, Governor, Reichsbank, Charles Rist, Deputy Governor, Banque de France, Benjamin Strong, USA Federal Reserve, Montagu Norman, Bank Of England) agreed that Indian demand for gold had a “…deflationary effect on global liquidity,” therefore Indian demand for gold had to be regulated.”
in the spring of 1926, when Norman induced Strong to support him in fiercely opposing a plan of Sir Basil Blackett’s to establish a full gold-coin standard in India. Strong went to the length of traveling to England to testify against the measure, and was backed up by Andrew Mellon and aided by economists Professor Oliver M.W. Sprague of Harvard, Jacob Hollander of Johns Hopkins, and W. Randolph Burgess and Robert Warren of the New York Reserve Bank. The American experts warned that the ensuing gold drain to India would cause deflation in other countries (i.e., reveal their existing over-inflation) (from America’s Great Depression By Murray N. Rothbard, Chapter 5, The Development of the Inflation; Ludwig von Mises Institute)
The New York Times wrote how “it was most important for the Allies to agree on a policy that would prevent the Huns from capturing the very valuable raw materials which can be obtained in India, and sometimes in India alone.” Further, The New York Times went on and stated “how without Indian products there would be greater difficulty in winning the war.”
So, as the West traded, profited and consumed Indian production and goods, when it came to paying for the goods, they caviled – and ‘regulated’ Indian demand for gold – and even silver!!
fortunately, in todays mallu weddings the bride can get through a metal detector
View attachment 150815
St Augustine, Florida.No doubt this is an photo of a marriage somewhere in Europe or US ?
may or may not..But it is not a rare scene in Kerala... This type of wedding is very very common nowadays....No doubt this is an photo of a marriage somewhere in Europe or US ?
may or may not..But it is not a rare scene in Kerala... This type of wedding is very very common nowadays....
Anyway,It highlights your knowledge about Kerala and Malayalis...