| 1952 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Economic Conference | |
|---|---|
Photoshoot during the conference | |
| Host country | |
| Dates | 28 November–12 December 1952 |
| Cities | London |
| Participants | 8 |
| Chair | Winston Churchill (Prime Minister) |
| Follows | 1951 |
| Precedes | 1953 |
| Key points | |
Commonwealth trade,imperial preference,Sterling area,ANZUS Treaty,Royal Styles and Titles,Head of the Commonwealth | |
The1952 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Economic Conference was an emergencyMeeting of theHeads of Government of theBritish Commonwealth. It was called by the British government of SirWinston Churchill and held in theUnited Kingdom in December 1952 as a follow-up to a Commonwealth Finance Minister's conference held in January 1952. The conference was held in the context of British economic and military decline and the United States' surging role in the world.[1]
The principal topic of the conference was theconvertibility and liquidity ofPound sterling intoAmerican dollars and British concerns that non-sterling Commonwealth countries were building up sterling balances for the purpose of conversion into American dollars, the future of thePound sterling area, and the alleviation of Commonwealth trade restrictions andimperial preference, particularly in the light of the surging American economy and the desire of Commonwealth countries such asAustralia for American investment in order for economic development to occur against British concerns that American economic dominance threatened Britain's economic position. This discussion was necessary as the Commonwealth, with the exception of Canada, had a common pool ofgold and dollar reserves.[2] Little was accomplished in the economic discussion with the final communique being described as an "agreement in platitudes".[1]
British concerns at being excluded from theANZUS military treaty betweenAustralia,New Zealand and theUnited States were also a topic and were addressed by a communique issued by the prime ministers supporting Britain's demand for a voice in ANZUS.[3]
In addition, Commonwealth prime ministers, after months of discussion on whether the newly ascended QueenElizabeth II should have a uniformRoyal Styles and Titles throughout the Commonwealth or whether realms should adopt their own styles and titles, it was agreed that each member of the Commonwealth "should use for its own purposes a form of the Royal Style and Titles which suits its own particular circumstances but retains a substantial element which is common to all"[4][5] and agreed to pass appropriate legislation in their respective parliaments. The prime ministers also agreed to proclaim the new Queen,Elizabeth II,Head of the Commonwealth in succession of her late father,George VI.[4]