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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 May 2009
Council The Council of the Organization for European Economic Cooperation (OEEC), meeting in Paris on June 29, 1956, decided to maintain the European Payments Union (EPU) for another year beginning on July 1, 1956, without any modifications in its rules. The Council also approved bilateral agreements on repayment and liquidation concluded by some EPU members. The Council met again in Paris from July 17 to 19, under the chairmanship of Mr. Harold Macmillan (United Kingdom); among the major questions discussed were nuclear energy and trade liberalization. Prior to the meeting, press reports indicated that the United Kingdom had refused an invitation from the west German government to discuss a flexible exchange rate for sterling, stating that the United Kingdom government saw no useful purpose to be served in an international discussion of the exchange value of sterling. During the Council session the ministers had before them a report and proposal dealing with 1) the need for the OEEC countries to achieve a degree of free trade abolishing quantitative restrictions to the extent of 90 percent or more; 2) the possibility of consolidating that degree of liberalization; and 3) the desire of the low tariff countries in Europe to see this quantitative liberalization accompanied by tariff reductions.
1 Council of Europe News, July 1956, p. 6.Google Scholar
2 The Times (London), July 12, 1956.Google Scholar
3 See International Organization, X, p. 346–347.
4 See Ibid., X, p. 330.
5 Council of Europe News, August 1956, p. 6–7; The Times (London), July 12, 18, 19 and 20, 1956Google Scholar; New York Times, July 18 and 20, 1956.Google Scholar
6 See International Organization, X, p. 346–347.
7 The Times (London), September 4 and 5, 1956.Google Scholar
8 Council of Europe News, October 1956, p. 7.Google Scholar