The Economics of Constitutional Monarchy: The Antipodean Anachronism?

The United Kingdom, since the end of the Second World War, has not been vitally trade or defence dependent on Australia. Australia since the advent of European Economic Community has not been vitally trade dependent on the United Kingdom. There are continuing trade and investment relationships but,...

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Main Author: Simpson, John
Format: Working Paper
Published: Centre for Research in Applied Economics, Curtin Business School 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32033
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author Simpson, John
author_facet Simpson, John
author_sort Simpson, John
building Curtin Institutional Repository
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description The United Kingdom, since the end of the Second World War, has not been vitally trade or defence dependent on Australia. Australia since the advent of European Economic Community has not been vitally trade dependent on the United Kingdom. There are continuing trade and investment relationships but, any strong economic, financial and political connections have long since evaporated. Yet, the Union Jack remains at the corner of the Australian flag. A British constitutional monarchy persists. Australia is a wealthy, independent and rapidly growing developed country, with its own identity, destiny and pride of place in the world. The United Kingdom and Australia of course remain friendly allies. This paper does not deal with past British cultural connections. It merely demonstrates econometrically that linkages of an economic, financial and political nature are not sufficiently strong enough to perpetuate a constitutional monarchy for Australia. A three country model is presented, to include the only other developed Southern Hemisphere British constitutional monarchy (that of New Zealand), for purposes of comparison.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-320332017-01-30T13:28:45Z The Economics of Constitutional Monarchy: The Antipodean Anachronism? Simpson, John Constitutional monarchy causality risk ratings cointegration The United Kingdom, since the end of the Second World War, has not been vitally trade or defence dependent on Australia. Australia since the advent of European Economic Community has not been vitally trade dependent on the United Kingdom. There are continuing trade and investment relationships but, any strong economic, financial and political connections have long since evaporated. Yet, the Union Jack remains at the corner of the Australian flag. A British constitutional monarchy persists. Australia is a wealthy, independent and rapidly growing developed country, with its own identity, destiny and pride of place in the world. The United Kingdom and Australia of course remain friendly allies. This paper does not deal with past British cultural connections. It merely demonstrates econometrically that linkages of an economic, financial and political nature are not sufficiently strong enough to perpetuate a constitutional monarchy for Australia. A three country model is presented, to include the only other developed Southern Hemisphere British constitutional monarchy (that of New Zealand), for purposes of comparison. 2010 Working Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32033 Centre for Research in Applied Economics, Curtin Business School fulltext
spellingShingle Constitutional monarchy
causality
risk ratings
cointegration
Simpson, John
The Economics of Constitutional Monarchy: The Antipodean Anachronism?
title The Economics of Constitutional Monarchy: The Antipodean Anachronism?
title_full The Economics of Constitutional Monarchy: The Antipodean Anachronism?
title_fullStr The Economics of Constitutional Monarchy: The Antipodean Anachronism?
title_full_unstemmed The Economics of Constitutional Monarchy: The Antipodean Anachronism?
title_short The Economics of Constitutional Monarchy: The Antipodean Anachronism?
title_sort economics of constitutional monarchy: the antipodean anachronism?
topic Constitutional monarchy
causality
risk ratings
cointegration
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32033