Something doesn't seem right about this radio. The FM broadcast band is correct for this country and perhaps a portion of Europe, but the AM band is all wrong -- starts with 550 and ends with 200. Someone must have left a digit off that 200, but still it would be wrong since the BC band would then run from 550 to just 1200 kHz -- 500 kHz (0.5 MHz) short of the actual end of the American AM band. The only thing I can come up with that makes any sense is that the AM BC band on this radio is calibrated in meters, not actual frequencies in kilohertz; this also is an almost dead giveaway that the radio was an export version, since US and Canadian AM radios no longer refer to their AM stations by wavelength in meters--despite the fact that Canada uses the metric system almost exclusively. I remember many old AC/battery tube-type portable radios of the '50s having the BC scale calibrated 550-1600 kc, with another scale (meters) directly below it; I once had a rather large GE three-way tube-type portable radio with a dial calibrated this way. I don't know if that model was meant for export. Hmmm.

Something else to consider about the GE Monogram set we are discussing here is that the radio was made in the United States of America (look at the label on the back cover, which clearly states "Trademark of General Electric Company, U. S. A. . . . Made in USA), which is another tipoff that the set was made here but intended for export to Europe.
The GE Monogram trademark, IIRC, was used on some of their television CRTs of the 1950s as well.