John Maynard Keynes, Volume 1The culmination of these efforts was his famous anti-inflationist tract, How to Pay for the War, whose logic, and supporting national income accounts, was accepted as the basis of Kingsley Wood's budget of 1941. For the rest of his life Keynes was involved in difficult financial negotiations with the United States, first to establish conditions of American help to Britain, then to devise a postwar financial system that satisfied American requirements without sacrificing Britain's interests, and finally, and most traumatically, to get Britain a loan to tide it over the first postwar years. When he died in 1946, Lionel Robbins wrote, "He gave his life for his country, as surely as if he had fallen on the field of battle." |
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Page 363
... REPARATIONS TANGLE Keynes had , as yet , had little to do with drawing up the financial terms of the peace settlement . The detailed work of the conference was being done by the Expert Commissions , with contentious issues referred to ...
... REPARATIONS TANGLE Keynes had , as yet , had little to do with drawing up the financial terms of the peace settlement . The detailed work of the conference was being done by the Expert Commissions , with contentious issues referred to ...
Page 373
... reparations . The minutes of the meetings held at the French Ministry of Finance , unusually for minutes , reveal the atmosphere as no summary can : 29 May 1919 : Mr Keynes thereupon presented the general question as to whether the ...
... reparations . The minutes of the meetings held at the French Ministry of Finance , unusually for minutes , reveal the atmosphere as no summary can : 29 May 1919 : Mr Keynes thereupon presented the general question as to whether the ...
Page 397
... reparations are now seen to be more modest and defensible than Britain's ; while the important linkage is not between reparations and security but between reparations , inter - Ally debts , and an American loan . Schuker argues that in ...
... reparations are now seen to be more modest and defensible than Britain's ; while the important linkage is not between reparations and security but between reparations , inter - Ally debts , and an American loan . Schuker argues that in ...
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Hopes betrayed, 1883-1920, Volume 2 Robert Skidelsky,Robert Jacob Alexander Skidelsky No preview available - 1992 |
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Allies Apostles Asquith August Austen Chamberlain Bank biographer Bloomsbury British called Cambridge Clive Bell currency David Garnett December Duncan Grant economics economist Edwin Montagu ethical Eton father February feel Florence Foxwell French friends G. E. Moore Geoffrey Gerald Shove German gold Harrod Harvey Road Hobhouse Ibid India Office intellectual interest January JMK's John July June Keynes wrote Keynes's King's College later lectures Leonard Woolf letter Lloyd George London Lord Lytton Strachey March Margot Asquith Marshall Marshall's Mary Berenson mathematics Maynard Keynes Maynard wrote McKenna mind Montagu Moore Moore's Moral Sciences mother never Neville Neville's November October Oxford paper Peace philosophy Pigou Principia Ethica Professor reparations Roger Fry Rupert Brooke seems September Sheppard Sidgwick social Society started Swithinbank theory things thought tion told took Treasury Treaty Tripos undergraduate University Utilitarian Vanessa Victorian wanted Woolf writing