Discussion about this post

User's avatar
eg's avatar

Masterful, and as is usually the case with Tooze, careful not to make uncautious claims about the motivations of the the players involved at the time. Readers who are interested in a more sinister interpretation of American motives during the period are encouraged to investigate Michael Hudson's "Super Imperialism. The Economic Strategy of American Empire. Third Edition" or the first few chapters of his "The Destiny of Civilization: Finance Capitalism, Industrial Capitalism or Socialism" both of which outline how the refusal of the US to forgive the war debts of its WWI allies represented a departure from previous European practice with serious consequences for the next 30 years in world history and ultimately resulting in the world-girdling dollar system and its various associated agencies (Bretton Woods, World Bank, IMF).

Somewhat related is John Perkins' "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man" exposing the mechanisms and consequences of US dollar diplomacy among Third World countries in the post-WWII era.

Expand full comment
Hugh's avatar

Interesting. And important.

In the first world war, the Netherlands was neutral, contrary to the first table.

If I remember correctly (and I may not), Britain was the largest creditor nation in 1914. The US entered to war quite late and so didn't have to pay for much of it. That's how Britain turned into a debtor nation. The process was repeated in 1939. It got so bad that Britain secretly paid for its last imports, before the US joined WWII, with Belgian gold held for safekeeping in the Bank of England.

I'm not an American, so I don't really know the domestic history, but various political enthusiasms, like the pro-silver movements, made the US seem like an unsafe manager of the world monetary system.

Expand full comment
5 more comments...

No posts