The Economic Consequences of the PeaceIntroduction by Robert
Lekachman
Chapter I: Introductory
Chapter II: Europe Before the War
Chapter III: The Conference
Chapter IV: The Peace
Chapter V: Reparation
Chapter VI: Europe After the Treaty
Chapter VII: Remedies
John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946) was educated at Eton and at Kings
College, Cambridge, where he took his degree in 1905. After a
period in the India Office of the Civil Service, he returned to
Cambridge as a lecturer in economics. During World War I he held a
post at the Treasury and was selected as an economic adviser to the
British delegation at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919. He
resigned that position in June of that year and wrote and published
The Economic Consequences of the Peace, in which he argued against
the excessive reparations required of Germany. Between the wars he
was a financial adviser and a lecturer at Cambridge. His major and
most revolutionary work, The General Theory of Employment, Interest
and Money, was published in 1936. Keynes played a central role in
British war finance during World War II and, in 1944, was the chief
British representative at the Bretton Woods Conference that
established the International Monetary Fund. The transformations
which Keynes brought about, both in economic theory and policy,
were some of the most considerable and influential of the twentieth
century, laying, in effect, the foundations for what is now
macroeconomics.
Robert Lekachman was a professor of economics at Lehman College,
City University of New York, and is the author of The Age of Keynes
and Capitalism for Beginners.
"The most important economic document relating to World War I and its aftermath" —John Kenneth Galbraith
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