ABSTRACT

This impressive and pioneering work describes and analyses the management of the national debt of the United Kingdom from the Boer War (1899-1902) to the period of the Great Depression in the early 1930s. It therefore spans the expansion of the debt during the Great War of 1914-18 and the struggle to bring its structure and cost under control in the decade and a half following Armistice.
The Management of the National Debt in the United Kingdom is the first definitive work on the subject. Using an impressive array of research, from archives and unpublished material, Jeremy Wormell has brought together material that is unavailable in any other form. It will be an invaluable resource for political and economic historians, as well as economists in general, civil servants, bankers and financial journalists.

part |62 pages

The foundations of the twentieth-century debt

part |316 pages

The Great War

chapter |26 pages

Lloyd George's Loan

chapter |33 pages

McKenna's Conversion

chapter |28 pages

The year of drift

Internal borrowing in 1916

chapter |27 pages

The year of drift

External borrowing in 1916

chapter |40 pages

External borrowing 1917–18

(I) The United States of America

chapter |34 pages

External borrowing 1917–18

(II) The neutrals, Canada and silver

chapter |30 pages

Bonar Law's Loans

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion