------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (January 2007)
Hew Strachan, _Financing the First World War_. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2004. viii + 268 pp. $20/???9 (paperback), ISBN:
0-19-925727-2.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Hans-Joachim Voth, Department of Economics,
Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona.
Long before the trains started to roll towards the battlefields in
1914, the coming of World War I put heavy demands on other types of
transport. All over the world, in late July, ships were loading
unusual freight, in unusual quantities. As William Silber describes
in his _When Washington Shut down Wall Street_ [1], the cargo for the
ships waiting in New York harbor came from only a few miles away.
Workers at depositories stacked thousands of bars of gold in wooden
kegs, covered them with saw dust to reduce abrasion, and nailed them
shut. Armed transports took the crates and barrels with their
precious cargo to the docks, before they were sent to the strong
rooms of the waiting passenger and cargo ships.
As the risk of war grew, the soon-to-be belligerent powers sold
foreign assets, and began to repatriate the proceeds in gold. Before
the barbarism of the conflict became apparent to all, gold, the
"barbarous relic" in the words of Keynes, started to change from
currency anchor to strategic asset. Hew Strachan's _Financing the
First World War_ is about the struggle to find the funds necessary to
fight World War I -- the first and the last of the major armed
conflicts when all the main powers were on the gold standard when
hostilities broke out. This scramble turned out to be every bit as
desperate as the attempts to hoard gold in the summer months of 1914.
The history of finance during World War I has often been told with a
view to the hyperinflations and deflations, the booms and busts that
followed -- how economies coped with the large increase in money in
circulation, the economic dislocation and the overhang of debt. As
the introduction explains, Strachan is less concerned with the
consequences of financing World War I. Instead this book aims to
explain how the war was fought on the financial battlefield.
This is part of a much larger project. Strachan was commissioned to
write a comprehensive replacement of Cruttwell's (1934) _A History of
the Great War_. Strachan's _To Arms_ is the first installment in what
is promised to be a three-volume history of the conflict. _Financing
the First World War_ is not a self-contained book as such, written
with the intention to get to the bottom of financing arrangements
during the Great War. Rather, Oxford University Press is re-issuing
parts of _To Arms_, the first volume of Strachan's three-volume book
on World War I, as separate paperbacks. In addition to this book,
there are _The Outbreak of the First World War_, and _The First World
War in Africa_. Strachan probably knows as much about the military,
political and financial history of belligerents as any other author;
he has also done an admirable job summarizing the main secondary
works in German, French, Russian, and Italian. Since Strachan's own
university (Oxford) has abolished even basic language requirements
(like a two modern languages and Latin) for the study of history
because of alleged "elitism," this is certainly to be welcomed. It is
also in pleasing contrast with other English-language books on World
War I, which often focus on the Anglo-German rivalry.
This is an ambitious and knowledgeable book. It is also poorly
structured, strikingly confusing, and monumentally boring. The main
problem seems to be that it has been re-assembled from the
ingredients of a larger book. Like meat cuts reassembled into false
filets, the book looks like the real thing, but certainly doesn't
taste like it. Chapters starts well enough, with a small, intriguing
vignette -- how the garbage-strewn battlefield of World War I
indicates the prolific use of materiel, how a German Reichstag
delegate encountered problems getting change when trying to pay for
his dinner in Berlin in August 1914, etc. Yet these are rare morsels
in army-style fare of dry prose and even drier numbers, cooked up
without salt or spices. This reviewer thinks of himself as a bit of a
chiffrephile, in Angus Maddison's elegant phrase -- someone who has a
healthy appetite for figures. Yet the main account of financial
questions related to the war effort in Strachan's book is close to
unreadable. The reader is treated to a constant bombardment with
financial figures, without much explanation. A barrage with millions
of Sterling here is followed by salvos of millions of Russian Rubles,
Bulgarian Levas, German Marks and French Francs in adjacent sectors.
They left this reader shell-shocked. Little or no effort is made to
put them into context, nor is there much of an explanation of "how
big is big" (they are certainly almost never related to something
economically meaningful such as GDP). Only occasionally do we learn
that the British tax increases in 1917 -- after much back and forth -
produced only enough additional revenue to cover the cost of five
days' fighting. A typical example reads like this:
A total of 4,460 million marks was subscribed, producing a
surplus of 1,832 million over existing debt. The second, in
March 1915, raised 9,060, a surplus of 1,851; the third, in
September 1915, 12,101 million, a surplus of 2,410; a fourth
10,712 million, a surplus of 324 million. [???] The fifth loan was
2,114 million marks short of its target, the sixth (in March
1917) 6,732 million, the seventh (in September 1917) 14,578
million, and the eighth 23,970 million. The total of the last
loan, issued in September 1918, fell back to 10,443 million
marks, and left a shortfall of 38,971 million (p. 123).
Surely, this is why tables or graphs were invented? Yet not a single
table or figure adorns the entire, 278-page book. The author
apparently felt no need for such complications. This is no simple
oversight, but indicative of his approach to the subject. All too
often, we are simply told the sequence of minor political intrigues
and major budget moves, in a blow-by-blow sequence, for one
belligerent after the other.
For all its command of the minutiae, this book represents a wasted
opportunity for comparative history. The book contains no insightful,
analytical, systematically comparative discussion of war finances as
such, other than a narrative of political maneuvers concerned with
financial questions. For the most part, the discussion is strung
across countries in a way that clarifies little. We are treated to
very brief overviews in the introduction of topics -- financial
mobilization, taxation, domestic borrowing, foreign borrowing, etc.
Then, quasi in subchapters, we are told how individual countries
handled these issues. There is no attempt to summarize what the
chapters show, nor is there even a brief section that would conclude
and argue a case. If there is a guiding theme, I failed to find it.
The book simply peters out with some observations on the Balfour
mission to the U.S. in 1917, before moving on to suggestions for
further reading.
The First Word War produced bouts of nostalgia in many. After the
cessation of hostilities, Keynes wrote longingly about a world where
goods from all corners of the globe could be ordered quickly, where
capital flowed freely and no passports were necessary to cross
borders. This book engendered a different kind of nostalgia in this
reviewer -- for a long-lost world where middle-aged copy editors in
sensible shoes corrected spelling mistakes, editors at university
presses leaned on authors to write to the best of their ability, a
time when authors tried to publish books that were definitive works,
not repackaged slices of a bigger volume which also contain prolific
quantities of reworked secondary material; a time when charity
publishers didn't go out of their way to boost revenues by academic
recycling; and one when publishing a book without a concluding
chapter was unthinkable.
Note:
1. William L. Silber, _When Washington Shut down Wall Street: The
Great Financial Crisis of 1914 and the Origins of America's Monetary
Supremacy_, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2007.
Hans-Joachim Voth is ICREA Research Professor in the Economics
Department, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, a Research Affiliate
at the Center for International Economics (CREI, Barcelona), and a
Research Fellow in the CEPR International Macro Research Program.
Recent publications include "Interest Rate Restrictions in a Natural
Experiment: Loan Allocation and the Change in the Usury Laws in
1714," _Economic Journal_ 2007 (with Peter Temin, forthcoming), "Why
England? Demographic Factors, Structural Change and Physical Capital
Accumulation during the Industrial Revolution," _Journal of Economic
Growth_ 2006 (with Nico Voigtlaender), and "Credit Rationing and
Crowding Out during the Industrial Revolution: Evidence from Hoare's
Bank, 1702-1862," _Explorations in Economic History_ 2005 (with Peter
Temin).
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Published by EH.Net (January 2007). All EH.Net reviews are archived
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