------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (May 2006)
James Macdonald, _A Free Nation Deep in Debt: The Financial Roots of
Democracy_. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006. ix + 564 pp.
$20 (paperback), ISBN: 0-691-12632-1.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Robert E. Wright, Stern School of Business,
New York University.
Storied trade publishing house Farrar, Straus and Giroux (FSG)
published _A Free Nation Deep in Debt_ in cloth in 2003 but did not
see fit to send a copy to EH.Net for review. Princeton University
Press, the publisher of the new paperback edition technically
reviewed here, is taking closer aim at the scholarly market. That is
likely a good call. Though ably written, this book is closer in tone,
density, and substance to a scholarly tome than a bookstore
blockbuster. Likely, FSG was attracted to the book's Niall
Ferguson-esque Big Thesis: Democracies eventually defeat autocracies
because "countries with representative institutions are able to
borrow more cheaply than those with autocratic governments" (p. 4).
Bond markets also strengthen democracies internally by giving
citizens some of the proverbial power of the purse and by aligning
their interests with those of their governments. Heady, important
stuff.
To prove his thesis, James Macdonald, a British investment banker and
independent scholar, has written a wide-ranging survey of the
co-evolution of representative governments and public debt markets.
He starts with the Old Testament, which he uses as a primary source
to explicate the transition of societies from a Lockean state of
nature to autocracy. Small family groups that highly valued leisure
were subsumed or slaughtered by larger and more powerfully organized
autocracies that forced their subjects through taxation to create
economic surpluses. Autocracies soon came to control much of the
ancient world but found it impossible to control the vast expanses of
Asia, the forests and fjords of Northern Europe, or the jungles of
Africa. A few small city states, often strengthened by alliances with
other nearby cities, also managed to hold off the imperial advance
for a time.
The ancient autocracies financed wars from savings, their legendary
"treasure troves," and equity contracts that divided the spoils of
war. The democratic city states, by contrast, borrowed to fund
resistance to imperial encroachments. "The picture that emerges,"
however, was "not of a regular system of public finance, but of a
series of improvised reactions to fiscal emergencies" (p. 36). The
ancient Greeks, for example, moved toward modern public credit but
never explicitly connected "the principle of voluntary contribution
to the public funds and the principle of distribution of surplus
assets" (p. 36). The result was a dizzying array of debt instruments,
some forced and some voluntary, some paying interest and others not,
most short-term but some in the form of life annuities. The Greeks
sometimes found it difficult to honor their obligations but the
extant documentation is too sparse to say anything more definitive
about their creditworthiness.
Modern public finance had to await the emergence of a different group
of city states some 1,500 years later in the northern Italian
peninsula. There emerged, for the first time since the fall of
Carthage, a group of states run by merchants instead of soldiers.
Desperate to maintain their freedom from regional despots, the
representative governments of Venice, Florence, and Genoa hit upon
the notion of repayable taxes, levies upon which interest would be
paid if the government's finances allowed. To evade the Church's then
stringent usury prohibition, repayment of the principal sum was left
at the pleasure of the government. The Venetians circumvented that
inconvenience by making the right to receive the tax repayments
transferable to third parties, which quickly led to the creation of a
secondary market. "They had invented the bond market" (p. 77) as
Macdonald writes, but the Italian city states did not regularly pay
interest on their repayable taxes, the market prices of which
spiraled downward. City states in northern Europe eventually improved
upon the Italian model by avoiding forced loans and repayable taxes
and religiously servicing their debts. The Dutch Republic was the
major innovator here.
Medieval and Early Modern European autocrats also borrowed but almost
invariably eventually defaulted. Unsurprisingly, they could not
borrow as much or as cheaply as the Dutch, who won their independence
by wearing down the once mighty Hapsburg Empire. By the end of the
80-year struggle, a majority of Dutch households were creditors to
their government. Default, rebellion, or large scale tax evasion
became unthinkable because the interests of the government and the
citizenry were thoroughly intertwined.
After revolutions of their own in 1688 and 1776, the British and the
Americans adopted Dutch-style finance, funding their wars in large
measure by selling bonds to citizen creditors rather than resorting
to punitive levels of taxation, ruinous inflation, or physical
coercion. The democracies thrived, while autocracies in France,
Germany, Russia, and elsewhere lost wars and rebellions. By World War
II, however, government wartime financial techniques, including
financial repression, rationing, and payroll deduction, had become so
powerful that the great patriotic bond drives of earlier wars lost
much of their importance. The wartime financial system of that
greatest of autocrats, Adolf Hitler, looked eerily similar to that of
the United States.
If Macdonald is right -- and there is more than a little truth in
this book -- then adherents of the English "Country" and American
Jeffersonian Republican traditions exaggerated the negative aspects
of national debts. Far from endangering democracies, national debts
bolstered them by enabling them to defeat powerful external and
internal foes. Eternal interest was as much the price of liberty as
eternal vigilance.
Authors who dare proffer such a Big Thesis confront numerous
tradeoffs, the most important of which is that between depth and
breadth. A twenty-page bibliography is always impressive, but less so
for a book that covers several millennia of finance, government, and
politics. Specialists will likely be disappointed with the treatment
of their areas of expertise. (I cringed at several points in his
discussion of the early U.S. monetary and financial systems.) But
readers should concentrate on the forest rather than the trees and
judge this ambitious and important book on its panoramic vision.
Robert E. Wright teaches business, economic, and financial history at
the Stern School of Business, New York University. His most recent
books include _The First Wall Street: Chestnut Street, Philadelphia,
and the Birth of American Finance_ (Chicago, 2005) and _Financial
Founding Fathers: The Men Who Made America Rich_ (Chicago, 2006, with
David J. Cowen). He is currently working on a book tentatively titled
_Financing Freedom_ that will describe how the entire financial
system, not just the government securities market, enabled America to
vanquish its most dangerous enemies at home and abroad.
Copyright (c) 2006 by EH.Net. All rights reserved. This work may be
copied for non-profit educational uses if proper credit is given to
the author and the list. For other permission, please contact the
EH.Net Administrator ([log in to unmask]; Telephone: 513-529-2229).
Published by EH.Net (May 2006). All EH.Net reviews are archived at
http://www.eh.net/BookReview.
-------------- FOOTER TO EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
EH.Net-Review mailing list
[log in to unmask]
http://eh.net/mailman/listinfo/eh.net-review
|