From 1915, when Keynes joined the Treasury, until he resigned in
1919 during the Versailles Conference, he carried a rapidly
increasing load of responsibility. This volume prints all the
principal papers and memoranda he wrote during those years and
throws new light on the crises of inter-allied financial relations
and the near exhaustion of British financial resources. It contains
also his contributions to the early thinking in the Treasury about
post-war reparations and inter-allied debts. It ends with his
correspondence, official and private, from Paris, as he saw his
hopes of a wise settlement vanishing. This is a necessary companion
to The Economic Consequences of the Peace (Volume 2 in this
series).
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