Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General Introduction
- Editorial Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction to New Edition
- Notes on Further Reading
- Corrections to this Edition
- I THE TREATY OF PEACE
- 1 PARIS (1919)
- 2 THE CAPACITY OF GERMANY TO PAY REPARATIONS (1919)
- 3 PROPOSALS FOR THE RECONSTRUCTION OF EUROPE (1919)
- 4 THE CHANGE OF OPINION (1921)
- 5 WAR DEBTS AND THE UNITED STATES (1921, 1925, 1928)
- II INFLATION AND DEFLATION
- III THE RETURN TO THE GOLD STANDARD
- IV POLITICS
- V THE FUTURE
- VI LATER ESSAYS
- Index
1 - PARIS (1919)
from I - THE TREATY OF PEACE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General Introduction
- Editorial Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction to New Edition
- Notes on Further Reading
- Corrections to this Edition
- I THE TREATY OF PEACE
- 1 PARIS (1919)
- 2 THE CAPACITY OF GERMANY TO PAY REPARATIONS (1919)
- 3 PROPOSALS FOR THE RECONSTRUCTION OF EUROPE (1919)
- 4 THE CHANGE OF OPINION (1921)
- 5 WAR DEBTS AND THE UNITED STATES (1921, 1925, 1928)
- II INFLATION AND DEFLATION
- III THE RETURN TO THE GOLD STANDARD
- IV POLITICS
- V THE FUTURE
- VI LATER ESSAYS
- Index
Summary
From The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919), chapter 1, ‘Introductory’.
The power to become habituated to his surroundings is a marked characteristic of mankind. Very few of us realise with conviction the intensely unusual, unstable, complicated, unreliable, temporary nature of the economic organisation by which western Europe has lived for the last half-century. We assume some of the most peculiar and temporary of our late advantages as natural, permanent, and to be depended on, and we lay our plans accordingly. On this sandy and false foundation we scheme for social improvement and dress our political platforms, pursue our animosities and particular ambitions, and feel ourselves with enough margin in hand to foster, not assuage, civil conflict in the European family. Moved by insane delusion and reckless self-regard, the German people overturned the foundations on which we all lived and built. But the spokesmen of the French and British people have run the risk of completing the ruin, which Germany began, by a Peace which, if it is carried into effect, must impair yet further, when it might have restored, the delicate, complicated organisation, already shaken and broken by war, through which alone the European peoples can employ themselves and live.
In England the outward aspect of life does not yet teach us to feel or realise in the least that an age is over. We are busy picking up the threads of our life where we dropped them, with this difference only, that many of us seem a good deal richer than we were before.
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- Information
- The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes , pp. 3 - 5Publisher: Royal Economic SocietyPrint publication year: 1978