Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General introduction
- Editorial note
- Preface
- Longer draft preface
- English text of French preface
- Preface to the Roumanian edition
- Introduction to the Roumanian edition
- 1 INTRODUCTORY
- 2 EUROPE BEFORE THE WAR
- 3 THE CONFERENCE
- 4 THE TREATY
- 5 REPARATION
- 6 EUROPE AFTER THE TREATY
- 7 REMEDIES
- Index
6 - EUROPE AFTER THE TREATY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General introduction
- Editorial note
- Preface
- Longer draft preface
- English text of French preface
- Preface to the Roumanian edition
- Introduction to the Roumanian edition
- 1 INTRODUCTORY
- 2 EUROPE BEFORE THE WAR
- 3 THE CONFERENCE
- 4 THE TREATY
- 5 REPARATION
- 6 EUROPE AFTER THE TREATY
- 7 REMEDIES
- Index
Summary
This chapter must be one of pessimism. The treaty includes no provisions for the economic rehabilitation of Europe—nothing to make the defeated Central empires into good neighbours, nothing to stabilise the new states of Europe, nothing to reclaim Russia; nor does it promote in any way a compact of economic solidarity amongst the Allies themselves; no arrangement was reached at Paris for restoring the disordered finances of France and Italy, or to adjust the systems of the Old World and the New.
The Council of Four paid no attention to these issues, being preoccupied with others—Clemenceau to crush the economic life of his enemy, Lloyd George to do a deal and bring home something which would pass muster for a week, the President to do nothing that was not just and right. It is an extraordinary fact that the fundamental economic problem of a Europe starving and disintegrating before their eyes, was the one question in which it was impossible to arouse the interest of the Four. Reparation was their main excursion into the economic field, and they settled it as a problem of theology, of politics, of electoral chicane, from every point of view except that of the economic future of the states whose destiny they were handling.
I leave, from this point onwards, Paris, the conference, and the treaty, briefly to consider the present situation of Europe, as the war and the peace have made it; and it will no longer be part of my purpose to distinguish between the inevitable fruits of the war and the avoidable misfortunes of the peace.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes , pp. 143 - 159Publisher: Royal Economic SocietyPrint publication year: 1978