Does establishing representative democracy increase commitment to repaying public debt? This book develops a new theory about the link between debt and democracy and applies it to a classic historical comparison: eighteenth century Great Britain (which had strong representative institutions and sound public finance) vs. ancien regime France (which had neither). The study asserts that whether representative institutions improve commitment depends on the opportunities for government creditors to form coalitions with other groups. It is relevant to developing country governments with implications for government policy where credibility is a concern.
"...offers a new approach to the subject. (Stasavage) is therefore able to buttress by his economic models the arguments previously advanced by historians to explain Britain's success and France's failure to develop an effective system of public credit in the eighteenth century. This makes his work of considerable value to those historians who have relied upon traditional approaches to these important questions." H.T. Dickinson, The International History Review
Find at your local library from our friends at WorldCat
Does establishing representative democracy increase commitment to repaying public debt? This book develops a new theory about the link between debt and democracy and applies it to a classic historical comparison: eighteenth century Great Britain (whi ... Read full overview
Overview
Does establishing representative democracy increase commitment to repaying public debt? This book develops a new theory about the link between debt and democracy and applies it to a classic historical comparison: eighteenth century Great Britain (which had strong representative institutions and sound public finance) vs. ancien regime France (which had neither). The study asserts that whether representative institutions improve commitment depends on the opportunities for government creditors to form coalitions with other groups. It is relevant to developing country governments with implications for government policy where credibility is a concern.
Product Details
Paperback
English
Cambridge University Press
Aug. 28th, 2008
224
9780521071277
5.98 x 8.86 x 0.51 inches
0521071275
0.75 lbs
Professional Reviews
"...offers a new approach to the subject. (Stasavage) is therefore able to buttress by his economic models the arguments previously advanced by historians to explain Britain's success and France's failure to develop an effective system of public credit in the eighteenth century. This makes his work of considerable value to those historians who have relied upon traditional approaches to these important questions." H.T. Dickinson, The International History Review
All Available Copies
Condition
Source
Price
New (363 available) Brand new; direct from the publisher or distributor.
Ships Separately
Ships separately from Better World Books suppliers
Limited Preview for 'Public Debt and the Birth of the Democratic State : France and Great Britain, 1688-1789' provided by Archive.org
*This is a limited preview of the contents of this book and does not directly represent the item available for sale.*
A preview for 'Public Debt and the Birth of the Democratic State : France and Great Britain, 1688-1789' is unavailable.
You are now leaving the Better World Books website to complete your transaction. Your eBook download will be facilitated by our friends at eBooks.com. Thank you for your support and for shopping with Better World Books!
You are now leaving the Better World Books website to complete your transaction. Your audio book download will be facilitated by our friends at AudiobooksNow.com. Thank you for your support and for shopping with Better World Books!
You are now leaving the Better World Books website. Thank you for your support and for shopping with Better World Books!