جزییات کتاب
How did economic and financial factors determine how America waged war in the twentieth century? This important new book exposes the influence of economics and finance on the questions of whether the nation should go to war, how wars would be fought, how resources would be mobilized, and the long-term consequences for the American economy. Ranging from the Spanish-American War to the Gulf War, Hugh Rockoff explores the ways in which war can provide unique opportunities for understanding the basic principles of economics as wars produce immense changes in monetary and fiscal policy and so provide a wealth of information about how these policies actually work. He shows that wars have been more costly to the United States than most Americans realize as a substantial reliance on borrowing from the public, money creation and other strategies to finance America's war efforts have hidden the true cost of war.* Reveals how America's current wars are financed and how the current financial system reflects the outcomes of past wars* Shows how the extremes of war can illuminate the basic principles of economics* As the first book to provide an economic and financial history of America's twentieth-century wars, it will help students, journalists, business people and academics place America's recent wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya into historical perspective