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Publications of the

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Division of Economics and History
John Bates Clark, Director

ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL HISTORY

OF THE WORLD WAR

British Series

JAMES T. SHOTWELL, PH.D., LL.D.

GENERAL EDITOR

With the Collaboration of the

BRITISH EDITORIAL BOARD

Sir William H. Beveridge, K.C.B., M.A., B.C.L. (Chairman)
Professor H. W. C. Davis, C.B.E., M.A.

Sir Edward C. K. Gonner, K.B.E., M.A., Litt.D.

F. W. Hirst, Esq.

Thomas Jones, M.A., LL.D.

J. M. Keynes, C.B., M.A.

Professor W. R. Scott, D.Phil., Litt.D., LL.D., F.B.A.
Professor J. T. Shotwell (ex officio)

For List of other Editors and the plan of the Series see end
of this volume

OF

CONTEMPORARY SOURCES

FOR THE

ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL HISTORY

OF THE WAR

BY

M. E. BULKLEY, B.A., B.Sc.

OXFORD: AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
London, Edinburgh, New York, Toronto, Melbourne and Bombay
HUMPHREY MILFORD

Addl.

Crocker Donation

Printed in England

HC256

·2

138

7%e

EDITOR'S PREFACE

In the autumn of 1914 when the scientific study of the effects of war upon modern life passed suddenly from theory to history, the Division of Economics and History of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace proposed to adjust the programme of its researches to the new and altered problems which the War presented. The existing programme, which had been prepared as the result of a conference of economists' held at Berne in 1911, and which dealt with the facts then at hand, had just begun to show the quality of its contributions; but for many reasons it could no longer be followed out. A plan was therefore drawn up at the request of the Director of the Division, in which it was proposed by means of an historical survey, to attempt to measure the economic cost of the War and the displacement which it was causing in the processes of civilization. Such an 'Economic and Social History of the World War', it was felt, if undertaken by men of judicial temper and adequate training, might ultimately, by reason of its scientific obligations to truth, furnish data for the forming of sound public opinion, and thus contribute fundamentally toward the aims of an institution dedicated to the cause of international peace.

The need for such an analysis, conceived and executed in the spirit of historical research, was increasingly obvious as the War developed, releasing complex forces of national life not only for the vast process of destruction but also for the stimulation of new capacities for production. This new economic activity, which under normal conditions of peace might have been a gain to society, and the surprising capacity exhibited by the belligerent nations for enduring long and increasing loss-often while presenting the outward semblance of new prosperity-made necessary a reconsideration of the whole field of war economics. A double obligation was therefore placed upon the Division of Economics and History. It was obliged to concentrate its work upon the

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