First published in December 1919 this global bestseller attacking those who had made the peace
in Paris after the First World War sparked immediate controversy. It also made John Maynard
Keynes famous overnight and soon came to define how people around the world viewed the
Versailles Peace Treaty. In Germany the book which argued against reparations was greeted
with enthusiasm in France with dismay and in the US as ammunition that could be (and was)
used against Woodrow Wilson in his ultimately unsuccessful bid to sell the League of Nations to
an increasingly sceptical American public. Meanwhile in his own country the book provoked
outrage amongst establishment critics - Keynes was even refused membership of the prestigious
British Academy - while admirers from Winston Churchill to the founders of the LSE Sidney and
Beatrice Webb went on to praise Keynes for his wisdom and humanity. Keynes may have written
what he thought was a reasoned critique of the economics of the peace settlement. In effect he
had penned a political bombshell whose key arguments are still being debated today. The
Economic Consequences of the Peace is now reissued by Keynes' publisher of choice with a new
introduction from Michael Cox one of the major figures in the field of International Relations
today. Scholarly yet engaged and readable Cox's introduction to the work - written a century
after the book first hit the headlines - critically appraises Keynes' polemic contextualising
and bringing to life the text for a new generation of scholars and students of IR IPE
Politics and History. The original text and this authoritative introduction provide essential
reading for anyone who wishes to understand the tragedy that was the twentieth century why
making peace with former enemies can be just as hard as winning a war against them and how and
why ideas really do matter.