American Default, Sebastian Edwards
American Default, Sebastian Edwards
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American Default
The Untold Story of FDR, the Supreme Court, and the Battle over Gold

Author: Sebastian Edwards

Narrator: Timothy Andrés Pabon

Unabridged: 9 hr 1 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 07/18/2018


Synopsis

The American economy is strong in large part because nobody believes that America would ever default on its debt. Yet in 1933, Franklin D. Roosevelt did just that, when in a bid to pull the country out of depression, he depreciated the U.S. dollar in relation to gold, effectively annulling all debt contracts. American Default is the story of this forgotten chapter in America's history.

Sebastian Edwards provides a compelling account of the economic and legal drama that embroiled a nation already reeling from global financial collapse. It began on April 5, 1933, when FDR ordered Americans to sell all their gold holdings to the government. This was followed by the abandonment of the gold standard, the unilateral and retroactive rewriting of contracts, and the devaluation of the dollar. Anyone who held public and private debt suddenly saw its value reduced by nearly half, and debtors—including the U.S. government—suddenly owed their creditors far less. Revaluing the dollar imposed a hefty loss on investors and savers, many of them middle-class American families. The banks fought back, and a bitter battle for gold ensued. In early 1935, the case went to the Supreme Court. Edwards describes FDR's rancorous clashes with conservative Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, a confrontation that threatened to finish the New Deal for good—and that led to FDR's attempt to pack the court in 1937.

At a time when several major economies never approached the brink of default or devaluing or recalling currencies, American Default is a timely account of a little-known yet drastic experiment with these policies, the inevitable backlash, and the ultimate result.

About Sebastian Edwards

Sebastian Edwards is the Henry Ford II Professor of International Economics at the University of California, Los Angeles. His books include Toxic Aid: Economic Collapse and Recovery in Tanzania and Left Behind: Latin America and the False Promise of Populism. He lives in Los Angeles.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Jason on March 22, 2024

It is tempting to say that American Default is shockingly readable for a book written by an economist. But it is probably more fair to say that it is shockingly readable period. It is a history of the banking crisis around the onset of the Great Depression, the role that devaluing gold played in rev......more

Goodreads review by Jean on December 08, 2018

Edwards is a UCLA economics professor. Edwards tells how FDR engineered a default in 1933. FDR did away with the gold standard and made owning private gold illegal. The changes were argued before the Supreme Court. The book is well written and researched. Edwards made this complex action understandab......more

Goodreads review by Athan on February 23, 2019

When it comes to the study of sovereign default, author Sebastian Edwards, a UCLA professor, got his baptism of fire studying the 16 year saga that started with the 2001 Argentinian default. Inevitably, this led him to the much larger, and poignantly similar, US default to all holders of gold-linked......more

Goodreads review by Frank on August 26, 2018

Edwards is right that most Americans are shocked when they learn that in 1933, the American government defaulted on its debt, refusing to pay the gold the government's contracts explicitly promised. They are even more shocked when they learn that even former private contracts with "gold clauses," an......more

Goodreads review by Casey on May 28, 2018

I received a free Kindle copy of American Default by Sebastian Edwards courtesy of Net Galley  and Princeton University Press, the publisher. It was with the understanding that I would post a review on Net Galley, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes and Noble and my fiction book review blog. I also posted it......more