You’ve got to speculate to accumulate. We apply that notion to
individuals in pursuit of wealth, but what about countries? The Debt
of a Nation is the first comprehensive history of Canada’s
nineteenth-century public debt. Beginning in the 1820s, loans gave
British North American settler governments access to unprecedented
amounts of capital at low interest rates. The credit for such loans
derived from colonial appropriation of Indigenous territories, and
this process essentially created a market value for stolen land.
Angela Tozer explores the role of public debt financing in the
consolidation of the Canadian settler state: Upper Canada’s first
public debt, issued as securities on the London Stock Exchange; the
unique government land tenure of Prince Edward Island and attendant
impact on Mi’kmaw homelands; and the purchase of Rupert’s Land via
a loan. She analyzes how an economic system centred on credit and debt
relied on two factors: settlers had to become the risk bearers –
though not necessarily the beneficiaries – of loans, and colonial
governments had to have the power to appropriate Indigenous
territories in order to appear creditworthy. This history of the
intimate relationship between public debt and colonization underscores
the importance of the appropriation of Indigenous lands to global
markets.
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Land and the Financing of the Canadian Settler State, 1820–73
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780774871563
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
University of British Columbia Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter