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Consumer Lending in France and America: Credit And Welfare

Consumer Lending in France and America: Credit And Welfare

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Gunnar Trumbull
Cambridge University Press, 8/11/2014
EAN 9781107693906, ISBN10: 110769390X

Paperback, 240 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm
Language: English

Why did America embrace consumer credit over the course of the twentieth century, when most other countries did not? How did American policy makers by the late twentieth century come to believe that more credit would make even poor families better off? This book traces the historical emergence of modern consumer lending in America and France. If Americans were profligate in their borrowing, the French were correspondingly frugal. Comparison of the two countries reveals that America's love affair with credit was not primarily the consequence of its culture of consumption, as many writers have observed, nor directly a consequences of its less generous welfare state. It emerged instead from evolving coalitions between fledgling consumer lenders seeking to make their business socially acceptable and a range of non-governmental groups working to promote public welfare, labor, and minority rights. In France, where a similar coalition did not emerge, consumer credit continued to be perceived as economically regressive and socially risky.

1. Introduction
2. Commercial banks and consumer credit in the United States
3. Banks against credit
consumer finance in France
4. American retailers and credit innovation
5. Selling France on credit
6. Credit and reconstruction
7. The politics of usury
8. Credit for being American
9. Deregulation and the politics of over-indebtedness
10. Consumer credit and American liberalism.