Beggar Thy Neighbor: A History of Usury and Debt
ISBN: 9780812207507
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / University of Pennsylvania Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: Usury -- History; Usury -- Religious aspects -- History; Usury laws -- History; Debt -- History;

Geisst, a professor of finance at Manhattan College, tackles this double-edged, troublesome topic not from a personal level-you won't find 10 tips to reduce personal debt here-but from a historical and practical level. He starts from before banks even existed, with a debate that continues today over interest rate ceilings, and it's evident that we are indebted to religious institutions, both Catholic and Jewish, for the foundational practices of money handling, borrowing, loaning, and repaying. A word that is barely muttered, written, or read today-usury-lies at the center: a topic of treatises, books, and speeches that can hardly be defined without starting a debate. Generally defined as "excessive interest", history proves usury has been far more complex, sometimes straightforwardly stated, others based on formula-length calculations. How does one define "reasonable interest"? You'll know it when you see it, apparently. Though no longer an enforced law in America, Geisst shows how the history of usury, with its varying prohibitions and definitions, has affected current financial regulations, banking practices and government spending in America and abroad. Much like the topic at hand, Geisst's dense volume is daunting to get through, but the relief is palpable when you do. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Charles R. Geisst is Ambassador Charles A. Gargano Professor of Finance at Manhattan College and the author of many other books, including Collateral Damaged: The Marketing of Consumer Debt to America and Wall Street: A History.
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