Suggestions for Further Reading

These books are suggested for supplementary reading if it so happens that you have access to them. They are not approved nor officially supplied by the War Department. They have been selected because they give additional information and represent different points of view.

Reports to Congress on Lend-Lease Operations. By President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Printed at Government Printing Office, Washington 25, D. C. These appear quarterly, June 11, 1941 to date. They describe lend-lease operations, indicate government policy, and give statistical summaries.

Lend-Lease, Weapon for Victory. By Edward P. Stettinius, Jr. Published by Macmillan Company, 60 Fifth Ave., New York 11, N. Y., and by Pocket Books Inc., 1230 Sixth Ave., New York 20, N. Y. (1044). This is the only full-length account of the origin and operation of lend-lease.

If you want to go further into the economic issues involved, you might try the following from the many writings available.

War Debts and World Prosperity. By Harold G. Moulton and Leo Pasvolsky. Published for Brookings Institution, 722 Jackson Place, NAV., Washington 6, D. C. (1932).

The Changing Pattern of International Economic Affairs. By Herbert Feis. Published by Harper and Brothers, 49 East 33rd St., New York 16, N. Y. (1940).

The Reconstruction of World Trade: A Survey of International Economic Relations. By John B. Condliffe. Published by W. W. Norton and Company, 70 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. (1940).

The United States in The World Economy. No. 23 of Economic Series, published by Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, United States Department of Commerce, Washington, D. C. (1943).

From EM 13: How Shall Lend-Lease Accounts Be Settled? (1945)