Abstract
Recent financial events, especially the subprime and the sovereign debts crises, have
revived debate on debts, the necessity of debt repayment and the eventuality of debt
cancellations. A milestone in this debate was reached by David Graeber’s Debt (Brooklyn:
Melville House, 2011), but despite the richness of this essay, many normative questions
remain unanswered. Should debt always be repaid? Who should repay it? Should
government deficits be allowed or even encouraged? Alexander Douglas’ recent book
aims to provide an answer to all these questions. The main endeavour of the book lies
in applied philosophy, that is in finding general principles able to answer such questions
and to reconcile our possibly conflicting intuitions about debt and credit. However, the
analysis is largely nourished by history, linguistics and economics, which makes the book
highly original and multidisciplinary.
The author’s general thesis is that