2025-06-02
25 分钟War means politics, bloodshed, and misery.
It also means economics.
If you're going to fight,
you had best be sure you know how you're going to finance the fighting.
And of course, economic strength can give you an advantage on the battlefield.
So economics shapes war.
But how does war shape economies?
And how has the economics of war changed over time?
Duncan Weldon is an economics writer and broadcaster, and a former colleague of mine.
He's also a massive economics history nerd.
And most importantly, he's the author of a new book,
Blood and Treasure, The Economics of Conflict from the Vikings to Ukraine.
This is The Economics Show.
I'm Samaya Caines, and I'm here in our London studio with Duncan.
Duncan, welcome.
Thank you for having me.
Okay, so...
On a scale of 1 to 10, how important is economics for war?
So 1 is completely irrelevant.
10 is they are the same thing.