New Books in Economics

Angela C. Tozer, "The Debt of a Nation: Land and the Financing of the Canadian Settler State, 1820-73" (U of British Columbia Press, 2025)

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Aug 22, 2025
Angela Tozer, an Associate Professor at the University of New Brunswick and author of "The Debt of a Nation," dives into the relationship between public debt and colonialism in 19th-century Canada. She highlights how Indigenous lands were leveraged as collateral in financial markets. The discussion uncovers the troubling legacy of figures like Edward Gibbon Wakefield and his influence on settler narratives. Tozer also examines the complex responses to public debt, Indigenous fishing rights, and the commodification of natural resources, revealing ongoing tensions in Canada today.
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INSIGHT

Land As Colonial Collateral

  • Colonial governments used claimed Indigenous territories as collateral to borrow large sums on London markets.
  • That credit model made expansion and dispossession structurally necessary to repay debts.
INSIGHT

Speculation Fueled Expansion

  • Speculation about future land value underpinned borrowing even when projected returns never materialized.
  • This created a feedback loop forcing continual territorial expansion to cover prior debts.
INSIGHT

Creditworthiness Was Racialized

  • Creditworthiness was constructed around whiteness, patriarchy, and 'civilization' norms to reassure lenders.
  • Racialized and gendered legal ideas made Indigenous peoples appear as wards, justifying dispossession for credit markets.
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