"This important book represents the best of history and economics coming together. The Irish Potato Famine provides insights into how small farmers attempted to adapt to the potato blight, and the role of small-scale loans in supporting this adaptation and mitigating the devastating famine. This episode offers hope that increasing economic connectedness and worldwide access to small loans will help to avert the potentially devastating consequences of environmental shocks that will begin to occur with increasing frequency." (Richard Hornbeck is a Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business) "Tyler Beck Goodspeed shows how Loan Funds, early microfinance institutions operating in many parts of pre-famine Ireland, helped farmers both to recover from the disastrous potato crops of the mid-1840s and to adapt to new conditions in the decades that followed. This book both makes an important contribution to the study of the Great Famine and shows how history can inform current debates about the effectiveness of micro finance." (Peter Solar, Professor of Economics, Université Saint-Louis, Belgium).
Famine and Finance : Credit and the Great Famine of Ireland