THE ECONOMIC CATALYST

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THE ECONOMIC CATALYST Post-War Situation: 

Europe had lost ground to US in dominating world trade and industrial production



Immediate outcomes influenced by revolution and peace settlements: o



War Communism and New Economic Policy



Bolsheviks repudiate pre-war debts (especially affecting France)



Emergence of 11 new states destroyed previous customs union

o

Italy – economic collapse

o

Germany

o 

Russia



Treaty of Versailles reparations (Germany defaults 1923)



Printing paper money, collapse of mark

Britain and France – post-war boom, followed by recession in 1922

Reversal of malaise and increase in prosperity, 1924–9. Factors include: o

Stabilized international situation

o

Dawes Plan, 1924 (resolution of German reparations crisis)

o

US investment in Europe, loans etc. (1925–9)

o

Implementation of gold standard to stabilize international exchange

Five problems with immediate recovery: 

Eastern Europe isolated from any benefits and under dictatorships



Western European industrial growth not accompanied by increased trade



Overproduction in agricultural sector in western Europe and US



Unsteady industrial growth – dependent on American short term loans



Short-lived international economic relations

The Great Depression 

Features: o

Wall Street Crash, October 1929

o

Central European banking system collapses, 1931

o

Decline in industrial production, food output, extraction of raw materials by end 1932



Political reactions – Maintaining democracy:

o

Scandinavian countries contained emergency

o

Britain political upheaval within parliamentary context 

o

France maintains democracy through broad-based coalitions 



National Government replaces bipartisan approach

Léon Blum’s Popular Front, 1936

Political reactions – Failing democracy: o

Germany 

Müller’s broad-based coalition collapses 1929 over strategy for economic crisis

 o

Shift to the right benefits Nazis and rise of Hitler by 1933

Eastern Europe, Balkans, Portugal resort to emergency powers to replace parliamentary governments







Policy attempts to resolve depression o

Cutting government expenditure and budget balances (France, Britain, Germany)

o

Corporativism (Italy, Portugal, Austria)

o

Self-sufficiency/autarky (Germany)

Capitalism survives, but democracy does not o

‘Liberal capitalism’ extinguished

o

‘Economic nationalism’ emerges (state control, mobilization of labour and resources)

International relations damaged o

International trade suffers as national programmes of economic survival installed

o

Free trade destroyed by high tariffs and bilateral/regional agreements (Oslo Group and 1932 Ottawa Agreement)

o

Rearmament and aggression as economic solution (Japan, Italy, Germany) 

Italian invasion of Abyssinia leads to withdrawal of American investment, 1929



Hitler’s Four Year Plan prepares Germany for war by 1940