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U.S. Gold Certificate (1882-1933) Gold parity in 1913: 1.00 = $4.86 = RM 23.07 (8.26 grams) (1.70 grams) (0.358 grams) The gold standard was imposed on Germany with the Dawes Plan in 1924 and readopted by France & Great Britain in 1926.
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THE ONSET OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION 1926-29: The Price Scissors (prolonged decline of world commodities prices vs. those for manufactured goods) October 25-29, 1929: Wall Street Crash March 1930: Fall of the Great Coalition in Germany; resort to government by presidential emergency decree April-June 1930: Outbreak of tariff wars (new food tariffs in Germany provoke the U.S. Smoot-Hawley Tariff) May-July 1931: Bank Crisis in Austria & Germany stimulates the Hoover Moratorium September 1931: Great Britain abandons the gold standard, prompting competitive devaluations 1932: Unemployment rate nears 40% in Germany and USA
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Wall Street on Black Tuesday, October 29, 1929
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Black Tuesday was the third trading session of the last four in which the market lost more than 10% of its value
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Hunger Marchers have arrived in Chester on their way to Washington DC, December 2, 1932
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In Germany the Great Coalition formed in June 1928 united Social Democrats and liberals, but they could not agree on measures to finance unemployment insurance in March 1930
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Stresemann explains the Young Plan in a turbulent Reichstag session, 1929; unfortunately, its final version was not much different from the Dawes Plan. Germany would continue to owe around 2 billion marks per year in war reparations for 50 years….
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DNVP chairman Alfred Hugenberg and the leaders of the Stahlhelm allied with the NSDAP to combat the Young Plan Unto the third generation must you slave away! (Freedom Law referendum campaign poster, 1929)
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GERMANYS UNEMPLOYED (IN MILLIONS OF WORKERS)
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THE POLARIZATION OF THE GERMAN ELECTORATE IN THE GREAT DEPRESSION: In the election campaign of July 1932, many felt that Germany was on the brink of civil war.
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Chancellor Heinrich Brüning (1885-1970): The Center Partys expert on fiscal policy; a decorated combat veteran with a Ph.D. in economics. He lived an austere life and preached austerity.
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BRÜNINGS ASSUMPTIONS That Germanys budget must be balanced, because any deficit would cause a run on the mark-- (TRUE, because memories of hyper-inflation made investors panicky and ruined German governments credit) That deflation, i.e., systematic lowering of German wages & prices, would revive German export industries and employment– (but deflation also slows the velocity of the circulation of money) That the government could distribute sacrifices fairly among all social classes– (FALSE, because Hindenburg insisted that landowners receive debt relief and food tariff hikes, and the military was spared any budget cuts) That reparations must be abolished before the German economy could recover (?).
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Ramsay MacDonald (1866-1937) Raised a Scottish Presbyterian, became a Christian pacifist Resigned as Labour Party chair in August 1914 First Labour prime minister, 1924 and 1929-31 Formed a National Government with the Conservatives in September 1931 Sponsored Round Table Conference with Gandhi and Statute of Westminster in 1932
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Statement issued by Brüning as he left to meet with MacDonald at Chequers in June 1931 The limit of the privations which we can impose on our people has been reached. The premises on which the Young Plan was based have proved to be erroneous as a result of the development undergone by the world. The Young Plan has failed to give the German people the relief which according to the intentions of all concerned it was meant to give and of which it at first held out promise. The Government realizes that the extremely precarious economic and financial situation of the Reich imperiously requires Germanys relief from unbearable reparations obligations. This is also a prerequisite for the economic recuperation of the world.
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President Herbert Hoover (1874-1964) A wealthy mining engineer, he organized food relief for wartime Belgium and for millions of Central Europeans after 1918. In June 1931 he offered a one-year moratorium on the collection of war debts, if France & Great Britain suspended collection of reparations.
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Brüning & Foreign Minister Curtius bid Stimson farewell, Berlin, July 1931 Henry L. Stimson (on right), Hoovers Secretary of State, with predecessor Frank Kellogg
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Brüning secured Mussolinis support for the abolition of reparations during a visit to Rome in August 1931
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Resignation & Discussion, photo by Walter Ballhause from the series Unemployment (1930)
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Brüning united a broad front from the SPD to moderate conservatives to secure Hindenburgs reelection against Hitler in April 1932
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THE FALL OF BRÜNING, MAY 1932 Hindenburg was deeply wounded when most of his monarchist friends endorsed Hitler for President. In April 1932 Brüning banned the SA and sought to partition bankrupt agricultural estates for homesteaders. Hindenburg appointed the right-wing Catholic monarchist Franz von Papen to replace Brüning at the end of May, hoping that his government would be tolerated by the Center Party and NSDAP. Brünings many friends in Washington, London, and Rome interpreted these events as a military coup and anticipated a dangerous revival of German militarism.
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Chancellor Franz von Papen and his defense minister, General Kurt von Schleicher, openly sought German rearmament, not French disarmament.
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THE UNRAVELLING OF THE INTERNATIONAL ORDER World Disarmament Conference, Geneva, February 1932-January 1934: appears to make progress in April/May 1932 but then deadlocks; Hitler withdraws German delegation in October 1933. Lausanne Reparations Conference, June 1932: abolishes reparations permanently, but USA refuses to prolong the Hoover Moratorium on war debts; France & Great Britain soon default on their debts to the USA. World Economic Conference, London, June-July 1933: collapses after FDR prohibits U.S. delegation from signing any agreement on tariffs or exchange rates.
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King George V welcomes delegates to the World Economic Conference, London, 12 June 1933. Alfred Hugenbergs demand for the return of Germanys African colonies led to his dismissal from the Hitler cabinet on June 27.
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The Accused (French cartoon, early 1934) When Hitler walked out of the Geneva Disarmament Conference in October 1933, American and British leaders blamed France.
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