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Economics and Politics in the Weimar Republic
This book offers a succinct overview of the turbulent economic history of the Weimar Republic.
Theo Balderston (Author)
9780521777605, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 29 August 2002
142 pages
21.6 x 14 x 0.8 cm, 0.19 kg
'This is a technically excellent summary of the economic literature on Weimar … It will be highly useful as a handbook to those teaching the period … the issues dealt with in this book were critically important to the course of world events during the twentieth century.' Robin Pearson, The Economic History Review
This is a succinct overview of the turbulent economic history of the Weimar Republic. Theo Balderston, an experienced teacher of economic history, summarises the wealth of recent research on the subject, and presents it in lucid, accessible form. He offers new perspectives on the economic effects of the Reparations conflict and of domestic political struggles for postwar inflation and the slump. Controversial analyses of the slow economic growth of even the Republic's best years have implications for the instability or otherwise of its political economy. Recent globalisation and global debt crises throw new light on the foreign debt burden with which Germans saddled themselves in the later 1920s, and the fateful financial crisis of 1931. Theo Balderston explains new analyses of the role of economic policy in worsening the slump and thus paving the way for Hitler.
1. Demobilization and revolution
2. Treaty, reparations, taxation
3. Inflation
4. 1924–9: normalization and stagnation?
5. The slump
6. Epilogue.
Subject Areas: Economic history [KCZ], Politics & government [JP], 20th century history: c 1900 to c 2000 [HBLW], European history [HBJD]