The impact of the Depression on Germany
In October 1929 the Wall Street CrashThe economic downturn on the American stock market in 1929. on the US stock exchange brought about a global economic depression. In Europe, Germany was worst affected because American banks called in all of their foreign loans at very short notice. These loans, agreed under the Dawes PlanAn international agreement, signed in 1924, that restructured Germany's reparations payments and provided loans from the USA to pay them. in 1924, had been the basis for Weimar RepublicThe name given to the German republic between 1919 and 1933. economic recovery from the disaster of hyperinflationVery rapid and high increase in the level of prices, combined with a fall in the value of money.. The loans funded German industry and helped to pay reparationMonetary compensation from an individual, group or state to compensate victims.. Without these loans German industry collapsed and a depression began:
The most obvious consequence of this collapse was a huge rise in unemployment. Over the winter of 1929-30 the number of unemployed rose from 1.4 million to over 2 million. By the time Hitler became ChancellorIn the Weimar Republic, the Chancellor was the head of the government, appointed by the President. in January 1933 one in three Germans were unemployed, with the figure hitting 6.1 million. Industrial production had also more than halved over the same period.
The impact of unemployment
- The rise in unemployment significantly raised government expenditure on unemployment insurance and other benefits.
- Germans began to lose faith in democracy and looked to extreme parties on the both the Left (the communists) and the Right (the Nazis) for quick and simple solutions.
Political failure
In March 1930 the German Chancellor, Hermann M眉ller, resigned when his government could not agree on how to tackle the rise in government spending caused by the rise in unemployment. He was replaced by Heinrich Br眉ning. His policies were ineffective in dealing with the unemployment crisis and further undermined Germans鈥 faith in democracy:
- In July 1930 Chancellor Br眉ning cut government expenditure, wages and unemployment pay. This added to the spiral of decline and unemployment continued to rise, as well as making those who had lost their jobs even poorer.
- However, Br眉ning could not get the ReichstagThe name of Germany's parliament. to agree to his actions, so President Hindenburg used Article 48The Chancellor could control without the Reichstag at a time of emergency. of the Weimar constitution, which gave the President the power to pass laws by decreesLaws passed by one minister in a parliament, which have not been approved by the majority in parliament., to govern. This undermined democracy and weakened the power of the Reichstag 鈥 arguably opening the way for Hitler鈥檚 later dictatorship.
The rise of extremism
When people are unemployed, hungry and desperate, as millions were in Germany between 1930 and 1933, they often turn to extreme political parties offering simple solutions to their problems. Between 1930 and 1933 support for the extreme right-wing Nazis and the extreme left-wing communists soared.
By 1932 parties committed to the destruction of the Weimar Republic held 319 seats out of a total of 608 in the Reichstag, with many workers turning to communism. However, the real beneficiaries were the Nazis.