"This paper is a contribution to the debate on the causes of unemployment in inter-war Germany. It discusses the literature which attributes the rise in unemployment in the depression of 1929-32 to adverse demand factors, such as the cutting off of external capital flows and the weakness of ...
increases in unemployment are the result of economic slowdowns, recessions, ordepressions. In theGreat Depressionof the 1930s unemployment rose to 25% of the workforce in Germany, Great Britain, and the United States. Similar rates occurred in Greece and Spain, due in part to different causes,...
Unemployment in Interwar Germany: An Analysis of the Labor Market, 1927–1936 This article contributes to the debate on the causes of unemployment in interwar Germany. It applies the Layard-Nickell model of the labor market to interw... NH Dimsdale,N Horsewood,AV Riel - 《Journal of Economi...
19431.9%17.0%3.0%Germany surrendered at Stalingrad 19441.2%8.0%2.3%Bretton Woods 19451.9%-1.0%2.2%War ends. Min wage $0.40 19463.9%-11.6%18.1%Employment Act 19473.6%-1.1%8.8%Marshall Plan negotiated 19484.0%4.1%3.0%Truman re-elected 19496.6%-0.6%-2.1%Fair Deal; NATO ...
德国魏玛时代失业问题探析OntheUnemploymentProbleminWeimarGermany 西华师范大学学报(哲学社会科学版) 二。一二年第五期 31 ●历史学 德国魏玛时代失业问题探析 查泉 (安庆师范学院人文与社会学院,安徽安庆 246011) 摘要:魏玛时期的失业问题伴随当时德国社会经济的发展呈现出明显的阶段性特征。第一个阶段是战后的初期阶段...
but U.S. lending abroad fell in 1928 and 1929 because of high interest rates and the booming stock market in the United States. This reduction in foreign lending may have led to furthercreditcontractions and declines in output in borrower countries. In Germany, which experienced extremely rapid...
(in characteristicallypragmaticAmerican terms) the socialist “experiment.” In addition, from 1934 to 1939, the Soviet Union was the most uncompromising opponent of Nazi Germany, seeking alliances withBritain, France, and the United States and promoting a “popular front” partnership of liberals ...
The most important event in the history of Europeanculturein the 1930s was this massive hemorrhage of talent. No one was more responsible for transforming the culturalbalance of powerbetween Europe and the United States than Hitler. From the moment he assumed power in Germany in 1933, his book...