Between 1930 and 1932 the governments of Germany had met the economic crisis with a series of emergency decrees designed primarily to keep the state solvent through deflationary measures. Wages, rents, pensions, and relief payments were drastically reduced (see document 29B, the Report of the ...
被引量: 0发表: 1932年 Unemployment and its remedies J Hawthorne 被引量: 0发表: 1931年 Unemployment in Germany: Reasons and Remedies This paper discusses the reasons for the dismal labor market performance of Germany over the last three decades along with potential remedies. It argues th... ...
The Data Eleven out of the …fteen EU countries have been included in our empirical model: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Finland, France, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom. The reason for excluding the remaining four countries - Greece, Ireland, Luxembourg and ...
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 ...
During the first months of 1932 the number of people receiving unemployment benefits in Belgium rose to more than 21 per cent of those insured against unemployment, in Czechoslovakia to 15 per cent, in Germany to nearly 45 per cent, and in Britain to more than 18 per cent. 1 And these ...
THE UNEMPLOYMENT PROBLEM IN GERMANY.No abstract is available for this item.doi:10.1111/j.1475-4932.1932.tb00695.xE. R. WALKERJohn Wiley & Sons, LtdEconomic Record
Between 1913 and 1932 the increase in the number of students, which varied from 30 to 3 per cent, greatly exceeded the increase in the population of the world. Thus in Germany and in the United States of America, the number of inhabitants per student fell in that period from 866 to 506...
(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...
Germany, and Hungary. These widespread banking crises could have been the result of poor regulation and other local factors or of simple contagion from one country to another. In addition, the gold standard, by forcing countries to deflate along with the United States, reduced the value of bank...