The German Economy

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Topics Post World War II Economics German Economy vs. American Economy Solidarity Eurozone Economics

Topics

Post World War II Economics
German Economy vs. American Economy
Solidarity
Eurozone Economics

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Post World War II Economics World War II destroyed 20% of

Post World War II Economics

World War II destroyed 20% of housing
Scorched

earth policy
Food production per capita in 1947 was 51% of its level in 1938
Food rations set by occupying powers varied between 1,040 and 1,550 calories per day
Industrial output in 1947 was 33% of 1938 level

Winston Churchill and Adolf Hitler

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Post World War II Economics How would West Germany recover? Elimination

Post World War II Economics

How would West Germany recover?
Elimination of price

controls
Price controls are an attempt to regulate inflation
Reduction of marginal tax rates
The amount of tax paid for earnings above a certain level
For the median-income German in 1950, with an annual income of a little less than DM2,400, the marginal tax rate was 18 percent. That same person, had he earned the reichsmark equivalent in 1948, would have been in an 85 percent tax bracket.

Five Reichsmark note

Five Deutschmark note

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Post World War II Economics What about the Marshall Plan? Aid

Post World War II Economics

What about the Marshall Plan?
Aid programs only

totaled $2 billion through 1954
When aid was at its peak in 1948 and 1949, aid was less than 5% of German national income
Other countries that received more aid exhibited lower growth than Germany

Labeling used on Marshall Aid packages

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German Economy vs. American Economy *Gross Domestic Product- The combined value

German Economy vs. American Economy

*Gross Domestic Product- The combined value of

all goods and services produced in a country in one year
**Definition of poverty line varies among countries, especially industrialized countries

According to CIA World Fact Book

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Solidarity in Oberhausen $11,000 debt per capita Higher than anywhere else

Solidarity in Oberhausen

$11,000 debt per capita
Higher than anywhere else in Germany
Borrows

$500,000 a day to stay afloat
Taxpayers in western Germany have paid more than 1 trillion euros since reunification
Solidarity Payments continue into 2019
Oberhausen’s current debt
$350 million
Oberhausen is now receiving loan offers from some cities in eastern Germany

Tackenberg elementary school in Oberhausen, slated to close by
mid-2015, is one of the casualties of the city's required austerity measures.

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Eurozone Economics German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President François Hollande

Eurozone Economics

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President François Hollande dine

at “Das Austerity Euro-Café”

27 European Union member states
17 EU countries that use the Euro are called the “Eurozone”
The concept of the EU and the Eurozone is to promote political solidarity among member states
However, integrating the economies of sovereign nations vis-à-vis a single currency can be considered tantamount to the Articles of Confederation
The Eurozone is especially vulnerable to economic default of any given member state

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Summary Post World War II Economics Price controls eliminated, marginal tax

Summary

Post World War II Economics
Price controls eliminated, marginal tax reduced
German Economy

vs. American Economy
Solidarity
Domestic economic policy of using money from the west to “prop up” the east
Eurozone Economics
The debt crisis