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9780195037913

The Great Disorder Politics, Economics, and Society in the German Inflation, 1914-1924

by Feldman, Gerald D.
  • ISBN13:

    9780195037913

  • ISBN10:

    019503791X

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1993-09-30
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
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Summary

This book presents a comprehensive study of the most famous and spectacular instance of inflation in modern industrial society--that in Germany during and following World War I. A broad, probing narrative, this book studies inflation as a strategy of social pacification and economicreconstruction and as a mechanism for escaping domestic and international indebtedness. The Great Disorder is a study of German society under the tension of inflation and hyperinflation, and it explores the ways in which Germany's hyperinflation and stabilization were linked to the Great Depressionand the rise of National Socialism. This wide-ranging study sets German inflation within the broader issues of maintaining economic stability, social peace, and democracy and thus contributes to the general history of the twentieth century and has important implications for existing and emergingmarket economies facing the temptation or reality of inflation.

Table of Contents

Illustrations
xiii
Tables
xv
Abbreviations xvii
Introduction 3(1)
The German Inflation in Collective Memory and Economic History
3(8)
The Germany of Dr. Cornelius
11(14)
BOOK ONE The Inflation in War and Reconstruction
Part I: The First World War and the Origins of the German Inflation
Financing the War
25(27)
The Reichsbank, the Financial Preparations for War, and the Banking and Currency Laws of August 4, 1914
26(11)
War Loans, War Taxes, and Exchange Controls
37(15)
War Economy and Inflation
52(47)
What Price War?
52(14)
The Price of War
66(7)
German Society Between War and Peace
73(12)
The Revolutionary Crisis and Its Limits
85(14)
Part II: Managing the Crises: From the November Revolution to the Kapp Putsch
The Economics of Revolution and Revolutionary Economics
99(57)
Revolution and Demobilization: November 1918-May 1919
99(32)
Planning Financial and Economic Reform in the Shadow of Peacemaking, January-July 1919
131(25)
The Chaotic Path to Relative Stabilization, July 1919-March 1920
156(55)
Searching for Solutions: The Erzberger Tax Program
156(9)
The Policies of the Economics Ministry under Schmidt and Hirsch
165(23)
A Winter of Discontents
188(23)
Part III: Relative Stabilization and Inflationary Reconstruction, April 1920-May 1921
The Trials and Tribulations of Relative Stabilization
211(44)
The Relative Stabilization as a Historical Problem
211(7)
The Crisis of the Summer of 1920 and Its Consequences
218(9)
Policymaking in the Relative Stabilization
227(23)
The Gloomy Balance of Relative Stabilization
250(5)
What Kind of Reconstruction? The German Business Community Faces the Future
255(54)
A Credit Organization for German Industry?
255(17)
Restructuring the Private Sector: The Gospel According to Stinnes?
272(37)
Part IV: Reparations and the Domestic Management of the German Inflation
The Presentation of the Bill
309(35)
Spa, Brussels, and Paris
309(20)
Thunder from London: From Sanctions to Diktat
329(15)
The Domestic Politics of Fulfillment, May 1921-January 1922
344(41)
Fulfillment and Its Fiscal Limitations
344(6)
The ``Appropriation of Real Values'' and the Tactics of Fulfillment
350(8)
The Credit Action of German Industry
358(19)
Salvation from London?
377(8)
The Transition to Galloping Inflation
385(33)
Theory and Policy
385(21)
The Great Wage Push
406(12)
The Vicious Circles: From Galloping Inflation to Hyperinflation, January-July 1922
418(35)
The Paradoxes of Compliance
418(10)
Fulfillment Policy in Crisis
428(18)
The Coming of Hyperinflation
446(7)
Stabilization Debates and Political Crises, August 1922-January 1923
453(60)
Reparations and the Stabilization Issue, August-November 1922
453(12)
The German Stabilization Debate and the Fall of Wirth
465(25)
Business at the Helm? The Policies of the Cuno Government
490(23)
BOOK TWO The Hyperinflation
Part V: Society, State, and Economy in the Hyperinflation of 1922
The Year of Dr. Mabuse: The Hyperinflation and German Society in 1922
513(63)
Mark for Mark?
515(12)
``The Distress of the Intellectual Workers''
527(28)
``The Most Characterless Land on Earth''
555(21)
Facing Disaster: The State and the ``Productive Estates'' on the Eve of the Ruhr Occupation
576(55)
The Financial and Currency Crises
577(20)
The Economic Crisis
597(12)
The Social Crisis
609(22)
Part VI: The Ruhr Crisis, End of the Mark, Currency Reform, and Stabilization
A Disordered Fortress: Passive Resistance, the Cuno Government, and the Destruction of the German Mark
631(67)
The Insupportable Mark: Financing Passive Resistance
631(27)
Crisis Mismanagement: Cuno's Foreign Policy in the Ruhr Crisis
658(11)
Crisis Mismanagement: The Domestic Crisis of the Spring and Summer of 1923
669(29)
The Politics of Currency Reform, August-October 1923
698(56)
A Republic in Crisis
698(10)
The Struggle over a Currency Reform Plan
708(28)
Dictatorship or Enabling Act? Retaining Democratic Legitimacy
736(18)
The Politics of Stabilization, October-November 1923
754(49)
``Regime Change'' or Change of Regime? The Stresemann Government between Communist Insurgence and Fascist Putschism
754(26)
Introducing the Rentenmark
780(23)
Saving the Stabilization, December 1923-April 1924
803(34)
Establishing Credibility
803(18)
A New Order: Credit Stops and Credit Starts
821(16)
Epilogue: A Mortgaged Democracy 837(22)
From Deflation to Deflation
837(17)
From Geldmenschen to Hitlermenschen
854(5)
Notes 859(86)
Bibliography 945(24)
Index 969

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