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Inter-War Years
Inter-War Years
Period between WWI and WWII
Great uncertainty
Time of despair
Great Depression
Great Depression
American stock market crash, 1929
Global economy, so impacted all
Worst economic disaster in American history
Great Depression --- Causes
Policies of Federal Reserve System (Fed)
Expanded credit and money supply 1927
To fuel consumer spending
Lowered interest rates
Created bubble
False sense of financial security
Great Depression --- Causes
Mass consumerism
Fed policies “worked” short-term
In fueling spending
But prosperity was a mirage, not “real”
Not result of high savings
Bubble burst 1929
Great Depression --- Causes
Reckless banking practices
Felt invulnerable because of Fed policies
Good times here forever … so they thought
Unsound investments
Once bubble burst, had very little
Great Depression
Record high unemployment
Record low productivity
Every economic indicator terrible
Inter-War Years
Most rejected classical liberalism
Blamed laissez-faire capitalism for the depression
But false to do so
Fed policies were not laissez faire
Classical liberals rejected those Fed policies
But classical liberals blamed al the same
Inter-War Years
Most turned to different solutions
Progressive liberalism
Communism
Fascism
Democratic Nations
England
Economy weak even before Depression
Depression was double-whammy
Labor Party won majority 1929
Quasi-socialist, but not full communist
But no positive results
John Maynard Keynes
British economist
New ideas
o Massive government spending
o To stimulate economic growth
o Government debt = positive
Rejected classical liberal ideas of limited
government and balanced budgets
England
Conservative party won 1931
Relied on balanced budget, rejected Keynesianism
Some success
Employment on rise
Depression not over, but past the worst of it
France
Uncertainty, anxiety
Economic woes
Swung from conservative regimes to socialists
Economy still as bad by late 1930s
Many starting to believe German fascism better
Scandinavian Nations
Turned to social democracy
Government welfare state
Old-age pensions
Unemployment insurance
Free housing
Free pregnancy treatment
Government-funded vacations for workers
Very high taxes
United States
Had always been most classical liberal of all
But rejected its founding beliefs
Accepted progressive liberalism
Under Herbert Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt
New Deal
Higher taxes, government regulation of business
Government economic planning, imposed ….
o Production levels, set prices
o Arbitrated wage disputes
o Largest government intrusion in economy in US history
Keynesian approach --- government spending to stimulate economy
Beginning of welfare
New Deal
Recession within the Depression, 1937-8
After 10 years of Keynesianism, failure
o High unemployment
o Low productivity
Yet most still devoted to New Deal, progressive liberalism
Still rejected classical liberalism
Anti-Colonialism
Colonies of European empires resentful
Attempts of independence
The Middle East
New independent
nations formed
Saudi Arabia
Iraq
Iran
Turkey
Heart of old Ottoman Empire
Most Muslims
But turned into westernized republic
More European in style than Middle Eastern
Mahatma Ghandi
Led independence movement against Britain
Civil disobedience --- peaceful, nonviolent resistance
Gathered huge following
1935 – India won some self-government
Outright independence after WWII
Authoritarian States
Problems in Italy
Soldiers angry
– Fought during WWI
– Felt civilians did not appreciate their service
– Or understand their experiences
– War was difficult
– Angry, bitter
Problems in Italy
Italians felt cheated after WWI
– Did not receive all the territory they demanded
– Thought England, France cheated them
– Not rewarded for their service to the Allies
– Angry, bitter
– National honor besmirched
Problems in Italy
Economic problems
– Inflation disaster
– Middle-class wiped out
– Standard of living plumetted
Benito Mussolini
Leader of Italian fascism
Former socialist
Rejected universal nature of socialism
Preferred nationalism
Fascism
Right-wing nationalism
– Not just patriotism
– Exalted the Nation above all else
– Willingness to wage war for national glory
– Extreme militarism
– saw other nations as enemies
Fascism
Rejection of democracy, liberalism
– Weak, ineffective, effeminate
– Too much focus on the individual, not the Nation
– Preferred dictators
Fascism
Progressive liberal economic policies
– Akin to US New Deal
– Government economic planning
– Support for workers
– Guaranteed high wages, welfare programs
– But also assistance for corporations
Fascism
Rejection of socialism
– Socialists focused on universals
– Called for alliance of all workers
– Fascists only focused on the Nation
– Rejected socialism only on nationalist grounds
Seizing Power
Fascist violence
Against socialists newspapers, organizations
By 1921, over 200,000 armed fascists
Mussolini demanded power
1922 --- named Prime Minister
Fascism
Fascism seemed like answer to millions
National glory
Economic recovery
Democratic government had been a failure
Third way --- neither socialism nor democracy
Becoming a Dictator
Cult of the Duce (leader)
– His posters everywhere
– Massive propaganda
– Almost god-like status
– All-powerful ruler
– Mystical connection with the people
Becoming a Dictator
Fascists the only legal party
– One-party rule
– Other parties prohibited
– Complete censorship of news
Becoming a Dictator
No liberties
– No democracy
– No rights
– Secret police
– No trial by jury, due process
Becoming a Dictator
Progressive liberal economics
– Economy planned
– Prices, production level, labor policies
– Set by government and major corporate leaders
– “Codes” imposed on entire economy
Fascist Totalitarianism
All-powerful government
No individual freedoms allowed
Foreign Policy
o Restore national glory
o To restore the old Roan Empire
o Foreign wars (to be discussed next week)
o Not all that successful
o But inspired by extreme nationalism
Fascism in Germany
o Similar story in Germany
o More most, fascism seemed like only solution
Problems in Germany
Treaty of Versailles (1919)
– Way WWI ended set the stage for WWII
– Very unpopular treaty
– Angered millions of Germans
Treaty of Versailles
Germany received sole blame for WWI
Lost colonies and part of its own land
Reparations to France and England
Drastic reductions in its military
Problems in Germany
Weimar government
– At end of WWI, revolution in Germany
– Quasi-socialist, democratic
– Democracy
– Nicknamed the Weimar Republic
Weimar Republic
Angered many Germans
Weak, ineffective
Moderately socialist (not communist)
Many Jews involved
Weimar Republic
Accepted the Treaty of Versailles
Anger directed towards Weimar
Germany “stabbed in the back”
By socialists and Jews
Growing support for extreme nationalism
Weimar seemed “un-German” to many
Problems in Germany
Horrible economy
– Far worse than the US
– Hyperinflation
– Money lost its value literally overnight
German Hyperinflation
Poor economy in early 1920s
Government responded by printing money
Disastrous results
Hyperinflation set in
Run away levels of inflation
German Hyperinflation
Prices doubled every two days
Deutschmark became literally worthless
Became toy for kids, had lost its purchasing power
Problems in Germany
Overall
– National glory gone
– Absolute poverty
– Weak government
– Perceived domination of Jews and socialists
Fascists in Germany
National Socialist German Workers Party
Or Nazis
Combination of liberal workers’ parties
And right-wing nationalism
Adolf Hitler
Led the Nazis
And SA (Stormtroopers), Nazi
army/gang
Used violence and intimidation
Hitler and the Beer Hall Putsch
1924 coup against Weimar Republic
Failed, imprisoned
Wrote Mein Kampf (My Struggle)
Outlined Nazi fascist beliefs
Nazi Fascism
Similar to Italian fascism
But more virulently racist
And anti-Semitic
Lebensraum
“Living space” for German nation
Extreme social darwinism
German nation to conquer land itself
Non-Germans had no rights, were unfit
Rise of Hitler
Problems continued throughout the 1920s
Conservatives supported Hitler
Could solve problems
And be controlled by traditional conservative elites
Never saw the danger of Hitler
Rise of Hitler
Hitler appointed prime minister 1933
By President Hindenburg
Hitler called for national elections
Crisis
Reichstag building burned
A week before the elections
Blamed on Jews and socialists
Anti-communist hysteria
But all Nazi propaganda, lies
The Nazis Took Power
More popular than ever
Only Nazis could save Germany
Huge victory in election
Totalitarian State
Like Italy
But more complete
Hitler had firmer grip than Mussolini
No liberties whatsoever in Germany
Hitler As Dictator
Enabling Act 1933
– Gave Hitler emergency power
– To deal with “socialist threat”
Nazis as Dictators
All parties illegal except Nazis
Local governments abolished
All independent labor unions abolished
New Nazi-controlled union mandatory
Jews and non-Nazis removed from power
Concentration camps for enemies
The Problem with the SA
Traditional military distrusted SA
Hitler needed military more than SA
SA purged, leaders murdered
Night of Long Knives
Military now supported Hitler
Hitler named president once Hindenburg died (1934)
Destruction of the Republic
By 1934 Weimar republic dead
Hitler dictator
Of a new Nazi Germany
Hitler As Dictator
Police state
– SS, Hitler’s private goon squad, bodyguards
– Gestapo, secret police
– No individual rights
– Complete censorship, no freedom of speech
– Arbitrary arrests, no trials or juries
Hitler As Dictator
Hitler Youth
– Nazi version of Boy and Girl Scouts
– Encouraged to spy on parents and neighbors
– Turn in all enemies of the Nation
Hitler As Dictator
Nazi control of major institutions
– Churches
– Schools
– Businesses
– No independent source of power
– All institutions under control of Nazi party
Nazi Anti-Semitism
Aryan superiority
– Aryans = pure-blooded Germans
– Master Race
– Even those who did not live in Germany itself
– Aryans should be united into German Empire
Not Aryans
Jews
Socialists (whether Germans or not)
Slavs
“Mongrel races” (French, English, Dutch)
Gays (forced to wear pink triangles)
Handicapped
Nazi Anti-Semitism
Sought to remove Jews from leadership
And all areas of influence
Remove from German society
To purge Germany of Jewish presence
Anti-Semitism
Nuremberg Laws (1935)
– Jews lost citizenship
– Jews kicked out of schools
– And most professions
– Removed from homes, placed in ghettos
– Then moved from ghettos to concentration camps
Targeting the Jews
Yellow Star (Jews)
Pink Triangle (Gays)
Anti-Semitism
Nuremberg Laws (1935)
– Prohibited mixed marriages
– And sex between Jews and German citizens
– Jews forced to register with government
– Forced to wear yellow stars
Kristallnacht (1938)
o Night of Broken Glass
o Attack on synagogues, Jewish businesses
o Absolute destruction of Jewish communities
o 30,000 sent to concentration camps
Concentration Camps
Not death camps (yet)
Just place to put Jews
And other non-Aryans
Later turned into extermination camps
Fascism in Spain Also
Similar story as Italy and Germany
Same problems
Disenchanted with democratic government
Preferred fascism
Economic growth
National glory
Effective government
Spanish Civil War
National Front
Leftists, socialists, republicans, secularists
Aided by Soviet Union (communist Russia)
Nationalists
Fascists, conservatives, military, Catholic Church
Aided by Italy and Germany
General Franco
Led Fascists/Nationalists
Prevailed in civil war 1939
Fascist dictator until his death 1975
Authoritarianism in East Europe
Poland
Yugoslavia
Bulgaria
Hungary (fascist)
Romania
Democracy declining
Classical liberalism nearly dead
Lenin’s NEP
Soviet Union
New Economic Policy 1921
Temporary compromise with capitalism
To jumpstart economic growth
And then go to full communism
NEP
Peasants could sell produce for private gain
Small stores could earn private profit
Communism for rest ….
Corporations, banks, railroads, mines
Communist Totalitarianism
Same type of all-powerful government
As in Italy, Germany
Different goals
Lenin a communist, not fascist
But methods of ruling the same
Communist Totalitarianism
No democracy or civil liberties
Arbitrary arrests, complete censorship
All other parties prohibited
Police state, under KGB
After Lenin?
Lenin died 1924
Trotsky and Stalin competed to be successor
Most supported Trotsky
Brilliant, right-hand man to Lenin
Stalin smeared him, had him exiled, later murdered
Stalinist Purges
Killed off all personal and political enemies
Over 8,000,000
More brutal than even Hitler
Shown here signing a death warrant
Economic Policies
Abolished NEP
Proceeded with full-scale communism
All private property abolished
Businesses
Money
Shops
Farms
Agricultural Collectivism
Peasants moved from traditional land
Into new government collective farm
Strong opposition
Most produce taken by government for Red Army
Agricultural Collectivism
Peasants outraged
Worse off than under czars
Stalin cut off food completely
Starved nearly 10,000,000 to death
More killed by Stalin than by Hitler
Industrialization Program
Intensified industrialization
Imposed very high quotas for workers
Wages fell nearly 50%
Standard of living on decline
Yet working harder than ever
Work Camps
Prisons for trouble makers
In Siberia, blistering cold
Extreme working conditions
Many died
Brutal totalitarian regime