Germany's ability to support its war machine financially has
long puzzled scholars. The young nation had exhausted itself paying
for its loss in the First World War, had suffered a hyperinflation
in the early 1920s, and had ended the 1920s with a terrible
economic depression. This is the first book in any language to
examine the budget policies of the middle years of the Weimar
Republic and to look at how these policies changed the politics of
the time. It is also the first work to support the government's
aggressive use of deficit spending and fiscal stimuli to promote
economic growth. Some findings even indicate that the German
government could have used creative financial solutions to avoid
the worst of the Depression and to avert the Nazi regime.
Clingan explores the changes and continuities in fiscal policy
and budget-making politics, beginning in the last years of the
Wilhelmine Empire and continuing into the 1930s. Although this is a
story about money, it is also a story about men. Very few in Nazi
Germany understood the intricacies of fiscal policy and budget
making, and political parties tended to follow the lead of those
who did. Clingan combines their personal stories with the tale of a
country still growing into its economic power and still trying to
learn both its limits and its strengths.
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