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The Party's Over: The End of the Welfare State Boom in Western
Europe provides the first comprehensive account of the West German
Pension Reform Law 1972 (Rentenreformgesetz 1972 - RRG 1972), which
marked the end of the period of rapid welfare state growth in
Western Europe after World War II. Alfred C. Mierzejewski uses
extensive archival research to explore how the law was conceived,
how it was modified and expanded during parliamentary debate, and
the effects that it had after it was enacted. Mierzejewski puts the
reform into Western European context by comparing it with British
and French efforts to develop their public pension systems since
the seventeenth century. In doing so, The Party's Over highlights
both the general trends in post-World War II Western European
welfare state development as well as the differences in how these
three countries organized and managed their pension plans.
Mierzejewski underscores the political risk that endangers old age
pensions delivered by government mandated pay-as-you-go systems and
demonstrates how policy matters, revealing how the end of the West
European welfare state boom is relevant and significant for both
workers and retirees today.
A History of the German Public Pension System: Continuity amid
Change provides the first comprehensive institutional history of
the German public pension system from its origins in the late
nineteenth century to the major reform period in the early
twenty-first century. Relying on a wide range sources, including
many used for the first time, this study provides a balanced
account of how the pension system has coped with major challenges,
such as Germany's defeat in two world wars, inflation, the Great
Depression, the demographic transition, political risk,
reunification, and changing gender roles. It shows that while the
pension system has changed to meet all of these challenges, it has
retained basic characteristics-particularly the tie between work,
contributions, and benefits-that fundamentally define its character
and have enabled it to survive economic and political turmoil for
over a century. This book also demonstrates that the most serious
challenge faced by the pension system has consistently been
political intervention by leaders hoping to use it for purposes
unrelated to its mission of providing the insured with secure and
adequate retirement income.
In this book, Alfred Mierzejewski describes how the German economy
collapsed under Allied bombing in the last year of World War II. He
presents a broad-based, original study of German wartime industry
and transportation, and of Allied air force planning and
intelligence, including the first complete analysis in English of
the German National Railway.The German industrial economy was
extraordinarily dependent on the timely, adequate distribution of
coal by railroad and inland waterway. The German National Railway
in particular was the pivot of the finely balanced armaments
production and distribution system created by Albert Speer. But
Allied strategists did not immediately recognize this. Only in late
1944, when Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Sir Arthur Tedder built
a new strategic consensus, was this vital coal/transport nexus
severed. The result was the rapid paralysis of the Nazi war
economy. Mierzejewski measures the economic consequences of the
bombing by considering broad indices such as armaments and coal
production, railway performance, and weapons deliveries to the
armed forces. In addition, he shows how individual companies in
each of Germany's major economic regions fared. By drawing on
previously unexamined filed of private German manufacturing
companies, the Reich Transportation Ministry, and Allied air
intelligence agencies, Mierzejewski creates a rare combination of
economic analysis and military history that provides new
perspectives on the German war economy and Allied air intelligence.
In the first English-language biography of one of the most
important figures in postwar German history, Alfred C. Mierzejewski
examines the life and service of Ludwig Erhard (1897-1977), West
Germany's first minister of economics and second chancellor. Erhard
liberalized the German economy in 1948 and is generally considered
the father of West Germany's ""economic miracle""--the period of
extraordinary growth in jobs and improvement in the standard of
living in the 1950s that helped stabilize Germany's first
successful democracy. While recent scholarship has dismissed
Erhard's influence on Germany's economic recovery, Mierzejewski
returns to little-cited German analyses and Erhard's own record and
concludes that Allied currency reform and Erhard's liberalization
of the economy were crucial triggers for Germany's unprecedented
economic boom. Mierzejewski provides insight into Erhard's
policies, his ideas, his character, and his relationships with
Konrad Adenauer and Charles de Gaulle. By offering a fresh account
of Erhard's career as a leader in postwar West Germany,
Mierzejewski provides a deeper understanding of Germany's economy
as well as its democracy.
The largest enterprise in the capitalist world between 1920 and
1945, the Deutsche Reichsbahn (German National Railway) was at the
center of events in a period of great turmoil in Germany. In this,
the second volume of his comprehensive history of the Reichsbahn,
Alfred Mierzejewski offers the first complete account of the
national railway under Hitler's regime. Mierzejewski uses sources
that include Nazi Party membership records and Reichsbahn internal
memoranda to explore the railway's operations, finances, and
political and social roles from 1933 to 1945. He examines the
Reichsbahn's role in German rearmament, its own lack of
preparations for war, and its participation in Germany's military
operations. He shows that despite successfully resisting Nazi
efforts to politicize its internal functions, the Reichsbahn
cooperated with the government's anti-Semitic policies. Indeed, the
railway played a crucial role in the Holocaust by supporting the
construction and operation of the Nazi death camps and by
transporting Jews and other victims to them.
The largest enterprise in the capitalist world between 1920 and
1932, the Deutsche Reichsbahn (German National Railway) was at the
center of events in a period of great turmoil in Germany. In the
first detailed history of this important organization, Alfred
Mierzejewski presents a sophisticated analysis of the Reichsbahn's
operations, finances, and political and social roles. In addition,
he uses the story of the Reichsbahn to gain new perspectives on
modern German economic and political history. Mierzejewski
describes and analyzes the beginnings of the national railway in
Germany and the problems that it faced. He examines the
Reichsbahn's noncapitalistic, ""commonweal"" approach to economic
management and shows how the railway was used to hold Germany
together, especially in the face of Bavarian particularism.
Mierzejewski's account also provides unparalleled insight into
Germany's reparations policies, demonstrating that Germany was
fully capable of paying the Dawes annuities and that the
government's claims that reparations paid by the Reichsbahn hurt
both the railway and Germany were groundless. A second volume will
cover the period from 1933 to 1945.
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