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The Treaty of Versailles & The German Economic Collapse

The Causes of WWII Part 1:. The Treaty of Versailles & The German Economic Collapse. The End of World War One. By the summer of 1918, it was clear Germany had lost the war The Germans tried negotiate terms to end the war while maintaining their honor

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The Treaty of Versailles & The German Economic Collapse

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  1. The Causes of WWII Part 1: The Treaty of Versailles &The German Economic Collapse

  2. The End of World War One • By the summer of 1918, it was clear Germany had lost the war • The Germans tried negotiate terms to end the war while maintaining their honor • The US President, Woodrow Wilson, proposed 14 points that Germany must agree to for the war to end • Wilson was not interested in punishing Germany • Rather, he wished to build systems and institutions that would provide a more peaceful future (e.g. The League of Nations) • Germany was pleased with the 14 points and eventually surrendered under the impression that these points would be the basis of the peace treaty.

  3. The Paris Peace Conference • The Paris peace conference is where the combatants met to create the peace • However, the meeting was dominated by the French who wanted to forever destroy Germany’s ability to make war

  4. The Treaty of Versailles Some important Articles of the Treaty include: • Germany accepts all blame for the war (War Guilt) • Germany would pay $32,000,000,000 in reparations • Germany’s military is destroyed (no Aircraft, reduced Navy, 100,000 man army) • Germany lost all colonies • Germany lost almost 20% of its territory (to France, Poland and others) • Rhineland (border with France) was demilitarized • Saar Region (Germany’s richest land in terms of natural resources) was occupied by the French

  5. The Effect of the Treaty • The Treaty was considered excessive by many at the time • Germany was humiliated and economically destroyed • Austria/Hungary was completely destroyed • Italy received no benefit for its war efforts and fell into poverty • Russia and Germany were both banned from joining the League of Nations

  6. The German Economy in the 1920s • It would have been very difficult for Germany to make repartitions payments even if their economy was healthy • However, with no colonies and the loss of so much territory, Germanys situation was completely hopeless • In order to find a way out of this situation, the new German government, began to print extra money to make the payments on time.

  7. Hyperinflation • Printing too much money and other foolish economic policies soon led to rapid inflation • Inflation is when the prices of products rise • The prices in Germany rose so fast that German money became completely useless • Almost the entire German population became poor almost overnight

  8. German Inflation (Berlin Prices in German marks)

  9. 10 Million Marks

  10. 4 Billion Marks

  11. 100 Gold Marks = 100 Trillion Marks

  12. The Effect of Hyperinflation • The German rich did very well during inflation • They bought up land, assets and expanded their businesses • The inflation cancelled out their debt • However, lower and middle class Germans were completely destroyed – life savings were eliminated • Employers could not keep up with the inflation, many stopped working as their weekly cheque would not be enough for a cup of coffee.

  13. The Effect of Hyperinflation Part 2 • Police and government officials stopped working • The streets were run by gangs and groups of ex-soldiers • Violence and crime were rampant • Most transactions were from Trading or Bartering • Communists and Right wing groups fought for control of the country and the hearts and minds of the citizens • 1923 Germany made our depression seem like a picnic!

  14. What’s next? • This terrifying environment was the perfect place for psychopaths and misfits to gain attention • Those who promised revenge and the restoration of Germany’s greatness soon became national heroes • The greatest of all these was . . .

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