A History of Modern Europe - From the Renaissance to the Present

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Political Instability 985

Table 24.2. The Mark and the Dollar, 1914-1923

Date


July 1914


January 1919


July 1919


January 1920


July 1920


January 1921


July 1921


January 1922


July 1922


January 1923


July 1923


August 1923


September 1923


October 1923


November 15, 1923


Source: Gordon Craig, Germany 1866—


1978), p. 450.


Rate: 1 dollar =


4.2 marks


8.9


14.0


64.8


39.5


64.9


76.7


191.8


493.2


17,972.0


353,412.0


4,620,455.0

98,860,000.0


25,260,208,000.0
4,200,000,000,000.0

(New York: Oxford University Press,


apples went for 300 billion marks. Employees asked to be paid their wages
each morning so that they could shop at noon before merchants posted the
afternoon price rises. Spiraling inflation wiped out people with fixed incomes
and small savings they had put aside for retirement. Many of those who
believed that they had done their patriotic duty by buying war bonds during
the war now blamed the Weimar Republic when those bonds became worth­
less. The poor found staples and other goods not only ridiculously expensive
but often unavailable at the market as farmers hoarded produce. Nonethe­
less, those people who were able to pay off bank loans with wildly inflated
currency or to invest in property did well. The rich got richer. In such an
atmosphere, the German Communist Party attracted bitter, discouraged
workers in great numbers, undercutting the Social Democrats.
In August 1923, Ebert turned to Gustav Stresemann (1878-1929) to
form a government. Stresemann, a former monarchist converted by right­
wing violence to the republic, governed by decree with the support of the
Social Democrats. He convinced miners to go back to work and to cease
their passive resistance in the Ruhr Valley. France and Belgium ended the
occupation after a nine-month period that had been as financially damag­
ing to those nations as it was ruinous to Germany. Government printing
presses stopped cranking out billion-mark notes and issued a new mark.
The hyperinflation in Germany ended.
Stresemann hoped to meet the Allied demands as much as possible, and in
doing so, open the way for Germany’s return to respectability as a European

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