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

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
1122 Ch. 27 • Rebuilding Divided Europe

Table 27.2. Index of Industrial Production


1938 1948 1952 1959 1963 1967


United States 33 73 90 1 13 133 168


West Germany^532761107137158


France 52 55 70 101 129 155


Italy^434464112166212


Holland 47 53 72 1 10 141 182


Belgium^647888104135153


Britain 67 74 84 105 119 133


Austria^393665106131151


Spain^102149215


Sweden 52 74 81 106 140 176


Japan^582250120212347


Source: Walter Laqueur,Europe Since Hitler(New York: Penguin,1982), p.194.


resources. The German Federal Republic also had the advantage (one, to be
sure, bought at horrific cost during the war) of starting from scratch and
building new factories that utilized the most modern equipment. West Ger­
many’s other advantages included the presence of many engineers, a skilled
labor force, and protection by the Western Allies—so it did not have to spend
much for defense. The government of the German Federal Republic took a
lesser role in economic planning, but imposed short-term tariffs and encour­
aged agricultural modernization. The influx of refugees from East Germany
contributed to the remarkable growth of the West German economy. West
Germany in the 1960s attracted streams of migrant workers from Spain,
Italy, Greece, Yugoslavia, and above all, Turkey.
As a result of the German economic “miracle,” West Germany’s gross
national product tripled between 1950 and 1964. West Germany’s imports
multiplied during the 1950s by four times and its exports by six times. Ger­
man industrial production more than doubled between 1948 and 1951, and
it increased by six times from 1948 to 1964. West Germany assumed pre-war
Germany’s role as a major producer of steel and machinery. The chemical
industry, strong in Germany since the late nineteenth century, continued to
develop. By 1960, the German Federal Republic was the world’s second lead­
ing exporter of goods, including machinery, appliances, radios, chemicals,
and automobiles, as Volkswagens now streamed off the assembly lines.
The continued concentration of industrial production in large companies
characterized the post-war period. Western Europe entered the world of
conglomerates. A single Belgian company controlled as much as 80 percent
of Belgian bank deposits, 60 percent of insurance business, 40 percent of
the iron and steel produced, 30 percent of coal, and 25 percent of electrical
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