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3 - Understanding 1921–1927: inflation and economic recovery in the 1920s

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2010

Barry Eichengreen
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley
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Summary

The 1920s were for the industrial nations of the western world a decade of reconstruction and recovery. World War I had wrought destruction of two kinds of productive capacity: the physical capacity to produce goods and services, and the institutional capacity to mobilize productive resources and distribute the fruits of their labor. The first set of effects is more easily observed. Approximately 8.5 million soldiers, amounting to 15 percent of those mobilized, 2 percent of Europe's population, and nearly 8 percent of its adult male workers, died in active service. The number of casualties doubles when the permanently disabled are included and triples with the addition of civilian deaths. In parts of Europe, notably portions of France, Belgium, and northern Italy, where trench warfare had been waged, extensive destruction of industrial capacity had occurred. Restoring basic infrastructure, rebuilding plant and equipment, reconverting capacity from war-to peace-time uses, and training replacements for skilled workers proved to be a drawn-out process. The upward trend in industrial production over the first postwar decade is typically understood to reflect the gradual reconstruction of this type of productive capacity.

The impact of the war on economic institutions, while more difficult to quantify and measure, was equally profound. In the domestic sphere, wartime exigencies had undermined monetary stability, fiscal orthodoxy, and accepted standards of labor-management relations. In the international sphere, they had disrupted foreign trade, led to the gold standard's abandonment, and impeded the free international movement of capital.

Type
Chapter
Information
Elusive Stability
Essays in the History of International Finance, 1919–1939
, pp. 24 - 56
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1990

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