History 2360
History 2360
History 2360
The Allied powers – led by the USA and Britain - defeated Germany in 1918 and marked the
end of the first World War. In 1919 both sides signed the Treaty of Versailles in which
Germany was held responsible for starting the war and “harsh penalties in terms of loss of
Of all the humiliating parts of the treaty, it was the financial restitution that devastated
Germany and its people. The allies demanded “132 billion gold marks, or about $269 billion
today”2. Every political section and opposition leader in Germany saw this as an opportunity
to rise to power. Hitler’s Nazi party was among these. When the effects of the Great
Depression of 1929 finally reached Germany, the economic repercussions on the German
population gave Hitler the last push that he needed to capture the imagination of Germans
The financial restitution imposed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles made it almost
impossible for the German economy to recover – especially between 1920 to 1923. Economic
experts such as John Maynard Keynes had already forecast consequences of the “critical
failures of the peace” attained at Versailles3. Each of the over 70 political parties in the
country tried to take advantage of the populations misery to gain political traction and take
over power. These included the German Worker’s Party – later renamed the Nazi Party by
Hitler4 – which Hitler brought to the national limelight because of his speech-making
abilities. However, the party struggled to attract followers outside the disenfranchised
veterans – former German soldiers in WWI who felt the Pride of a once strong nation taken
away by harsh conditions for peace. This was mostly because in 1924 the United States had
1
The National WWII Museum, How did Hitler happen? (The National Museum of New Orleans, N.D)
2
Erin Blakemore, Germany's World War I Debt Was So Crushing It Took 92 Years to Pay Off (History.com,
2019), 1.
3
John Maynard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of Peace (Transaction Publishers, London, 1919), 54
4
Blakemore, 1
initiated the Dawes Plan through which “foreign banks would loan the German government
$200 million to help encourage economic stabilization”5. These loans helped Germany to
meet its reparation repayments and the economy experienced relative prosperity until 1929
Because the country’s economic stability and prosperity depended heavily on foreign debt
and capital, the effects of the great depression affected Germany almost immediately.
According to Alessandro Roselli (2021), there was capital flight from the German economy,
demand for exports dried up, and millions lost their jobs6. The lower middle-class was
impoverished and the middle and conservative classes were disillusioned. As the political
class continued to fight each other, the German economy had not only grown weak but was
almost at a halt. The population was yearning for a strong leader to lead the country out of
this misery. Hitler’s Nazi party – which had struggled to attract followers from many
different sections of society was now a party of choice for many Germans.
Although Hitler’s rise to power was a culmination of many different issues, the great
depression pushed the dwindling German democracy and the Weimer Republic off its final
precipice. As wall street crashed, many foreign loans to Germany were recalled. Businesses
could not afford to operate and were forced to shut down leading to millions of losing their
jobs. Farmers were unable to sell produce as international markets crumbled. By 1932, “over
6 million people were unemployed”7. The Weimer republic was unable to cushion the people
from the devastating effects of the great depression as millions fell into abject poverty –
5
Ernest patterson, The Dawes Plan in Operation (SAGE Publications. Inc), 1.
6
Alessandro Roselli, Hyperinflation, Depression, and the Rise of Adolf Hitler (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan,
2014), 134.
7
Alessandro Roselli, 302
especially the lower middle class and the middle class that Hitler’s party had struggled to
attract.
The devastation and destitution caused by the great depression confirmed to the people what
they always thought of the post-Versailles’ political leaders of the Weimer Republic; “as a
system ridden by division and party – political squabbling”8. The people blamed the
government of the day of over-reliance on foreign capital and loans to sustain the economy.
They were perceived as weak and unable to come together for the sake of country. All small
right- and left-wing parties tried to ride on this anti-government wave. Yet it was the Nazi
party that was able to win the hearts of the people because of two things; the party’s
effectively9, and Hitler’s ability to make speeches. “What makes the ‘Nazi Party’ different
from the other 69 groups is that they don’t have a Hitler, whose speaker talent and tactics are
quite effective”10. With his speaking prowess he set out to woo every section of society,
As everyone went through a hard economic time during the depression Hitler fronted himself
as the only one who could save Germany. Kershaw notes that “five years earlier, the Nazi
party had been a fringe irritant in German politics”11. But not anymore. Hitler portrayed the
Weimer Republic as the enemy who had caused the crisis and whose attempts at forming
coalition governments held no real solution to the ongoing problems. The ground was quickly
shifting against the status quo and toward Hitler and the Nazi party. As a testament to this
major shift in the country’s political scene, in the 1932 elections the Nazi party “receives 37.3
8
Ian Kershaw, Hitler (Routledge), 12.
9
Kershaw, 46
10
Roselli, 307
11
Kershaw, 38
percent of the vote, wins 230 seats, and becomes the largest party in the Reichstag”12. This
was a jump from only 2.6 percent (12 seats) four years earlier. As leader of the largest party,
Hitler turned down the position of vice Chancellor and demanded that the president appoints
Beyond the harsh conditions of the Treaty of Versailles and blaming the supposedly weak
and disunited political leaders of the Weimer Republic, Hitler gave the German population a
scapegoat for their economic problems (that climaxed with the great depression). He blamed
the Jews for Germany’s problems. In January 1933 Hitler became Chancellor and in August
1934 after the death of President Paul Hindenburg, he also assumed the role of president and
became the Führer. It was time to start eliminating the scapegoat of all Germany’s problems.
Within months of rising to power “the crucial steps into the full-fledged ‘Final Solution’ – the
attempted systematic murder of all Jews of Europe – now followed, one after the other”13.
The great depression had offered Hitler the crisis he needed to convince large portions of the
population to buy into the ideology of the Nazi party. To effectively accomplish this,
however, he needed a scape-goat. His long-held hatred for Jews was easily within reach.
Thus, when he rose to power, he not only had to eliminate Jews to satisfy his hatred, he also
had to satisfy the emotions of his political base whose hatred for Jews he had planted and
The great depression was not the only reason for Hitler’s rise to power. His popularity was a
culmination of many different factors and reasons mostly beginning from the post-WWI
restitution conditions. However, the depression offered Hitler the opportunity to appeal to an
12
Kershaw, 210
13
Kershaw, 156
increasingly impoverished, disenfranchised, and destitute population. In 1930, the rise of
Hitler was evident, as the depression crisis led to the Nazi party getting over eighteen percent
of the vote, winning 107 seats in parliament. With such numbers, the Nazi could hinder any
new plans by the sitting government to reverse the economic impacts of the great
depression14. The goal by Hitler was to make people as destitute as possible in order for his
Accordingly, without the great depression Hitler would not have had a political and socio-
economic crisis to ride on to power. The Dawes Plan (1924) as well as the Young Plan (1928)
probably would have kept Germany on a stable and prosperous trajectory well into the 1930s
had the depression not happened. Consequently, the Nazi party would have remained a
“fringe irritant in German politics”15 with barely 3 percent of the population on its side.
Whereas it is true that there was more to Hitler’s rise than the depression – e.g., the Treaty of
Versailles, over-reliance on foreign capital, communism vs. capitalism, and other factors –
none of them caused the sort of economic and political crisis necessary to push people to
want to vote for a strongman. Moreover, the forecasts of economists such Keynes and others
concerning the time bomb of restitutions was beginning to come true and strong economies
such as the United States, France, and Britain were already endorsing plans to create long
lasting solutions for Germany. As such, without the Great Depression of 1929, Hitler and the
Bibliography
http://public.ebookcentral.proquest.com/choice/publicfullrecord.aspx?p=1710569.
14
AN Wilson, Hitler (New York; Basic Books, 2012), 147.
15
Kershaw, 38
4. Keynes, John Maynard. 1919. The Economic Consequences of the Peace. La Vergne:
5. Patterson, Ernest Minor. 1925 The Dawes Plan in Operation. The Annals of the
http://www.jstor.org/stable/1015627.
6. Blakemore, Erin. 2019. Germany's World War I Debt Was So Crushing It Took 92 Years
treaty-versailles.
7. The National WWII Museum. 2017. How Did Hitler Happen? The National WWII
hitler-happen.