Marshall Plan: Difference between revisions
Eshaparvathi (talk | contribs) In the first line, I changed "aid" to "foreign aid" because it is more specific and aid has many connotations that can be confused as benevolence or altruism. "Economic assistance" is a generic phrase. The term used by the Marshall plan is "economic recovery programs" which is also more clarifying as the Marshall plan implemented various programs. |
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{{short description|American initiative for foreign aid to Western Europe following World War II}} |
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{{NPOV|talk =Anti-USSR bias|date=January 2020}} |
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{{for|the computer program|Marshall Plan (software)}} |
{{for|the computer program|Marshall Plan (software)}} |
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{{redirect-distinguish|European Recovery Program|2008 European Union stimulus plan}} |
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{{Redirect-distinguish|European Recovery Program|European Economic Recovery Plan}} |
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{{short description|U.S. initiative to help Western Europe recover from World War II}} |
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{{Infobox U.S. legislation |
{{Infobox U.S. legislation |
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| longtitle = An act to promote world peace and the general welfare, national interest, and foreign policy of the United States through economic, financial, and other measures necessary to the maintenance of conditions abroad in which free institutions may survive and consistent with the maintenance of the strength and stability of the United States. |
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| shorttitle = Marshall Plan |
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| colloquialacronym = |
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| othershorttitles = {{unbulleted list||Foreign Assistance Act of 1948 |
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| enacted by = 80th |
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}} |
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| effective date = April 3, 1948 |
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| longtitle = An act to promote world peace and the general welfare, national interest, and foreign policy of the United States through economic, financial, and other measures necessary to the maintenance of conditions abroad in which free institutions may survive and consistent with the maintenance of the strength and stability of the United States. |
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| public law url = https://govtrackus.s3.amazonaws.com/legislink/pdf/stat/62/STATUTE-62-Pg137.pdf |
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| colloquialacronym = |
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| cite public law = 80-472 |
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| enacted by = 80th |
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| effective date = April 3, 1948 |
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| public law url = http://legisworks.org/congress/80/publaw-472.pdf |
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| cite public law = 80-472 |
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| cite statutes at large = {{usstat|62|137}} |
| cite statutes at large = {{usstat|62|137}} |
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| acts amended |
| acts amended = |
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| acts repealed |
| acts repealed = |
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| title amended |
| title amended = <!--US code titles changed--> |
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| sections created = <!--{{USC}} can be used--> |
| sections created = <!--{{USC}} can be used--> |
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| sections amended = |
| sections amended = |
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| leghisturl |
| leghisturl = |
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| introducedin |
| introducedin = Senate |
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| introducedbill |
| introducedbill = {{USBill|80|S.|2202}} |
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| introducedby |
| introducedby = <!--sponsor(s)--> |
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| introduceddate |
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| committees |
| committees = |
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| passedbody1 |
| passedbody1 = Senate |
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| passeddate1 |
| passeddate1 = March 13, 1948 |
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| passedvote1 |
| passedvote1 = [http://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/80-1948/s153 71–19] |
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| passedbody2 |
| passedbody2 = House |
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| passedas2 |
| passedas2 = <!-- used if the second body changes the name of the legislation --> |
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| passeddate2 |
| passeddate2 = March 31, 1948 |
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| passedvote2 |
| passedvote2 = [http://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/80-1948/h105 333–78] |
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| conferencedate |
| conferencedate = April 1, 1948 |
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| passedbody3 |
| passedbody3 = House |
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| passeddate3 |
| passeddate3 = April 2, 1948 |
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| passedvote3 |
| passedvote3 = [http://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/80-1948/h109 321–78] |
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| agreedbody3 |
| agreedbody3 = <!-- used when the other body agrees without going into committee --> |
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| agreeddate3 |
| agreeddate3 = <!-- used when the other body agrees without going into committee --> |
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| agreedvote3 |
| agreedvote3 = <!-- used when the other body agrees without going into committee --> |
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| agreedbody4 = <!-- used if agreedbody3 further amends legislation --> |
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| agreedvote4 |
| agreedvote4 = <!-- used if agreedbody3 further amends legislation --> |
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| passedbody4 |
| passedbody4 = Senate |
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| passeddate4 |
| passeddate4 = April 2, 1948 |
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| passedvote4 |
| passedvote4 = agreed |
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| signedpresident = Harry S. Truman |
| signedpresident = [[Harry S. Truman]] |
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| signeddate |
| signeddate = April 3, 1948 |
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| unsignedpresident = <!-- used when passed without presidential signing --> |
| unsignedpresident = <!-- used when passed without presi!-- used when passed without presidential signing --> |
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| unsigneddate = <!-- used when passed without presidential signing --> |
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| vetoedpresident = <!-- used when passed by overriding presidential veto --> |
| vetoedpresident = <!-- used when passed by overriding presidential veto --> |
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| vetoeddate |
| vetoeddate = <!-- used when passed by overriding presidential veto --> |
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| overriddenbody1 = <!-- used when passed by overriding presidential veto --> |
| overriddenbody1 = <!-- used when passed by overriding presidential veto --> |
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| overriddendate1 = <!-- used when passed by overriding presidential veto --> |
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| overriddendate2 = <!-- used when passed by overriding presidential veto --> |
| overriddendate2 = <!-- used when passed by overriding presidential veto --> |
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| overriddenvote2 = <!-- used when passed by overriding presidential veto --> |
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| amendments |
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| SCOTUS cases |
| SCOTUS cases = |
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| shorttitle = Foreign Assistance Act of 1948 |
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}} |
}} |
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[[File:US-MarshallPlanAid-Logo.svg|thumb|upright=1.15|The |
[[File: US-MarshallPlanAid-Logo.svg|thumb|upright=1.15|The labeling used on aid packages created and sent under the Marshall Plan.]] |
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[[File:George C. Marshall, U.S. Secretary of State.jpg|thumb|George Marshall, the U.S. Secretary of State]] |
[[File: George C. Marshall, U.S. Secretary of State.jpg|thumb|General [[George C. Marshall]], the 50th U.S. Secretary of State]] |
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The '''Marshall Plan''' (officially the '''European Recovery Program''', '''ERP''') was an American initiative |
The '''Marshall Plan''' (officially the '''European Recovery Program''', '''ERP''') was an American initiative enacted in 1948 to provide foreign aid to [[Western Europe]]. The [[United States]] transferred $13.3 billion (equivalent to $173.8 billion in 2024) in economic recovery programs to Western European economies after the end of [[World War II]]. Replacing an earlier proposal for a [[Morgenthau Plan]], it operated for four years beginning on April 3, 1948,{{sfn|Marshall Plan|2020}} though in 1951, the Marshall Plan was largely replaced by the [[Mutual Security Act]]. The goals of the United States were to rebuild war-torn regions, remove [[trade barrier]]s, modernize [[Manufacturing|industry]], improve European prosperity and prevent the spread of [[communism]].{{sfn|Hogan|1987|p=[{{Google books|wVp0UsB1ITIC|pg=PA27|plainurl=yes}} 27]}} The Marshall Plan proposed the reduction of interstate barriers and the economic integration of the [[Europe|European Continent]] while also encouraging an increase in [[productivity]] as well as the adoption of modern business procedures.{{sfn|Carew|1987}} |
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The Marshall Plan aid was divided |
The Marshall Plan aid was divided among the participant states roughly on a per capita basis. A larger amount was given to the major industrial powers, as the prevailing opinion was that their resuscitation was essential for the general European revival. Somewhat more aid per capita was also directed toward the [[Allies of World War II|Allied nations]], with less for those that had been part of the [[Axis powers|Axis]] or [[Neutral powers during World War II|remained neutral]]. The largest recipient of Marshall Plan money was the [[United Kingdom]] (receiving about 26% of the total). The next highest contributions went to [[France]] (18%) and [[West Germany]] (11%). Some eighteen European countries received Plan benefits.{{sfn|Schain|2001}} Although offered participation, the [[Soviet Union]] refused Plan benefits and also blocked benefits to [[Eastern Bloc]] countries, such as [[Romania]] and [[Polish People's Republic|Poland]].{{sfn|Sobell|1987}} The United States provided similar aid programs in Asia, but they were not part of the Marshall Plan.{{efn-ua|There was large-scale American aid to Nationalist China, and North Korea, as well as French Indochina, Thailand, Burma and the Philippines. {{harv|Price|1955|pp=179–219}}}} |
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Its role in |
Its role in rapid recovery has been debated. The Marshall Plan's accounting reflects that aid accounted for about 3% of the combined [[Measures of national income and output|national income]] of the recipient countries between 1948 and 1951,{{sfn|DeLong|Eichengreen|1993|p=189-230}} which means an increase in [[Gross domestic product|GDP]] growth of less than half a percent.{{sfn|Crafts|2011|p=6}} |
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Graham T. Allison states that "the Marshall Plan has become a favorite analogy for policy-makers. Yet few know much about it."<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://www.cfr.org/book/marshall-plan |title=The Marshall Plan |language=en}}</ref> Some new studies highlight not only the role of economic cooperation but approach the Marshall Plan as a case concerning strategic thinking to face some typical challenges in policy, as problem definition, risk analysis, decision support to policy formulation, and program implementation.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lassance |first=Antonio |url=https://repositorio.ipea.gov.br/bitstream/11058/11101/1/td_2747.pdf |title=The making of a public policy in large-scale: strategy, planning and decision support of the Marshall Plan. |publisher=Brazilian Institute for Applied Economic Research (Ipea) |year=2022 |location=Brasília-DF, Brazil |language=Portuguese}}</ref> |
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After World War II, in 1947, industrialist [[Lewis H. Brown]] wrote (at the request of General [[Lucius D. Clay]]) ''[[A Report on Germany]]'', which served as a detailed recommendation for the reconstruction of post-war Germany, and served as a basis for the Marshall Plan. The initiative was named after [[United States Secretary of State]] [[George Marshall]]. The plan had bipartisan support in Washington, where the [[History of the Republican Party (United States)|Republicans]] controlled Congress and the [[History of the Democratic Party (United States)|Democrats]] controlled the White House with [[Harry S. Truman]] as President. The Plan was largely the creation of [[United States Department of State|State Department]] officials, especially [[William L. Clayton]] and [[George F. Kennan]], with help from the [[Brookings Institution]], as requested by Senator [[Arthur H. Vandenberg]], chairman of the [[Senate Foreign Relations Committee]].<ref>{{cite web|url =http://www.brookings.edu/about/history/marshallplan|title =Brookings's Role in the Marshall Plan|author =''[[Brookings Institution]]''|publisher =brookings.edu|url-status =dead|archiveurl =https://web.archive.org/web/20130806040018/http://www.brookings.edu/about/history/marshallplan|archivedate =2013-08-06}}</ref> Marshall spoke of an urgent need to help the European recovery in his address at [[Harvard University]] in June 1947.<ref name="Hogan 1987"/> The purpose of the Marshall Plan was to aid in the economic recovery of nations [[Aftermath of World War II|after World War II]] and to reduce the influence of Communist parties within them. To combat the effects of the Marshall Plan, the USSR developed its own economic plan, known as the [[Molotov Plan]], in spite of the fact that large amounts of resources from the Eastern Bloc countries to the USSR were paid as reparations, for countries participating in the Axis Power during the war. |
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In 1947, two years after the end of the war, industrialist [[Lewis H. Brown]] wrote, at the request of General [[Lucius D. Clay]], ''[[A Report on Germany]]'', which served as a detailed recommendation for the reconstruction of post-war Germany and served as a basis for the Marshall Plan. The initiative was named after [[United States Secretary of State]] [[George C. Marshall]]. The plan had bipartisan support in Washington, where the [[History of the Republican Party (United States)|Republicans]] controlled [[United States Congress|Congress]] and the [[History of the United States Democratic Party|Democrats]] controlled the White House with [[Harry S. Truman]] as president. Some businessmen feared the Marshall Plan, unsure whether reconstructing European economies and encouraging foreign competition was in the US' best interests.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Weissman |first1=Alexander |title=Pivotal Politics – The Marshal Plan: A Turning Point in Foreign Aid and the Struggle for Democracy |journal=The History Teacher |date=November 2013 |volume=47 |issue=1 |page=113}}</ref> The plan was largely the creation of [[United States Department of State|State Department]] officials, especially [[William L. Clayton]] and [[George F. Kennan]], with help from the [[Brookings Institution]], as requested by Senator [[Arthur Vandenberg]], chairman of the [[United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations]].{{sfn|Brookings Institution}} Marshall spoke of an urgent need to help the European recovery in his address at [[Harvard University]] in June 1947.{{sfn|Hogan|1987|p=[{{Google books|wVp0UsB1ITIC|pg=PA43|plainurl=yes}} 43]}} The purpose of the Marshall Plan was to aid in the economic recovery of nations [[Aftermath of World War II|after World War II]] and secure US geopolitical influence over Western Europe.{{sfn|Lassance|2021|pp=61}} To combat the effects of the Marshall Plan, the USSR developed its own economic recovery program, known as the [[Molotov Plan]]. However, the plan was said to have not worked as well due to the USSR particularly having been hit hard by the effects of [[World War II]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Research Starters: Worldwide Deaths in World War II |url=https://www.nationalww2museum.org/students-teachers/student-resources/research-starters/research-starters-worldwide-deaths-world-war |access-date=2023-06-28 |website=The National WWII Museum {{!}} New Orleans |language=en}}</ref> |
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The phrase "equivalent of the Marshall Plan" is often used to describe a proposed large-scale economic rescue program.<ref>{{cite book|author=Brad Roberts, ed.|title=The New Democracies: Global Change and U.S. Policy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JF3tkUYGbk8C&pg=PA97|year=1990|publisher=MIT Press|page=97|isbn=9780262680622}}</ref> |
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The phrase "equivalent of the Marshall Plan" is often used to describe a proposed large-scale economic rescue program.{{sfn|Roberts|1990|p= 97}} |
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In 1951 the Marshall Plan was largely replaced by the [[Mutual Security Act]]. |
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==Development and deployment== |
==Development and deployment== |
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The reconstruction plan, developed at a meeting of the participating European states, was drafted on June 5, 1947. It offered the same aid to the [[Soviet Union]] and [[Eastern Bloc|its allies]], but they refused to accept it, |
The reconstruction plan, developed at a meeting of the participating European states, was drafted on June 5, 1947. It offered the same aid to the [[Soviet Union]] and [[Eastern Bloc|its allies]], but they refused to accept it, under Soviet pressure (as was the case for Finland's rejection) as doing so would allow a degree of US control over the communist economies.{{sfn|Volkogonov|1996|p=531}}{{sfnm|Roberts|2000|1p=30|McMahon|2003|2p=30}}{{sfn|Seppinen|2003|p=1}} Secretary Marshall became convinced Stalin had no interest in helping restore economic health in Western Europe.{{sfn|Kaplan|1999|p=4}} |
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[[File:Marshall Plan.svg|thumb|upright=1.6|European Recovery Program expenditures by country]] |
[[File:Marshall Plan.svg|thumb|upright=1.6|European Recovery Program expenditures by country. The [[Eastern Bloc]] is not included.]] |
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President Harry Truman signed the Marshall Plan on April 3, 1948, granting $5 billion in aid to 16 European nations. During the four years the plan was in effect, the United States donated $17 billion (equivalent to ${{Inflation|US|21|1952|r=2}} billion in {{Inflation-year|US}}) in economic and technical assistance to help the recovery of the European countries that joined the [[Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development#Organisation for European Economic Co-operation|Organisation for European Economic Co-operation]]. The $17 billion was in the context of a US GDP of $258 billion in 1948, and on top of $17 billion in American aid to Europe between the end of the war and the start of the |
President Harry Truman signed the Marshall Plan on April 3, 1948, granting $5 billion in aid to 16 European nations. During the four years that the plan was in effect, the United States donated $17 billion (equivalent to ${{Inflation|US|21|1952|r=2}} billion in {{Inflation-year|US}}) in economic and technical assistance to help the recovery of the European countries that joined the [[Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development#Organisation for European Economic Co-operation|Organisation for European Economic Co-operation]]. The $17 billion was in the context of a US GDP of $258 billion in 1948, and on top of $17 billion in American aid to Europe between the end of the war and the start of the plan that is counted separately from the Marshall Plan.{{sfn|Milward |1984 |p=46}} The Marshall Plan was replaced by the [[Mutual Security Act|Mutual Security Plan]] at the end of 1951; that new plan gave away about $7.5 billion annually until 1961 when it was replaced by another program.{{sfn|Mills|2008|page=[https://archive.org/details/winningpeacemars00mill/page/195 195]}} |
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The ERP addressed each of the obstacles to postwar recovery. The plan looked to the future and did not focus on the destruction caused by the war. Much more important were efforts to modernize European industrial and business practices using high-efficiency American models, reducing artificial trade barriers, and instilling a sense of hope and self-reliance. |
The ERP addressed each of the obstacles to postwar recovery. The plan looked to the future and did not focus on the destruction caused by the war. Much more important were efforts to modernize European industrial and business practices using high-efficiency American models, reducing artificial trade barriers, and instilling a sense of hope and self-reliance.{{sfnm|Hogan|1987|1pp=427–45|Eichengreen|2008|2pp=64–73}} |
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By 1952, as the funding ended, the economy of every participant state had surpassed pre-war levels; for all Marshall Plan recipients, output in 1951 was at least 35% higher than in 1938. |
By 1952, as the funding ended, the economy of every participant state had surpassed pre-war levels; for all Marshall Plan recipients, output in 1951 was at least 35% higher than in 1938.{{sfn|Eichengreen |2008|p=57}}{{efn-ua|West Germany was 6% higher, the other countries 45% higher {{harv|Eichengreen |2008|p=57}}.}} Over the next two decades, Western Europe enjoyed unprecedented growth and prosperity, but economists are not sure what proportion was due directly to the ERP, what proportion indirectly, and how much would have happened without it. |
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A common American interpretation of the program's role in European recovery was expressed by Paul Hoffman, head of the Economic Cooperation Administration, in 1949 |
A common American interpretation of the program's role in European recovery was expressed by Paul Hoffman, head of the Economic Cooperation Administration, in 1949 when he told Congress Marshall aid had provided the "critical margin" on which other investment needed for European recovery depended.{{sfn|Hogan|1987|p=189}} The Marshall Plan was one of the first elements of [[European integration]], as it erased trade barriers and set up institutions to coordinate the economy on a continental level—that is, it stimulated the total political reconstruction of Western Europe.{{sfn|Milward |1984 |p=466}} |
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Belgian economic historian Herman Van der Wee concludes the Marshall Plan was a "great success": |
Belgian economic historian [[Herman Van der Wee]] concludes the Marshall Plan was a "great success": |
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{{ |
{{Blockquote|It gave a new impetus to reconstruction in Western Europe and made a decisive contribution to the renewal of the transport system, the modernization of industrial and agricultural equipment, the resumption of normal production, the raising of productivity, and the facilitating of intra-European trade.{{sfn|Van der Wee|1984|p=[https://archive.org/details/prosperityupheav00weeh/page/44 44]}}}} |
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==Wartime destruction== |
==Wartime destruction== |
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By [[End of World War II in Europe|the end]] of World War II, much of Europe was devastated. Sustained [[Strategic bombing during World War II|aerial bombardment during the war]] had badly damaged most major cities, and industrial facilities were especially hard-hit. Millions of refugees were in temporary camps.{{sfn|Buchanon|2006|loc=ch. 1}} The region's trade flows had been thoroughly disrupted; millions were in refugee camps living on aid from the United States, which was provided by the [[United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration]] and other agencies. Food shortages were severe, especially in the harsh [[Winter of 1946–47 in the United Kingdom|winter of 1946–47]]. From July 1945 through June 1946, the United States shipped 16.5 million tons of food, primarily wheat, to Europe and Japan. It amounted to one-sixth of the American food supply and provided 35 trillion calories, enough to provide 400 calories a day for one year to 300 million people.{{sfn|Matusow|1967|pp=35–36}} |
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[[File:Markt in het vernielde Neurenberg, Bestanddeelnr 901-9446.jpg|thumb|Market in the ruins of [[Nuremberg]], October 1946]] |
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By [[End of World War II in Europe|the end]] of [[World War II]], much of Europe was devastated. Sustained [[Strategic bombing during World War II|aerial bombardment during the war]] had badly damaged most major cities, and industrial facilities were especially hard-hit.<ref>Tom Buchanan, ''Europe's Troubled Peace 1945–2000,'' (2006) ch 1</ref> The region's trade flows had been thoroughly disrupted; millions were in refugee camps living on aid from the United States, which was provided in the guise of the [[United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration]] and other agencies. The [[United Nations]] had been approved by a three-month conference that bookended [[Victory in Europe]]. Food shortages were severe, especially in the harsh [[Winter of 1946–47 in the United Kingdom|winter of 1946–47]]. From July 1945 through June 1946, the United States shipped 16.5 million tons of food, primarily wheat, to Europe and Japan. It amounted to one-sixth of the American food supply and provided 35 trillion calories, enough to provide 400 calories a day for one year to 300 million people.<ref>Allen J. Matusow, ''Farm Policies and Politics in the Truman Administration'' (1967) pp 35-36.</ref> |
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Especially damaged was transportation infrastructure, as railways, bridges, and docks had been specifically targeted by airstrikes, while much merchant shipping had been sunk. Although most small towns and villages had not suffered as much damage, the destruction of transportation left them economically isolated. None of these problems could be easily remedied, as most nations engaged in the war had exhausted their treasuries in the process. |
Especially damaged was transportation infrastructure, as railways, bridges, and docks had been specifically targeted by airstrikes, while much merchant shipping had been sunk. Although most small towns and villages had not suffered as much damage, the destruction of transportation left them economically isolated. None of these problems could be easily remedied, as most nations engaged in the war had exhausted their treasuries in the process.{{sfn|Judt|2001}} |
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The only major powers whose infrastructure had not been significantly harmed in World War II were the United States and Canada. They were much more prosperous than before the war but exports were a small factor in their economy. Much of the Marshall Plan aid would be used by the Europeans to buy manufactured goods and raw materials from the United States and Canada. |
The only major powers whose infrastructure had not been significantly harmed in World War II were the United States and Canada.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-11-01 |title=The Marshall Plan: Definition, Date & Cold War |url=https://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/marshall-plan-1 |access-date=2024-04-12 |website=HISTORY |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Canada |first=Veterans Affairs |date=2021-06-07 |title=Canada's Industries Gear up for War - Historical Sheet - Second World War - History - Veterans Affairs Canada |url=https://www.veterans.gc.ca/en/remembrance/classroom/fact-sheets/industry |access-date=2024-04-12 |website=www.veterans.gc.ca}}</ref> They were much more prosperous than before the war, but exports were a small factor in their economy. Much of the Marshall Plan aid would be used by the Europeans to buy manufactured goods and raw materials from the United States and Canada. |
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==Initial post-war events== |
==Initial post-war events== |
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Along with the UN, many humanist ideas were circulating over the five-year period that ensued its formation. The [[World Bank]] and the [[International Monetary Fund]] (IMF) date from this time. One of the ideas proposed in 1947 at the [[United Nations Conference on Trade and Employment]] (UNCTE) was the [[International Trade Organization]] (ITO). The [[GATT]] was first conceived around that time too.<ref name=ce/> |
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===Slow recovery=== |
===Slow recovery=== |
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Most of Europe's economies were recovering slowly, as unemployment and food shortages led to strikes and unrest in several nations. Agricultural production was 83% of 1938 levels, industrial production was 88%, and exports 59%. |
Most of Europe's economies were recovering slowly, as unemployment and food shortages led to strikes and unrest in several nations. Agricultural production was 83% of 1938 levels, industrial production was 88%, and exports 59%.{{sfn|Hogan|1987|p=[{{Google books|wVp0UsB1ITIC|pg=PA30|plainurl=yes}} 30]}} Exceptions were the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and France, where by the end of 1947 production had already been restored to pre-war levels before the Marshall Plan. Italy and Belgium would follow by the end of 1948.{{sfnm|van Zanden|1998|1p=|Klemann|1997|2p=3–40}} In Germany in 1945–46 housing and food conditions were bad, as the disruption of transport, markets, and finances slowed a return to normality. In the West, the bombing had destroyed 5,000,000 houses and apartments, and 12,000,000 refugees from the east had crowded in.{{sfn|Raff|1988|p=335}} |
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Food production was two-thirds of the pre-war level in 1946–48, while normal grain and meat shipments no longer arrived from the East. The drop in food production can be attributed to a drought that killed a major portion of the wheat crop while a severe winter destroyed most of the wheat crop the following year. This caused most Europeans to rely on a 1,500-calorie-per-day diet.{{sfn|Schaff|2009|p=1}} Furthermore, the large shipments of food stolen from occupied nations during the war no longer reached Germany. Industrial production fell more than half and reached pre-war levels at the end of 1949.{{sfn|Milward |1984 |pp=356, 436}} While Germany struggled to recover from the destruction of the War, the recovery effort began in June 1948, moving on from emergency relief. The [[Deutsche Mark#Economics of 1948 currency reform|currency reform in 1948]] was headed by the military government and helped Germany to restore stability by encouraging production. The reform revalued old currency and deposits and introduced a new currency. Taxes were also reduced and Germany prepared to remove economic barriers.{{sfn|Price|1955|p=264}} |
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During the first three years of occupation of Germany, the Allied occupational authorities vigorously pursued a [[Allied plans for German industry after World War II|military disarmament program in Germany]], partly by removal of equipment but mainly through an import embargo on raw materials, part of the [[Morgenthau Plan]] approved by President [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]].{{sfn|Balabkins|1964|p=207}} Historian Nicholas Balabkins concluded that "as long as German industrial capacity was kept idle the economic recovery of Europe was delayed."{{sfn|Balabkins|1964|p=209}} By July 1947, Washington realized that economic recovery in Europe could not go forward without the reconstruction of the German industrial base, deciding that an "orderly, prosperous Europe requires the economic contributions of a stable and productive Germany."{{sfn|Pas de Pagaille!|1947}} In addition, the strength of Moscow-controlled communist parties in France and Italy worried Washington.{{sfn|Gaddis|1997}} |
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While Germany struggled to recover from the destruction of the War, the recovery effort began in June 1948, moving on from emergency relief. The [[Deutsche Mark#Economics of 1948 currency reform|currency reform in 1948]] was headed by the military government and helped Germany to restore stability by encouraging production. The reform revalued old currency and deposits and introduced new currency. Taxes were also reduced and Germany prepared to remove economic barriers.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Price|first1=Harry Bayard|title=The Marshall Plan and Its Meaning|url=https://archive.org/details/marshallplanitsm00pric|url-access=registration|date=1955|publisher=Cornell University Press|location=Ithaca, New York|page=[https://archive.org/details/marshallplanitsm00pric/page/264 264]}}</ref> |
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In the view of the State Department under President [[Presidency of Harry S. Truman|Harry S Truman]], the United States needed to adopt a definite position on the world scene or fear losing credibility. The emerging doctrine of [[containment]] (as opposed to [[rollback]]) argued that the United States needed to substantially aid non-communist countries to stop the spread of Soviet influence. There was also some hope that the Eastern Bloc nations would join the plan, and thus be pulled out of the emerging Soviet bloc, but that did not happen.<ref>{{cite web |title=History of the Marshall Plan |url=https://history.state.gov/departmenthistory/short-history/truman |publisher=Office of the Historian |access-date=5 June 2024}}</ref> |
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During the first three years of occupation of Germany, the UK and US vigorously pursued a [[Industrial plans for Germany|military disarmament program in Germany]], partly by removal of equipment but mainly through an import embargo on raw materials, part of the [[Morgenthau Plan]] approved by President [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]].<ref>Nicholas Balabkins, ''"Germany Under Direct Controls: Economic Aspects of Industrial Disarmament 1945–1948"'', Rutgers University Press, 1964 p. 207</ref> |
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-B0527-0001-753, Krefeld, Hungerwinter, Demonstration.jpg|thumb|upright=1.15|The [[Food in occupied Germany|hunger-winter]] of 1947, thousands protest in West Germany against the disastrous food situation (March 31, 1947). The sign says: ''We want coal, we want bread'']] |
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Nicholas Balabkins concludes that "as long as German industrial capacity was kept idle the economic recovery of Europe was delayed."<ref>Balabkins, p. 209</ref> By July 1947 Washington realized that economic recovery in Europe could not go forward without the reconstruction of the German industrial base, deciding that an "orderly, prosperous Europe requires the economic contributions of a stable and productive Germany."<ref>[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,887417,00.html Pas de Pagaille!] ''Time'' July 28, 1947.</ref> In addition, the strength of Moscow-controlled communist parties in France and Italy worried Washington.<ref>Gaddis, ''We Now Know''.</ref> |
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====Need to rebuild Germany==== |
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In the view of the State Department under President [[Harry S. Truman#Presidency 1945–1953|Harry S Truman]], the United States needed to adopt a definite position on the world scene or fear losing credibility. The emerging doctrine of [[containment]] (as opposed to [[rollback]]) argued that the United States needed to substantially aid non-communist countries to stop the spread of Soviet influence. There was also some hope that the Eastern Bloc nations would join the plan, and thus be pulled out of the emerging Soviet bloc, but that did not happen. |
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In January 1947, Truman appointed retired General [[George Marshall]] as Secretary of State. In July 1947 Marshall scrapped [[JCS 1067|Joint Chiefs of Staff Directive 1067]], which was based on the [[Morgenthau Plan]] which had decreed "take no steps looking toward the economic rehabilitation of Germany [or] designed to maintain or strengthen the German economy." The new plan JCS 1779 stated that "an orderly and prosperous Europe requires the economic contributions of a stable and productive Germany."{{sfn|Beschloss|2003|p=277}} The restrictions placed on German heavy industry production were partly ameliorated; permitted steel production levels were raised from 25% of pre-war capacity to a new limit placed at 50% of pre-war capacity.{{sfn|Pas de Pagaille!|1947}} |
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With a [[Greek Civil War#Confrontation: 1944|communist, although non-Soviet, insurgency]] threatening Greece, and Britain financially unable to continue its aid, the President announced his [[Truman Doctrine]] on March 12, 1947, "to support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures", with an aid request for consideration and decision, concerning Greece and Turkey. [[Herbert Hoover]] noted that "The whole economy of Europe is interlinked with the German economy through the exchange of raw materials and manufactured goods. The productivity of Europe cannot be restored without the restoration of Germany as a contributor to that productivity."{{sfn|Wala|1995 |pp=104–05}} [[The President's Economic Mission to Germany and Austria|Hoover's report]] led to a realization in Washington that a new policy was needed; "almost any action would be an improvement on current policy."{{sfn|Hogan|1987|pp=34–35}} In Washington, the Joint Chiefs declared that the "complete revival of German industry, particularly coal mining" was now of "primary importance" to American security.{{sfn|Beschloss|2003|p=277}} |
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-B0527-0001-753, Krefeld, Hungerwinter, Demonstration.jpg|thumb|upright=1.15|The hunger-winter of 1947, thousands protest in West Germany against the disastrous food situation (March 31, 1947). The sign says: ''We want coal, we want bread'']] |
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The United States was already spending a great deal to help Europe recover. Over $14 billion was spent or loaned during the postwar period through the end of 1947 and is not counted as part of the Marshall Plan. Much of this aid was designed to restore infrastructure and help refugees. Britain, for example, received an emergency loan of $3.75 billion.{{Sfn|U.S. Statistical Abstract|1949|p=[http://www2.census.gov/prod2/statcomp/documents/1949-12.pdf 846]}} |
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====Scrapping of the Morgenthau Plan==== |
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In January 1947, Truman appointed retired General [[George Marshall]] as Secretary of State. In July 1947 Marshall scrapped [[JCS 1067|Joint Chiefs of Staff Directive 1067]] implemented as part of the [[Morgenthau Plan]] under the personal supervision of Roosevelt's treasury secretary [[Henry Morgenthau, Jr.]], which had decreed "take no steps looking toward the economic rehabilitation of Germany [or] designed to maintain or strengthen the German economy." Thereafter, JCS 1067 was supplanted by JCS 1779, stating that "an orderly and prosperous Europe requires the economic contributions of a stable and productive Germany."<ref name="beschloss277" /> The restrictions placed on German heavy industry production were partly ameliorated; permitted steel production levels were raised from 25% of pre-war capacity to a new limit placed at 50% of pre-war capacity.<ref>[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,887417,00.html Pas de Pagaille!] ''Time'', July 28, 1947.</ref> |
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The [[United Nations]] also launched a series of humanitarian and relief efforts almost wholly funded by the United States. These efforts had important effects, but they lacked any central organization and planning, and failed to meet many of Europe's more fundamental needs.{{sfn|Judt|2001|p=4}} Already in 1943, the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) was founded to provide relief to areas liberated from Germany. UNRRA provided billions of dollars of rehabilitation aid and helped about 8 million refugees. It ceased the operation of [[displaced persons camp]]s in Europe in 1947; many of its functions were transferred to several UN agencies.{{sfn|UNRRA||p=317}}{{sfn|Fifield|2015|p=69}} |
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With a [[Greek Civil War#Confrontation: 1944|communist, although non-Soviet, insurgency]] threatening Greece, and Britain financially unable to continue its aid, the President announced his [[Truman Doctrine]] on March 12, 1947, "to support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures", with an aid request for consideration and decision, concerning Greece and Turkey. Also in March 1947, former US President [[Herbert Hoover]], in one of [[The President's Economic Mission to Germany and Austria|his reports from Germany]], argued for a change in US occupation policy, among other things stating: |
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<blockquote>There is the illusion that the New Germany left after the annexations can be reduced to a 'pastoral state' (Morgenthau's vision). It cannot be done unless we exterminate or move 25,000,000 people out of it.<ref>[[Erik Reinert]], [[Jomo Kwame Sundaram|Jomo K. S.]] [https://www.un.org/Pubs/chronicle/2008/webarticles/080103_marshallplan.html The Marshall Plan at 60: The General's Successful War on Poverty] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090419195002/http://www.un.org/Pubs/chronicle/2008/webarticles/080103_marshallplan.html |date=April 19, 2009 }}, ''[[UN Chronicle]]'' (accessed 2008-05-20)</ref></blockquote> |
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Hoover further noted that, "The whole economy of Europe is interlinked with German economy through the exchange of raw materials and manufactured goods. The productivity of Europe cannot be restored without the restoration of Germany as a contributor to that productivity."<ref name="Michael Wala 1994, pp.104-105">Michael Wala, ''The Council on Foreign Relations and American Foreign Policy in the Early Cold War'', 1994, Berghahn Books, {{ISBN|1-57181-003-X}} pp. 104–105</ref> Hoover's report led to a realization in Washington that a new policy was needed; "almost any action would be an improvement on current policy."<ref>Michael J. Hogan ''The Marshall Plan: America, Britain, and the Reconstruction of Western Europe, 1947–1952'', 1987, Cambridge University, {{ISBN|0-521-37840-0}} pp. 34–35</ref> In Washington, the Joint Chiefs declared that the "complete revival of German industry, particularly coal mining" was now of "primary importance" to American security.<ref name="beschloss277">{{Harvnb|Beschloss|2003|p=277}}</ref> |
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The United States was already spending a great deal to help Europe recover. Over $14 billion was spent or loaned during the postwar period through the end of 1947 and is not counted as part of the Marshall Plan. Much of this aid was designed to restore infrastructure and help refugees. Britain, for example, received an emergency loan of $3.75 billion.<ref>''Statistical Abstract of the United States: 1949'' p. 846 [http://www2.census.gov/prod2/statcomp/documents/1949-12.pdf online]</ref> |
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The [[United Nations]] also launched a series of humanitarian and relief efforts almost wholly funded by the United States. These efforts had important effects, but they lacked any central organization and planning, and failed to meet many of Europe's more fundamental needs.<ref>[[Tony Judt]], in ''The Marshall Plan: Fifty Years After,'' edited by Martin Schain, p. 4.</ref> Already in 1943, the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) was founded to provide relief to areas liberated from Germany. UNRRA provided billions of dollars of rehabilitation aid and helped about 8 million refugees. It ceased operation of [[displaced persons camp]]s in Europe in 1947; many of its functions were transferred to several UN agencies. |
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==Soviet negotiations== |
==Soviet negotiations== |
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After Marshall's appointment in January 1947, administration officials met with Soviet Foreign Minister [[Vyacheslav Molotov]] and others to press for an economically self-sufficient Germany, including a detailed accounting of the industrial plants, goods and infrastructure already removed by the Soviets in their occupied zone. |
After Marshall's appointment in January 1947, administration officials met with Soviet Foreign Minister [[Vyacheslav Molotov]] and others to press for an economically self-sufficient Germany, including a detailed accounting of the industrial plants, goods and infrastructure already removed by the Soviets in their occupied zone.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=116}} Molotov refrained from supplying accounts of Soviet assets.{{citation needed|date=September 2021}} The Soviets took a punitive approach, pressing for a delay rather than an acceleration in economic rehabilitation, demanding unconditional fulfillment of all prior reparation claims, and pressing for progress toward nationwide socioeconomic transformation.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=117}} |
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After six weeks of negotiations, Molotov rejected all of the American and British proposals.<ref |
After six weeks of negotiations, Molotov rejected all of the American and British proposals.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=117}} During negotiations with the French and the British, Molotov received a ciphered telegram from Vyshinsky, Soviet Minister of Foreign Affairs. The official position of the Soviet Union, on Stalin's orders, had changed dramatically, and now Moscow's representatives in Paris were forcefully rejecting the Marshall Plan.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Zulean |first1=Marian |title=Romania and the Marshall Plan |url=https://www.wilsoncenter.org/blog-post/romania-and-marshall-plan |website=www.wilsoncenter.org |publisher=The Wilson Center |access-date=March 30, 2024}}</ref> Due to this change, Molotov rejected the counteroffer to scrap the British-American "Bizonia" and to include the Soviet zone within the newly constructed Germany.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=117}} Marshall was particularly discouraged after personally meeting with Stalin to explain that the United States could not possibly abandon its position on Germany, while Stalin expressed little interest in a solution to German economic problems.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=117}} |
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==Marshall's speech== |
==Marshall's speech== |
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{{Wikisource|The Marshall Plan Speech}} |
{{Wikisource|The Marshall Plan Speech}} |
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After the adjournment of the Moscow conference following six weeks of failed discussions with the Soviets regarding a potential German reconstruction, the United States concluded that a solution could not wait any longer. To clarify the American position, a major address by Secretary of State [[George Marshall]] was planned. Marshall gave the address at Harvard University on June 5, 1947. He offered American aid to promote European recovery and reconstruction. The speech described the dysfunction of the European economy and presented a rationale for US aid |
After the adjournment of the Moscow conference following six weeks of failed discussions with the Soviets regarding a potential German reconstruction, the United States concluded that a solution could not wait any longer. To clarify the American position, a major address by Secretary of State [[George Marshall]] was planned. Marshall gave the address at Harvard University on June 5, 1947. He offered American aid to promote European recovery and reconstruction. The speech described the dysfunction of the European economy and presented a rationale for US aid: |
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<blockquote>The modern system of the division of labor upon which the exchange of products is based is in danger of breaking down. ... Aside from the demoralizing effect on the world at large and the possibilities of disturbances arising as a result of the desperation of the people concerned, the consequences to the economy of the United States should be apparent to all. It is logical that the United States should do whatever it is able to do to assist in the return of normal economic health to the world, without which there can be no political stability and no assured peace. Our policy is not directed against any country, but against hunger, poverty, desperation and chaos. Any government that is willing to assist in recovery will find full co-operation on the part of the United States. Its purpose should be the revival of a working economy in the world so as to permit the emergence of political and social conditions in which free institutions can exist. |
<blockquote>The modern system of the division of labor upon which the exchange of products is based is in danger of breaking down. ... Aside from the demoralizing effect on the world at large and the possibilities of disturbances arising as a result of the desperation of the people concerned, the consequences to the economy of the United States should be apparent to all. It is logical that the United States should do whatever it is able to do to assist in the return of normal economic health to the world, without which there can be no political stability and no assured peace. Our policy is not directed against any country, but against hunger, poverty, desperation and chaos. Any government that is willing to assist in recovery will find full co-operation on the part of the United States. Its purpose should be the revival of a working economy in the world so as to permit the emergence of political and social conditions in which free institutions can exist.{{sfn|Hanhimäki|Westad|2004|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=JSyv24u7iVEC&pg=PA122 122]}}</blockquote> |
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Marshall was convinced that economic stability would provide political stability in Europe. He offered aid, but the European countries had to organize the program themselves. |
Marshall was convinced that economic stability would provide political stability in Europe. He offered aid, but the European countries had to organize the program themselves. |
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The speech, written by [[Charles Bohlen]] |
The speech, written at Marshall's request and guidance by [[Charles Bohlen]]{{sfnm|Mee|1984|1p=[https://archive.org/details/marshallplan00char/page/97 97]|Miall|1977|2loc=}} contained virtually no details and no numbers. More a proposal than a plan, it was a challenge to European leaders to cooperate and coordinate. It asked Europeans to create their own plan for rebuilding Europe, indicating the United States would then fund this plan. The administration felt that the plan would likely be unpopular among many Americans, and the speech was mainly directed at a European audience. In an attempt to keep the speech out of American papers, journalists were not contacted, and on the same day, Truman called a press conference to take away headlines. In contrast, [[Dean Acheson]], an Under Secretary of State, was dispatched to contact the European media, especially the British media, and the speech was read in its entirety on the [[BBC]].{{sfnm|Mee|1984|1p=[https://archive.org/details/marshallplan00char/page/99 99]}} |
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In the audience at Harvard was International Law and Diplomacy graduate student Malcolm Crawford, who had just written his Master's thesis entitled "A Blueprint for the Financing of Post-War Business and Industry in the United Kingdom and Republic of France." Crawford's thesis was read by future Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas and presented to President Truman as the solution for Marshall's proposal. It was Crawford's thesis which provided the key to selling the Marshall Plan to Congress by laying out the idea of "strategic partnerships." Instead of the Federal government granting money directly to Europe, American businesses would provide technology, expertise, and materials to Europe as a strategic partner, and in exchange, the Federal government would purchase stock in the US businesses to reimburse them. In this way, Europe would receive the aid it needed, American businesses would receive capital investment, and the federal government would make a profit when the stock was sold.<ref>The Marshall Plan: The Economic Exchange of the Century by Tyler Bray, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nymHILU_XNg</ref> |
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==Rejection by the Soviets== |
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==Rejection by Stalin== |
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{{Eastern Bloc sidebar|Cold War events}} |
{{Eastern Bloc sidebar|Cold War events}} |
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British Foreign Secretary [[Ernest Bevin]] heard Marshall's radio broadcast speech and immediately contacted French Foreign Minister [[Georges Bidault]] to begin preparing a quick European response to (and acceptance of) the offer, which led to the creation of the [[Committee of European Economic Co-operation]]. The two agreed that it would be necessary to invite the Soviets as the other major allied power. Marshall's speech had explicitly included an invitation to the Soviets, feeling that excluding them would have been a sign of distrust. State Department officials, however, knew that [[Joseph Stalin|Stalin]] would almost certainly not participate and that any plan that would send large amounts of aid to the Soviets was unlikely to get Congressional approval. |
British Foreign Secretary [[Ernest Bevin]] heard Marshall's radio broadcast speech and immediately contacted French Foreign Minister [[Georges Bidault]] to begin preparing a quick European response to (and acceptance of) the offer, which led to the creation of the [[Committee of European Economic Co-operation]]. The two agreed that it would be necessary to invite the Soviets as the other major allied power. Marshall's speech had explicitly included an invitation to the Soviets, feeling that excluding them would have been a sign of distrust. State Department officials, however, knew that [[Joseph Stalin|Stalin]] would almost certainly not participate and that any plan that would send large amounts of aid to the Soviets was unlikely to get Congressional approval.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/soviet-union-rejects-marshall-plan-assistance/ |title=Soviet Union rejects Marshall Plan assistance |publisher=A&E Television Networks |date=June 29, 2020 |website=HISTORY |access-date=June 6, 2022}}</ref> |
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===Initial reactions=== |
===Initial reactions=== |
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Speaking at the Paris Peace Conference on October 10, 1946 Molotov had already stated Soviet fears: "If American capital was given a free hand in the small states ruined |
Speaking at the Paris Peace Conference on October 10, 1946, Molotov had already stated Soviet fears: "If American capital was given a free hand in the small states ruined and enfeebled by the war [it] would buy up the local industries, appropriate the more attractive Romanian, Yugoslav ... enterprises and would become the master in these small states."{{sfn|McCauley|2016|p=147}} While the Soviet ambassador in Washington suspected that the Marshall Plan could lead to the creation of an anti-Soviet bloc, Stalin was open to the offer.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=138}} He directed that—in negotiations to be held in Paris regarding the aid—countries in the Eastern Bloc should not reject economic conditions being placed upon them.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=138}} Stalin only changed his outlook when he learned that (a) credit would only be extended under conditions of economic cooperation, and (b) aid would also be extended to Germany in total, an eventuality which Stalin thought would hamper the Soviets' ability to exercise influence in western Germany.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=138}}{{clarify|date=August 2021}}<!--The way in which 'aid being extended to Germany in total' could 'hamper the Soviets' ability to exercise influence in western Germany' is not obvious and should be explained.--> |
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Initially, Stalin maneuvered to kill the Plan, or at least hamper it by means of destructive participation in the Paris talks regarding conditions.<ref name="wettig138"/> He quickly realized, however, that this would be impossible after Molotov reported—following his arrival in Paris in July 1947—that conditions for the credit were non-negotiable.<ref name="wettig138"/> Looming as just as large a concern was the Czechoslovak eagerness to accept the aid, as well as indications of a similar Polish attitude.<ref name="wettig138"/> |
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Initially, Stalin maneuvered to kill the plan, or at least hamper it using destructive participation in the Paris talks regarding conditions.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=138}} He quickly realized, however, that this would be impossible after Molotov reported—following his arrival in Paris in July 1947—that conditions for the credit were non-negotiable.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=138}} Looming as just as large a concern was the Czechoslovak eagerness to accept the aid, as well as indications of a similar Polish attitude.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=138}} |
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Stalin suspected a possibility that these Eastern Bloc countries might defy Soviet directives not to accept the aid, potentially causing a loss of control of the [[Eastern Bloc]].<ref name="wettig138"/> In addition, the most important condition was that every country choosing to take advantage of the plan would need to have its economic situation independently assessed—a level of scrutiny to which the Soviets could not agree.{{citation needed|date=February 2014}} Bevin and Bidault also insisted that any aid be accompanied by the creation of a unified European economy, something incompatible with the strict Soviet command economy.{{citation needed|date=February 2014}} |
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===Compulsory Eastern Bloc rejection=== |
===Compulsory Eastern Bloc rejection=== |
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Soviet Foreign Minister [[Vyacheslav Molotov]] left Paris, rejecting the plan. |
Soviet Foreign Minister [[Vyacheslav Molotov]] left Paris, rejecting the plan.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=139}} After that, statements were made suggesting a future confrontation with the West, calling the United States both a "fascizing" power and the "center of worldwide [[Reactionary|reaction]] and anti-Soviet activity", with all U.S.-aligned countries branded as enemies.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=139}} The Soviets blamed the United States for communist losses in elections in Belgium, France, and Italy months earlier, in the spring of 1947.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=139}} It claimed that "marshallization" must be resisted and prevented by any means and that French and Italian communist parties were to make maximum efforts to sabotage the implementation of the plan.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=139}} In addition, Western embassies in Moscow were isolated, with their personnel being denied contact with Soviet officials.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=139}} |
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On July 12, a larger meeting was convened in Paris. Every country |
On July 12, a larger meeting was convened in Paris. Every country in Europe was invited, with the exceptions of Spain (a World War II neutral that had sympathized with the [[Axis powers]]) and the small states of [[Andorra]], [[San Marino]], [[Monaco]], and [[Liechtenstein]]. The Soviet Union was invited with the understanding that it would likely refuse. The states of the future [[Eastern Bloc]] were also approached, and [[Czechoslovakia]] and [[Poland]] agreed to attend. In one of the most evident signs and reflections of tight Soviet control and domination over the region, [[Jan Masaryk]], the foreign minister of Czechoslovakia, was summoned to Moscow and berated by Stalin for considering Czechoslovakia's possible involvement with and joining of the Marshall Plan. The prime minister of Poland, [[Józef Cyrankiewicz]], was rewarded by Stalin for his country's rejection of the plan which came in the form of the Soviet Union's offer of a lucrative [[trade agreement]] lasting for five years, a grant amounting to the approximate equivalent of $450 million (in 1948; the sum would have been $4.4 billion in 2014 {{sfn|U.S. Inflation Calculator|2021}}) in the form of long-term credit and loans and the provision of 200,000 tonnes of grain, heavy and manufacturing machinery and factories and heavy industries to Poland.{{sfn|Carnations|1948}} |
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The Marshall Plan participants were not surprised when the Czechoslovakian and Polish delegations were prevented from attending the Paris meeting. The other [[Eastern Bloc]] states immediately rejected the offer. |
The Marshall Plan participants were not surprised when the Czechoslovakian and Polish delegations were prevented from attending the Paris meeting. The other [[Eastern Bloc]] states immediately rejected the offer.{{sfn|Schain|2001|p=132}} [[Finland]] also declined, to avoid antagonizing the Soviets (see also [[Finlandization]]). The Soviet Union's "alternative" to the Marshall plan which was purported to involve Soviet subsidies and trade with western Europe, became known as the [[Molotov Plan]], and later, the [[Comecon]]. In a 1947 speech to the United Nations, Soviet deputy foreign minister [[Andrei Vyshinsky]] said that the Marshall Plan violated the principles of the United Nations. He accused the United States of attempting to impose its will on other independent states while at the same time using economic resources distributed as a relief to needy nations as an instrument of political pressure.{{sfn|Vyshinsky|1947}} |
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===Yugoslavia=== |
===Yugoslavia=== |
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Although all other |
Although all other communist European countries had deferred to Stalin and rejected the aid, the Yugoslavs, led by Josip Broz (Tito), initially went along and rejected the Marshall Plan. However, in 1948 [[Tito-Stalin Split|Tito broke decisively with Stalin]] on other issues. Yugoslavia requested American aid. American leaders were internally divided, but finally agreed and began sending money on a small scale in 1949 and on a much larger scale in 1950–53. The American aid was not part of the Marshall Plan.{{sfn|Lampe|1990|pp=[https://archive.org/details/yugoslavamerican00lamp/page/28 28–37]}} |
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===Szklarska Poręba meeting=== |
===Szklarska Poręba meeting=== |
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In late September, the Soviet Union called a meeting of nine European |
In late September, the Soviet Union called a meeting of nine European communist parties at the resort town of [[Szklarska Poręba]] in southwest Poland.{{sfn|Behrman|2007|p=}} A [[Communist Party of the Soviet Union]] (CPSU) report was read at the outset to set the heavily [[Anti-Western sentiment|anti-Western]] tone, stating now that "international politics is dominated by the ruling clique of the American imperialists" which have embarked upon the "enslavement of the weakened capitalist countries of Europe".{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=140}}Communist parties were to struggle against the US presence in Europe by any means necessary, including sabotage.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=146}} The report further claimed that "reactionary imperialist elements throughout the world, particularly in the United States, in Britain and France, had put particular hope on Germany and Japan, primarily on Hitlerite Germany—first as a force most capable of striking a blow at the Soviet Union".{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=142}} |
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Referring to the Eastern Bloc, the report stated that "the Red Army's liberating role was complemented by an upsurge of the freedom-loving peoples' liberation struggle against the fascist predators and their hirelings." |
Referring to the Eastern Bloc, the report stated that "the Red Army's liberating role was complemented by an upsurge of the freedom-loving peoples' liberation struggle against the fascist predators and their hirelings."{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=142}}It argued that "the bosses of Wall Street" were "tak[ing] the place of Germany, Japan, and Italy".{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=142}} The Marshall Plan was described as "the American plan for the enslavement of Europe".{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=142}} It described the world now breaking down "into basically two camps—the imperialist and antidemocratic camp on the one hand, and the anti-imperialist and democratic camp on the other".{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=142}} |
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Although the Eastern Bloc countries except Czechoslovakia had immediately rejected Marshall Plan aid, Eastern Bloc communist parties were blamed for permitting even minor influence by non-communists in their respective countries during the run |
Although the Eastern Bloc countries, except Czechoslovakia, had immediately rejected Marshall Plan aid, Eastern Bloc communist parties were blamed for permitting even minor influence by non-communists in their respective countries during the run-up to the Marshall Plan.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=148}} The meeting's chair, Andrei Zhdanov, who was in permanent radio contact with the Kremlin from whom he received instructions,{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=140}} also castigated communist parties in France and Italy for collaboration with those countries' domestic agendas.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=145}} Zhdanov warned that if they continued to fail to maintain international contact with Moscow to consult on all matters, "extremely harmful consequences for the development of the brother parties' work" would result.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=145}} |
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Italian and French communist leaders |
Party rules prevented Italian and French communist leaders from pointing out that it was Stalin who had directed them not to take opposition stances in 1944.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=145}} The French communist party, like others, was then to redirect its mission to "destroy capitalist economy" and that the Soviet Communist Information Bureau ([[Cominform]]) would take control of the French Communist Party's activities to oppose the Marshall Plan.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=146}} When they asked Zhdanov if they should prepare for armed revolt when they returned home, he did not answer.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=146}} In a follow-up conversation with Stalin, he explained that an armed struggle would be impossible and that the struggle against the Marshall Plan was to be waged under the slogan of national independence.{{sfn|Wettig|2008|p=147}} |
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==Passage in Congress== |
==Passage in Congress== |
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Congress, under the control of conservative Republicans, agreed to the program for multiple reasons. The 20-member conservative isolationist Senate wing of the party, based in the rural Midwest and led by Senator [[Kenneth S. Wherry]] (R-Nebraska), was outmaneuvered by the emerging internationalist wing, led by Senator [[Arthur H. Vandenberg]] (R-Michigan). The opposition argued |
Congress, under the control of conservative Republicans, agreed to the program for multiple reasons. The 20-member conservative isolationist Senate wing of the party, based in the rural Midwest and led by Senator [[Kenneth S. Wherry]] (R-Nebraska), was outmaneuvered by the emerging internationalist wing, led by Senator [[Arthur H. Vandenberg]] (R-Michigan). The opposition argued that it made no sense to oppose communism by supporting the socialist governments in Western Europe; and that American goods would reach Russia and increase its war potential. They called it "a wasteful 'operation rat-hole'"{{sfn |Bailey |1977 |p=232}} Vandenberg, assisted by Senator [[Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.]] (R-Massachusetts) admitted there was no certainty that the plan would succeed, but said it would halt economic chaos, sustain Western civilization, and stop further Soviet expansion. Senator [[Robert A. Taft]] (R-Ohio) hedged on the issue. He said it was without economic justification; however, it was "absolutely necessary" in "the world battle against communism." In the end, only 17 senators voted against it on March 13, 1948{{sfn|Campbell|1948|pp=500–05}} A bill granting an initial $5 billion passed Congress with strong bipartisan support. Congress eventually allocated $12.4 billion in aid over the four years of the plan.{{sfn|Grogin|2001|p=118}} |
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Congress reflected public opinion, which resonated with the ideological argument that communism flourishes in poverty |
Congress reflected public opinion, which resonated with the ideological argument that communism flourishes in poverty. Across America, multiple interest groups, including business, labor, farming, philanthropy, ethnic groups, and religious groups, saw the Marshall Plan as an inexpensive solution to a massive problem, noting it would also help American exports and stimulate the American economy as well. Major newspapers were highly supportive, including such conservative outlets as [[Time (magazine)|''Time'' magazine]]. Vandenberg made sure of bipartisan support on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The Solid Democratic South was highly supportive, the upper Midwest was dubious, but heavily outnumbered. The plan was opposed by conservatives in the rural Midwest, who opposed any major government spending program and were highly suspicious of Europeans.{{sfn|Smuckler|1953|pp=386–401}} The plan also had some opponents on the left, led by [[Henry A. Wallace]], the former vice president. He said the plan was hostile to the Soviet Union, a subsidy for American exporters, and sure to polarize the world between East and West.{{sfn|Hogan|1987|p=93}} However, opposition against the Marshall Plan was greatly reduced by the shock of the [[Czechoslovak coup d'état of 1948|communist coup in Czechoslovakia]] in February 1948. The appointment of the prominent businessman [[Paul G. Hoffman]] as director reassured conservative businessmen that the gigantic sums of money would be handled efficiently.{{sfnm|Hitchens|1968|1pp=51–68|Kunz|1997|2p=}} |
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==Negotiations== |
==Negotiations== |
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Turning the plan into reality required negotiations among the participating nations. |
Turning the plan into reality required negotiations among the participating nations. Sixteen nations met in Paris to determine what form the American aid would take, and how it would be divided. The negotiations were long and complex, with each nation having its own interests. France's major concern was that Germany not be rebuilt to its previous level of might. The [[Benelux]] countries (Belgium, Netherlands, and Luxembourg), despite also suffering under the Nazis, had long been closely linked to the German economy and felt their prosperity depended on its revival. The Scandinavian nations, especially [[Sweden]], insisted that their long-standing trading relationships with the Eastern Bloc nations not be disrupted and that their neutrality not be infringed.{{sfn|Cini|2001|p=24}} |
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The United Kingdom insisted on special status as a longstanding belligerent during the war, concerned that if it were treated equally with the devastated continental powers it would receive virtually no aid. The Americans were pushing the importance of free trade and European unity to form a bulwark against communism. The Truman administration, represented by [[William L. Clayton]], promised the Europeans that they would be free to structure the plan themselves, but the administration also reminded the Europeans that implementation depended on the plan's passage through Congress. A majority of Congress members were committed to free trade and European integration |
The United Kingdom insisted on special status as a longstanding belligerent during the war, concerned that if it were treated equally with the devastated continental powers, it would receive virtually no aid. The Americans were pushing the importance of free trade and European unity to form a bulwark against communism. The Truman administration, represented by [[William L. Clayton]], promised the Europeans that they would be free to structure the plan themselves, but the administration also reminded the Europeans that implementation depended on the plan's passage through Congress. A majority of Congress members were committed to free trade and European integration and were hesitant to spend too much of the money on Germany.{{sfn|Cini|2001|p=24}} However, before the Marshall Plan was in effect, France, Austria, and Italy needed immediate aid. On December 17, 1947, the United States agreed to give $40 million to France, Austria, China, and Italy.{{sfn|Sorel|Padoan|2008|pp=15–16}} |
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Agreement was eventually reached and the Europeans sent a reconstruction plan to Washington, which was formulated and agreed upon by the [[Committee of European Economic Co-operation]] in 1947. In the document, the Europeans asked for $22 billion in aid. Truman cut this to $17 billion in the bill he put to Congress. |
Agreement was eventually reached, and the Europeans sent a reconstruction plan to Washington, which was formulated and agreed upon by the [[Committee of European Economic Co-operation]] in 1947. In the document, the Europeans asked for $22 billion in aid. Truman cut this to $17 billion in the bill he put to Congress. |
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On March 17, 1948, Truman addressed European security and condemned the Soviet Union before a hastily convened [[Joint Session of Congress]]. Attempting to contain spreading Soviet influence in the Eastern Bloc, Truman asked Congress to restore a peacetime military draft and to swiftly pass the '''Economic Cooperation Act |
On March 17, 1948, Truman addressed European security and condemned the Soviet Union before a hastily convened [[Joint Session of Congress]]. Attempting to contain spreading Soviet influence in the Eastern Bloc, Truman asked Congress to restore a peacetime military draft and to swiftly pass the '''Economic Cooperation Act''', the name given to the Marshall Plan. Of the Soviet Union Truman said, "The situation in the world today is not primarily the result of the natural difficulties which follow a great war. It is chiefly due to the fact that one nation has not only refused to cooperate in the establishment of a just and honorable peace but—even worse—has actively sought to prevent it.{{sfn|Truman|1948}} |
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Members of the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican-controlled]] [[80th United States Congress|80th Congress]] (1947–1949) were skeptical. "In effect, he told the Nation that we have lost the peace, that our whole war effort was in vain.", noted Representative [[Frederick Cleveland Smith|Frederick Smith]] of Ohio. Others thought he had not been forceful enough to contain the USSR. "What [Truman] said fell short of being tough", noted Representative [[Edward E. Cox|Eugene Cox]], a Democrat from Georgia, "there is no prospect of ever winning Russian cooperation." Despite its reservations, the 80th Congress implemented Truman's requests, further escalating the Cold War with the USSR. |
Members of the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican-controlled]] [[80th United States Congress|80th Congress]] (1947–1949) were skeptical. "In effect, he told the Nation that we have lost the peace, that our whole war effort was in vain.", noted Representative [[Frederick Cleveland Smith|Frederick Smith]] of Ohio. Others thought he had not been forceful enough to contain the USSR. "What [Truman] said fell short of being tough", noted Representative [[Edward E. Cox|Eugene Cox]], a Democrat from Georgia, "there is no prospect of ever winning Russian cooperation." Despite its reservations, the 80th Congress implemented Truman's requests, further escalating the Cold War with the USSR.{{sfn|Truman|1948}} |
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Truman signed the Economic Cooperation Act into law on April 3, 1948; the Act established the [[Economic Cooperation Administration]] (ECA) to administer the program. ECA was headed by economic cooperation administrator [[Paul G. Hoffman]]. In the same year, the participating countries (Austria, [[Belgium]], Denmark, France, West Germany, the United Kingdom, Greece, [[Iceland]], Ireland, Italy, [[Luxembourg]], the [[Netherlands]], Norway, Sweden, [[Switzerland]], Turkey, and the United States) signed an accord establishing a master financial-aid-coordinating agency, the [[Organisation for European Economic Co-operation]] (later called the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development or [[OECD]]), which was headed by Frenchman [[Robert Marjolin]]. |
Truman signed the Economic Cooperation Act into law on April 3, 1948; the Act established the [[Economic Cooperation Administration]] (ECA) to administer the program. ECA was headed by economic cooperation administrator [[Paul G. Hoffman]]. In the same year, the participating countries (Austria, [[Belgium]], Denmark, France, West Germany, the United Kingdom, Greece, [[Iceland]], Ireland, Italy, [[Luxembourg]], the [[Netherlands]], Norway, Sweden, [[Switzerland]], Turkey, and the United States) signed an accord establishing a master financial-aid-coordinating agency, the [[Organisation for European Economic Co-operation]] (later called the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development or [[OECD]]), which was headed by Frenchman [[Robert Marjolin]].{{cn|date=January 2023}} |
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==Implementation== |
==Implementation== |
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{{more citations needed section|date=March 2017}} |
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[[File:Marshall plan page 1.jpg|thumb|First page of the Marshall Plan]] |
[[File:Marshall plan page 1.jpg|thumb|First page of the Marshall Plan]] |
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The first substantial aid went to [[Greece]] and [[Turkey]] in January 1947, which were seen as the front line of the battle against communist expansion, and were already receiving aid under the [[Truman Doctrine]]. Initially, Britain had supported the anti-communist factions in those countries, but due to its dire economic condition it decided to pull out and in February 1947 requested the US to continue its efforts.<ref>Alan Bullock, ''Ernest Bevin: Foreign Secretary'' (1983) pp 368-9; Arnold Offner, ''Another Such Victory'' (2002) p 197; Denise M. Bostdorff, ''Proclaiming the Truman Doctrine'' (2008) p 51</ref> The ECA formally began operation in July 1948. |
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According to Armin Grünbacher: |
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The ECA's official [[mission statement]] was to give a boost to the European economy: to promote European production, to bolster European currency, and to facilitate international trade, especially with the United States, whose economic interest required Europe to become wealthy enough to import US goods. Another unofficial goal of ECA (and of the Marshall Plan) was the containment of growing Soviet influence in Europe, evident especially in the growing strength of [[communist party|communist parties]] in Czechoslovakia, France, and Italy. |
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{{blockquote|The U.S. government did not give money directly to the participating countries so that they could buy whatever they thought they needed. Instead the U.S. delivered the goods and provided services, mainly transatlantic shipping, to the participating governments, which then sold the commodities to businesses and individuals who had to pay the dollar value of the goods in local currency ("counterparts") into so-called ERP Special Accounts that were set up at the country's central bank. This way of operation held three advantages: the provision of U.S. goods to Europe without European dollar payments helped to narrow the [[dollar gap]] that strangled European reconstruction; the accumulated funds could be used for investments in long-term reconstruction (as happened in France and Germany) or for paying off a government's war debts (as in Great Britain); and the payments of the goods in local currencies helped to limit inflation by taking these funds temporarily out of circulation while they were held in the Special Accounts.{{sfn|Grünbacher |2012}}}} |
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The ECA's official [[mission statement]] was to give a boost to the European economy: to promote European production, to bolster European currency, and to facilitate international trade, especially with the United States, whose economic interest required Europe to become wealthy enough to import US goods. Another unofficial goal of ECA (and of the Marshall Plan) was the containment of growing Soviet influence in Europe, evident especially in the growing strength of [[communist party|communist parties]] in France, and Italy. |
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The Marshall Plan money was transferred to the governments of the European nations. The funds were jointly administered by the local governments and the ECA. Each European [[capital (political)|capital]] had an ECA envoy, generally a prominent American businessman, who would advise on the process. The cooperative allocation of funds was encouraged, and panels of government, business, and labor leaders were convened to examine the economy and see where aid was needed. |
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The Marshall Plan money was transferred to the governments of the European nations. The funds were jointly administered by the local governments and the ECA. Each European capital had an ECA envoy, generally a prominent American businessman who would advise on the process. The cooperative allocation of funds was encouraged, and panels of government, business and labor leaders were convened to examine the economy and see where aid was needed. The recipient nations were represented collectively by the [[Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development]] (OECD), headed by British statesman [[Oliver Franks]].{{sfn|Clayton|1963}} |
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The Marshall Plan aid was mostly used for the purchase of goods from the United States. The European nations had all but exhausted their [[foreign-exchange reserves]] during the war, and the Marshall Plan aid represented almost their sole means of importing goods from abroad. At the start of the plan, these imports were mainly much-needed staples such as food and fuel, but later the purchases turned towards reconstruction needs as was originally intended. In the latter years, under pressure from the United States Congress and with the outbreak of the [[Korean War]], an increasing amount of the aid was spent on rebuilding the militaries of Western Europe. Of the some $13 billion allotted by mid-1951, $3.4 billion had been spent on imports of raw materials and semi-manufactured products; $3.2 billion on food, feed, and fertilizer; $1.9 billion on machines, vehicles, and equipment; and $1.6 billion on fuel.<ref>Hogan, p.415</ref> |
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The Marshall Plan aid was mostly used for goods from the United States. The European nations had all but exhausted their [[foreign-exchange reserves]] during the war, and the Marshall Plan aid represented almost their sole means of importing goods from abroad. At the start of the plan, these imports were mainly much-needed staples such as food and fuel, but later the purchases turned toward reconstruction needs as was originally intended. In the latter years, under pressure from the United States Congress and with the outbreak of the [[Korean War]], an increasing amount of the aid was spent on rebuilding the militaries of Western Europe. Of the some $13 billion allotted by mid-1951, $3.4 billion had been spent on imports of raw materials and semi-manufactured products; $3.2 billion on food, feed, and fertilizer; $1.9 billion on machines, vehicles and equipment; and $1.6 billion on fuel.{{sfn|Hogan|1987|p=415}} |
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Also established were [[counterpart fund]]s, which used Marshall Plan aid to establish funds in the local currency. According to ECA rules, recipients had to invest 60% of these funds in industry. This was prominent in Germany, where these government-administered funds played a crucial role in lending money to private enterprises which would spend the money rebuilding. These funds played a central role in the reindustrialization of Germany. In 1949–50, for instance, 40% of the investment in the German coal industry was by these funds.<ref>Crafts, Toniolo, p.464</ref> |
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Also established were [[counterpart fund]]s, which used Marshall Plan aid to establish funds in the local currency. According to ECA rules, recipients had to invest 60% of these funds in industry. This was prominent in Germany where these government-administered funds played a crucial role in lending money to private enterprises which would spend the money rebuilding. These funds played a central role in the reindustrialization of Germany. In 1949–50, for instance, 40% of the investment in the German coal industry was by these funds.{{sfn|Crafts|Toniolo|1996|p=464}} |
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The companies were obligated to repay the loans to the government, and the money would then be lent out to another group of businesses. This process has continued to this day in the guise of the state-owned [[KfW]] bank, (Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau, meaning Reconstruction Credit Institute). The Special Fund, then supervised by the Federal Economics Ministry, was worth over DM 10 billion in 1971. In 1997 it was worth DM 23 billion. Through the revolving loan system, the Fund had by the end of 1995 made low-interest loans to German citizens amounting to around DM 140 billion. The other 40% of the counterpart funds were used to pay down the debt, stabilize the currency, or invest in non-industrial projects. France made the most extensive use of counterpart funds, using them to reduce the budget deficit. In France, and most other countries, the counterpart fund money was absorbed into general government revenues, and not recycled as in Germany.{{Citation needed|date=January 2010}} |
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The companies were obligated to repay the loans to the government, and the money would then be lent out to another group of businesses. This process has continued to this day in the guise of the state-owned [[KfW]] bank, (Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau, meaning Reconstruction Credit Institute). The Special Fund, then supervised by the Federal Economics Ministry, was worth over DM 10 billion in 1971. In 1997 it was worth DM 23 billion. Through the revolving loan system, the Fund had by the end of 1995 made low-interest loans to German citizens amounting to around DM 140 billion. The other 40% of the counterpart funds were used to pay down the debt, stabilize the currency, or invest in non-industrial projects. France made the most extensive use of counterpart funds, using them to reduce the budget deficit. In France, and most other countries, the counterpart fund money was absorbed into general government revenues, and not recycled as in Germany.{{sfn|Harries|Underwood|1998}} |
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The Netherlands received US aid for economic recovery in the Netherlands Indies. However, in January 1949, the American government suspended this aid in response to the Dutch efforts to restore colonial rule in Indonesia during the [[Indonesian National Revolution]], and it implicitly threatened to suspend Marshall aid to the Netherlands if the Dutch government continued to oppose the independence of [[Indonesia]].<ref>Van der Eng (1988).</ref> |
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The Netherlands received US aid for economic recovery in the Netherlands Indies. However, in January 1949, the American government suspended this aid in response to the Dutch efforts to restore colonial rule in Indonesia during the [[Indonesian National Revolution]], and it implicitly threatened to suspend Marshall aid to the Netherlands if the Dutch government continued to oppose the independence of [[Indonesia]].{{sfn|Van der Eng|1988|pp=335–52}} |
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At the time the United States was a significant oil producing nation — one of the goals of the Marshall Plan was for Europe to use oil in place of coal, but the Europeans wanted to buy [[crude oil]] and use the Marshall Plan funds to build refineries instead. However, when independent American oil companies complained, the ECA denied funds for European refinery construction.<ref>{{Cite book |publisher= Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn= 978-0-275-94562-6 |last= Pelletiere |first= Stephen C. |title= Iraq and the International Oil System: Why America Went to War in the Gulf |chapter= 3. The Fall of Mosadeq and the Triumph of the Oil Cartel in the United States |date= 2001}}</ref> |
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At the time the United States was a significant oil producing nation—one of the goals of the Marshall Plan was for Europe to use oil in place of coal, but the Europeans wanted to buy crude oil and use the Marshall Plan funds to build refineries instead. However, when independent American oil companies complained, the ECA denied funds for European refinery construction.{{sfn|Pelletiere|2001|loc=ch. 3}} |
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===Technical Assistance Program=== |
===Technical Assistance Program=== |
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[[File:Marshallplanhilfe.gif|thumb|Construction in West Berlin with the help of the Marshall Plan after 1948. The plaque reads: "Emergency Program Berlin |
[[File:Marshallplanhilfe.gif|thumb|Construction in West Berlin with the help of the Marshall Plan after 1948. The plaque reads: "Emergency Program Berlin – with the help of the Marshall Plan"]] |
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[[File:MarshallDonkey.jpg|thumb|US aid to Greece under the Marshall Plan]] |
[[File:MarshallDonkey.jpg|thumb|US aid to Greece under the Marshall Plan]] |
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A high priority was increasing industrial productivity in Europe, which proved one of the more successful aspects of the Marshall Plan. |
A high priority was increasing industrial productivity in Europe, which proved one of the more successful aspects of the Marshall Plan.{{sfn|Fossat|2018|pages=582–600}} The US [[Bureau of Labor Statistics]] (BLS) contributed heavily to the success of the Technical Assistance Program. The United States Congress passed a law on June 7, 1940, that allowed the BLS to "make continuing studies of labor productivity"{{sfn|Wasser|Dolfman|2005|p=44}} and appropriated funds for the creation of a Productivity and Technological Development Division. The BLS could then use its expertise in the field of productive efficiency to implement a productivity drive in each Western European country receiving Marshall Plan aid. Counterpart funds were used to finance large-scale tours of American industry. France, for example, sent 500 missions with 4700 businessmen and experts to tour American factories, farms, stores, and offices. They were especially impressed with the prosperity of American workers, and how they could purchase an inexpensive new automobile for nine months work, compared to 30 months in France.{{sfn|Kuisel|1993|pp=70–102}} |
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By implementing technological literature surveys and organized plant visits, American economists, statisticians, and engineers were able to educate European manufacturers in statistical measurement. The goal of the statistical and technical assistance from the Americans was to increase productive efficiency of European manufacturers in all industries. |
By implementing technological literature surveys and organized plant visits, American economists, statisticians, and engineers were able to educate European manufacturers in statistical measurement. The goal of the statistical and technical assistance from the Americans was to increase productive efficiency of European manufacturers in all industries. |
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To conduct this analysis, the BLS performed two types of productivity calculations. First, they used existing data to calculate how much a worker produces per hour of work—the average output rate. Second, they compared the existing output rates in a particular country to output rates in other nations. By performing these calculations across all industries, the BLS was able to identify the strengths and weaknesses of each country's manufacturing and industrial production. From that, the BLS could recommend technologies (especially statistical) that each individual nation could implement. Often, these technologies came from the United States; by the time the Technical Assistance Program began, the United States used statistical technologies "more than a generation ahead of what [the Europeans] were using". |
To conduct this analysis, the BLS performed two types of productivity calculations. First, they used existing data to calculate how much a worker produces per hour of work—the average output rate. Second, they compared the existing output rates in a particular country to output rates in other nations. By performing these calculations across all industries, the BLS was able to identify the strengths and weaknesses of each country's manufacturing and industrial production. From that, the BLS could recommend technologies (especially statistical) that each individual nation could implement. Often, these technologies came from the United States; by the time the Technical Assistance Program began, the United States used statistical technologies "more than a generation ahead of what [the Europeans] were using".{{sfn|Wasser|Dolfman|2005|p=44}} |
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The BLS used these statistical technologies to create Factory Performance Reports for Western European nations. The American government sent hundreds of technical advisers to Europe to observe workers in the field. This on-site analysis made the Factory Performance Reports especially helpful to the manufacturers. In addition, the Technical Assistance Program funded 24,000 European engineers, leaders, and industrialists to visit America and tour America's factories, mines, and manufacturing plants. |
The BLS used these statistical technologies to create Factory Performance Reports for Western European nations. The American government sent hundreds of technical advisers to Europe to observe workers in the field. This on-site analysis made the Factory Performance Reports especially helpful to the manufacturers. In addition, the Technical Assistance Program funded 24,000 European engineers, leaders, and industrialists to visit America and tour America's factories, mines, and manufacturing plants.{{sfn|Johnson|2002|p=2}} This way, the European visitors would be able to return to their home countries and implement the technologies used in the United States. The analyses in the Factory Performance Reports and the "hands-on" experience had by the European productivity teams effectively identified productivity deficiencies in European industries; from there, it became clearer how to make European production more effective. |
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Before the Technical Assistance Program even went into effect, United States Secretary of Labor [[Maurice J. Tobin|Maurice Tobin]] expressed his confidence in American productivity and technology to both American and European economic leaders. He urged that the United States play a large role in improving European productive efficiency by providing four recommendations for the program's administrators: |
Before the Technical Assistance Program even went into effect, [[United States Secretary of Labor]] [[Maurice J. Tobin|Maurice Tobin]] expressed his confidence in American productivity and technology to both American and European economic leaders. He urged that the United States play a large role in improving European productive efficiency by providing four recommendations for the program's administrators: |
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# That BLS productivity personnel should serve on American-European councils for productivity; |
# That BLS productivity personnel should serve on American-European councils for productivity; |
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# that productivity targets (based on American productivity standards) can and should be implemented to increase productivity; |
# that productivity targets (based on American productivity standards) can and should be implemented to increase productivity; |
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# that there should be a general exchange and publication of information; and |
# that there should be a general exchange and publication of information; and |
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# that the "technical abstract" service should be the central source of information. |
# that the "technical abstract" service should be the central source of information.{{sfn|Wasser|Dolfman|2005|p=44}} |
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The effects of the Technical Assistance Program were not limited to improvements in productive efficiency. While the thousands of European leaders took their work/study trips to the United States, they were able to observe a number of aspects of American society as well. The Europeans could watch local, state, and federal governments work together with citizens in a pluralist society. They observed a democratic society with open universities and civic societies in addition to more advanced factories and manufacturing plants. The Technical Assistance Program allowed Europeans to bring home many types of American ideas. |
The effects of the Technical Assistance Program were not limited to improvements in productive efficiency. While the thousands of European leaders took their work/study trips to the United States, they were able to observe a number of aspects of American society as well. The Europeans could watch local, state, and federal governments work together with citizens in a pluralist society. They observed a democratic society with open universities and civic societies in addition to more advanced factories and manufacturing plants. The Technical Assistance Program allowed Europeans to bring home many types of American ideas.{{sfn|Johnson|2002|p=2}} |
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Another important aspect of the Technical Assistance Program was its low cost. While $19.4 billion was allocated for capital costs in the Marshall Plan, the Technical Assistance Program only required $300 million. Only one-third of that $300 million cost was paid by the United States. |
Another important aspect of the Technical Assistance Program was its low cost. While $19.4 billion was allocated for capital costs in the Marshall Plan, the Technical Assistance Program only required $300 million. Only one-third of that $300 million cost was paid by the United States.{{sfn|Wasser|Dolfman|2005|p=49}} |
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===United Kingdom=== |
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[[File:DBP 1960 344 George C. Marshall.jpg|thumb|upright|1960 West German stamp honoring George Marshall]] |
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The economy was precarious during the age of austerity, as wartime restrictions and rationing continued, and the wartime bombing damage was slowly being rebuilt at great cost.<ref> David Kynaston, ''Austerity Britain, 1945–1951'' (2008)</ref> The Treasury depended heavily on American money, especially [[Anglo-American loan|the 1946 loan of $3.75 billion]] at a low 2% interest rate.{{Sfn|U.S. Statistical Abstract|1949|p=[http://www2.census.gov/prod2/statcomp/documents/1949-12.pdf 846]}} Even more helpful was the gift of $2.694 billion in Marshall Plan funds in 1948-1951. Canada also provided gifts and $1.25 billion in loans.<ref>Derek H. Aldcroft, ''The British Economy: Volume 1 The Years of Turmoil, 1920-1951'' (1986) pp.206, 209. [https://archive.org/details/isbn_0710801149 online].</ref><ref>Michael J. Hogan, ''The Marshall Plan: America, Britain and the Reconstruction of Western Europe, 1947-1952'' (Cambridge Up, 1987), pp. 29, 31, 48, 82–84.</ref><ref>Kenneth O. Morgan, ''Labour in Power, 1945-1951'' (1984) pp.270–272, 366.</ref><ref>Norman Moss, ''Picking up the Reins: America, Britain and the Postwar World''(Duckworth, 2008) pp.131–151.</ref> The Marshall money was a gift but carried requirements that Britain balance its budget, control tariffs, improve management, and maintain adequate currency reserves. The [[Attlee ministry|British Labour government]] under Prime Minister [[Clement Attlee]] was an enthusiastic participant.{{sfn|Newton|1984}}{{sfn|Pelling|1988}} |
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The American goals for the Marshall plan were to help rebuild the postwar British economy, help modernize the economy, and minimize trade barriers. When the Soviet Union refused to participate or allow its satellites to participate, the Marshall plan became an element of the emerging Cold War.{{sfn|Cromwell|1982}} |
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===German level of industry restrictions=== |
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Even while the Marshall Plan was being implemented, the dismantling of ostensibly German industry continued; and in 1949 [[Konrad Adenauer]], an opponent to Hitler's regime and the head of the Christian Democratic Union,<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=The World Transformed: 1945 to the Present|last=Hunt|first=Michael|publisher=Oxford|year=2016|isbn=978-0-19-937102-0|location=New York|pages=93}}</ref> wrote to the Allies requesting the end of industrial dismantling, citing the inherent contradiction between encouraging industrial growth and removing factories, and also the unpopularity of the policy.<ref>Dennis L. Bark and David R. Gress. ''A history of West Germany vol 1: from shadow to substance'' (''Oxford 1989'') p259</ref> Adenauer had been released from prison, only to discover that the Soviets had effectively divided Europe with Germany divided even further.<ref name=":0" /> Support for dismantling was by this time coming predominantly from the French, and the [[Petersberg Agreement]] of November 1949 greatly reduced the levels of [[deindustrialization]], though dismantling of minor factories continued until 1951.<ref>Dennis L. Bark and David R. Gress. ''A history of West Germany vol 1: from shadow to substance'' (Oxford 1989) p260</ref> The first "level of industry" plan, signed by the Allies on March 29, 1946, had stated that German heavy industry was to be lowered to 50% of its 1938 levels by the destruction of 1,500 listed [[manufacturing plant]]s.<ref>[[Henry C. Wallich]]. ''Mainsprings of the German Revival'' (''1955'') pg. 348.</ref> Marshall Plan played a huge role in post-war recovery for Europe in general. 1948, conditions were improving, European workers exceeded by 20 percent from the earning from the west side. Thanks to the Plan, during 1952, it went up 35 percent of the industrial and agricultural.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Thomas|first1=Vladimir|title=the world transformed 1945 to the present|date=February 5, 2017|publisher=Micheal H. Hunt|pages=91|edition=Second}}</ref> |
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There were political tensions between the two nations regarding Marshall plan requirements.{{sfn|Maier|1990}} London was dubious about Washington's emphasis on European economic integration as the solution to postwar recovery. Integration with Europe at this point would mean cutting close ties to the emerging Commonwealth. London tried to convince Washington that American economic aid, especially to the sterling currency area, was necessary to solve the dollar shortage. British economists argued that their position was validated by 1950 as European industrial production exceeded prewar levels. Washington demanded convertibility of sterling currency on 15 July 1947, which produced a severe financial crisis for Britain. Convertibility was suspended on 20 August 1947. However, by 1950, American rearmament and heavy spending on the Korean War and Cold War finally ended the dollar shortage.{{sfn|Newton|1984}} The balance of payment problems that troubled the postwar government was caused less by economic decline and more by political overreach, according to Jim Tomlinson.{{sfn|Tomlinson|2009}} |
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In January 1946 the [[Allied Control Council]] set the foundation of the future German economy by putting a cap on German steel production. The maximum allowed was set at about 5,800,000 tons of steel a year, equivalent to 25% of the pre-war production level.<ref name="autogenerated3">[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,934360,00.html "Cornerstone of Steel"], ''[[Time (magazine)|TIME]]'', January 21, 1946</ref> The UK, in whose occupation zone most of the steel production was located, had argued for a more limited capacity reduction by placing the production ceiling at 12 million tons of steel per year, but had to submit to the will of the US, France and the Soviet Union (which had argued for a 3 million ton limit). Steel plants thus made redundant were to be dismantled. Germany was to be reduced to the standard of life it had known at the height of the [[Great Depression]] (1932).<ref name="autogenerated1">[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,852764,00.html Cost of Defeat], ''[[Time (magazine)|TIME]]'', April 8, 1946</ref> Consequently, car production was set to 10% of pre-war levels, and the manufacture of other commodities was reduced as well.<ref>[http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlestop/study_collections/marshall/large/documents/index.php?pagenumber=10&documentid=22&documentdate=1947-03-24&studycollectionid=mp&nav=OK The President's Economic Mission to Germany and Austria, Report 3] [[Herbert Hoover]], March 1947 pg. 8</ref> |
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According to economic historians N.F.R. Crafts and Nicholas Woodward, the Marshall Plan money had a powerful multiplier effect. In 1948-1949 free imports from the United States amounted to 2.4 percent of British GNP. However, they calculate that the multiplier effects increased the 1949 GNP by 10% to 20%.<ref>N.F.R. Crafts and Nicholas Woodward, ''The British Economy since 1945'' (Clarendon Press, 1991) pp.172–173.</ref> |
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===West Germany and Austria=== |
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[[File:DBP 1960 344 George C. Marshall.jpg|thumb|upright|1960 West German stamp honoring George Marshall]] |
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The Marshall Plan was implemented in West Germany (1948–1950), as a way to modernize business procedures and utilize the best practices. As a major prerequisite for delivery of aid, the [[Currency Reform of 1948]] was implemented on June 20. The Marshall Plan made it possible for West Germany to return quickly to its traditional pattern of industrial production with a strong export sector. Without the plan, agriculture would have played a larger role in the recovery period, which itself would have been longer.{{sfn|Hardach|1987}}{{sfn|Knapp|Stolper|Hudson|1981}}{{sfn|Major|1996}} With respect to Austria, Günter Bischof has noted that "the Austrian economy, injected with an overabundance of European Recovery Program funds, produced "miracle" growth figures that matched and at times surpassed the German ones."{{sfn|Bischof|2020|pp=38–72}} |
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Marshall aid in general and the counterpart funds in particular had a significant impact in Cold-War propaganda and economic matters in Western Europe, which most likely contributed to the declining appeal of domestic communist parties.{{sfn|Grünbacher |2012}} |
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The first "[[Industrial plans for Germany|German level of industry]]" plan was subsequently followed by a number of new ones, the last signed in 1949. By 1950, after the virtual completion of the by then much watered-down "level of industry" plans, equipment had been removed from 706 [[manufacturing plants]] in western Germany and steel production capacity had been reduced by 6,700,000 tons.<ref>Frederick H. Gareau "Morgenthau's Plan for Industrial Disarmament in Germany" The Western Political Quarterly, Vol. 14, No. 2 (Jun. 1961), pp. 517-534</ref> Vladimir Petrov concludes that the Allies "delayed by several years the [[economic reconstruction]] of the war-torn continent, a reconstruction which subsequently cost the United States billions of dollars."<ref>Vladimir Petrov, ''Money and conquest; allied occupation currencies in World War II.'' Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press (1967) p. 263</ref> In 1951 West Germany agreed to join the [[European Coal and Steel Community]] (ECSC) the following year. This meant that some of the economic restrictions on production capacity and on actual production that were imposed by the [[International Authority for the Ruhr]] were lifted, and that its role was taken over by the ECSC.<ref>[http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/History/History-idx?type=article&did=HISTORY.0057.0400.0023&isize=M Information bulletin Frankfurt, Germany: Office of the US High Commissioner for Germany Office of Public Affairs, Public Relations Division, APO 757, US Army, January 1952 ''"Plans for terminating international authority for the Ruhr"'', pp. 61-62] ([http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/History.omg1952Jan main URL])</ref> |
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==Expenditures== |
==Expenditures== |
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The Marshall Plan aid was divided among the participant states on a roughly per capita basis. A larger amount was given to the major industrial powers, as the prevailing opinion was that their resuscitation was essential for general European revival. Somewhat more aid per capita was also directed |
The Marshall Plan aid was divided among the participant states on a roughly per capita basis. A larger amount was given to the major industrial powers, as the prevailing opinion was that their resuscitation was essential for general European revival. Somewhat more aid per capita was also directed toward the [[Allies of World War II|Allied nations]], with less for those that had been part of the [[Axis powers of World War II|Axis]] or remained neutral. The exception was Iceland, which had been [[Iceland in World War II|neutral during the war]], but received far more on a per capita basis than the second highest recipient.{{sfn|Jonsson|Snævarr|2008|p=385}} |
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The table below shows Marshall Plan aid by country and year (in millions of dollars) from ''The Marshall Plan Fifty Years Later.''{{sfn|Schain|2001}} There is no clear consensus on exact amounts, as different scholars differ on exactly what elements of American aid during this period were part of the Marshall Plan. |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" |
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{|class="wikitable sortable" |
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|- |
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!class="unsortable"|Country |
!class="unsortable"|Country |
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Line 256: | Line 250: | ||
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|{{AUT}} |
|{{AUT}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |232 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |166 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |70 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |468 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{BEL}} and {{LUX}} |
|{{BEL}} and {{LUX}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |195 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |222 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |360 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |777 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{DEN}} |
|{{DEN}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |103 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |87 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |195 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |385 |
||
|- |
|- |
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|{{FRA}} |
|{{FRA}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |1,085 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |691 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |520 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |2,296 |
||
|- |
|- |
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|{{flagcountry|West Germany}} |
|{{flagcountry|West Germany}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |510 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |438 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |500 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |1,448 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{flagcountry|Kingdom of Greece}} |
|{{flagcountry|Kingdom of Greece}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |175 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |156 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |45 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |376 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{ISL}} |
|{{ISL}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |6 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |22 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |15 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |43 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{IRL}} |
|{{IRL}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |88 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |45 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |0 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |133 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{ITA}} and {{flagcountry|Trieste}} |
|{{ITA}} and {{flagcountry|Trieste}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |594 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |405 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |205 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |1,204 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{NLD}} |
|{{NLD}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |471 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |302 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |355 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |1,128 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{NOR}} |
|{{NOR}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |82 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |90 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |200 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |372 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{POR}} |
|{{POR}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |0 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |0 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |70 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |70 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{SWE}} |
|{{SWE}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |39 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |48 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |260 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |347 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{CHE}} |
|{{CHE}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |0 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |0 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |250 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |250 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{TUR}} |
|{{TUR}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |28 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |59 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |50 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |137 |
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|- |
|- |
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|{{UK}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |1,316 |
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| |
|style="text-align: right" |921 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |1,060 |
||
| |
|style="text-align: right" |3,297 |
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|- class="sortbottom" |
|- class="sortbottom" |
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! style="background:#efefef; text-align: left;" | |
! style="background:#efefef; text-align: left;" |Totals |
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! style="background:#efefef; text-align: right;" | |
! style="background:#efefef; text-align: right;" |4,924 |
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! style="background:#efefef; text-align: right;" | |
! style="background:#efefef; text-align: right;" |3,652 |
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! style="background:#efefef; text-align: right;" | |
! style="background:#efefef; text-align: right;" |4,155 |
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!style="background:#efefef; text-align: right" | |
!style="background:#efefef; text-align: right" |12,731 |
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|} |
|} |
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==Loans and grants== |
==Loans and grants== |
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The Marshall Plan, just as GARIOA, consisted of aid both in the form of grants and in the form of loans. |
The Marshall Plan, just as [[GARIOA]], consisted of aid both in the form of grants and in the form of loans.{{sfn|Guinnane|2005|p=17}} Out of the total, US$1.2 billion were loan-aid.{{sfn|Agnew|Entrikin|2004|p=110}} |
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Ireland which received US$146.2 million through the Marshall Plan, received US$128.2 million as loans, and the remaining US$18 million as grants. |
Ireland which received US$146.2 million through the Marshall Plan, received US$128.2 million as loans, and the remaining US$18 million as grants.{{sfn|Bartlett|2018|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=KwFWDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA626 626]}} By 1969 the Irish Marshall Plan debt, which was still being repaid, amounted to 31 million pounds, out of a total Irish foreign debt of 50 million pounds.{{sfn|Lydon|1998|p=391}} The UK received US$385 million of its Marshall Plan aid in the form of loans.{{sfn|Agnew|Entrikin|2004|p=110}} Unconnected to the Marshall Plan the UK also received direct loans from the US amounting to US$4.6 billion.{{sfn|Agnew|Entrikin|2004|p=110}} The proportion of Marshall Plan loans versus Marshall Plan grants was roughly 15% to 85% for both the UK and France.{{sfn|Guinnane|2005|p=28}} |
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Germany, which up until the 1953 [[Agreement on German External Debts|debt agreement]] had to work on the assumption that all the Marshall Plan aid was to be repaid, spent its funds very carefully. Payment for Marshall Plan goods, "counterpart funds", were administered by the [[KfW|Reconstruction Credit Institute]], which used the funds for loans inside Germany. In the 1953 debt agreement, the amount of Marshall Plan aid that Germany was to repay was reduced to less than US$1 billion.{{sfn|Reconstruction of Germany|2021|ps=: {{lang|de|Im Londoner Schuldenabkommen wurde jedoch festgelegt, dass Deutschland von den erhaltenen Mitteln lediglich knapp 1 Mrd.}} US-Dollar zurückzahlen musste. [In the London debt agreement, it was stipulated that Germany only had to repay just under US $ 1 billion of the funds received.]}} This made the proportion of loans versus grants to Germany similar to that of France and the UK.{{sfn|Guinnane|2005|p=28}} The final German loan repayment was made in 1971.{{sfn|Biesinger|2006|p=556}} Since Germany chose to repay the aid debt out of the German Federal budget, leaving the German ERP fund intact, the fund was able to continue its reconstruction work. By 1996 it had accumulated a value of 23 billion Deutsche Mark.{{sfn|Hardach|2004|p=306}} |
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The UK received US$385 million of its Marshall Plan aid in the form of loans.<ref name="autogenerated110"/> Unconnected to the Marshall Plan the UK also received direct loans from the US amounting to US$4.6 billion.<ref name="autogenerated110"/> The proportion of Marshall Plan loans versus Marshall Plan grants was roughly 15% to 85% for both the UK and France.<ref name="Timothy">Timothy W. Guinnane, FINANCIAL VERGANGENHEITSBEWÄLTIGUNG: |
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THE 1953 LONDON DEBT AGREEMENT, p.28</ref> |
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{|class="wikitable" |
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Germany, which up until the 1953 [[Agreement on German External Debts|Debt agreement]] had to work on the assumption that all the Marshall Plan aid was to be repaid, spent its funds very carefully. Payment for Marshall Plan goods, "counterpart funds", were administered by the [[KfW|Reconstruction Credit Institute]], which used the funds for loans inside Germany. In the 1953 Debt agreement, the amount of Marshall plan aid that Germany was to repay was reduced to less than US$1 billion.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.kfw.de/kfw/en/KfW_Group/About_KfW/Identity/History/Themenschwerpunkte/Marshallplan_und_ERP.jsp |title=The Marshall Plan and the ERP |publisher=Kfw.de |accessdate=2011-12-09}}</ref> This made the proportion of loans versus grants to Germany similar to that of France and the UK.<ref name="Timothy" /> The final German loan repayment was made in 1971.<ref>Joseph A. Biesinger, Germany: a reference guide from the Renaissance to the present, p.556</ref> Since Germany chose to repay the aid debt out of the German Federal budget, leaving the German ERP fund intact, the fund was able to continue its reconstruction work. By 1996 it had accumulated a value of 23 billion Deutsche Mark.<ref>Detlef Junker, The United States and Germany in the Era of the Cold War, 1945-1990: 1945-1968, p.306</ref> |
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|+ Economic aid from 3 April 1948 to 30 June 1952 {{nowrap|(in millions of dollars of the time)}} |
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! Countries !! Total (m$.) !! Grants (m$.) !! Loans (m$.) |
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|Austria ||677.8||677.8||/ |
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|Belgium-Luxembourg ||559.3||491.3||68.0{{efn|The total of the loan includes $65 million for Belgium and $3 million for Luxembourg: it is impossible to define the respective grants among the two countries.}} |
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|Denmark ||273.0||239.7||33.3 |
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|France ||2,713.6||2,488.0||255.6 |
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|Germany (FRG) ||1,390.6||1,173.7||216.9{{efn|This includes a first loan of $16.9 million, to which were added $200 million representing a proportionally divided portion of grants converted into loans according to an agreement signed on 27 February 1953.}} |
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|Greece ||706.7||706.7||/ |
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|Iceland ||29.3||24.0||5.3 |
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|Ireland ||147.5||19.3||128.2 |
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|Italy (incl. Trieste) ||1,208.8||1,113.2||95.6 |
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|Netherlands (*Indonesia){{efn|Aid of the Marshall Plan to the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia) extended to the Netherlands before the transfer of sovereignty on 30 December 1949. Total aids for the Dutch East Indies amounted to $101.4 million ($84.2 million in grants, $17.2 million in loans).}} ||1,083.5||916.8||166.7 |
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|Norway ||255.3||216.1||39.2 |
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|Portugal ||51.2||15.1||36.1 |
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|Sweden ||107.3||86.9||20.4 |
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|Turkey ||225.1||140.1||85.0 |
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|United Kingdom ||3,189.8||2,895.0||384.8 |
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|Regional ||407.0{{efn|This includes the US contribution to the funds of the European Payments Union, $361.4 million; general freight account $33.5 million; European authorisations for technical assistance (multi-countries or regional) $12.1 million.}}||407.0||/ |
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|Total for all countries ||13,325.8||11,820.7||1,505.1 |
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|} |
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{{notelist}} |
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==Funding for CIA fronts== |
==Funding for CIA fronts== |
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The [[Central Intelligence Agency]] received 5% of the Marshall Plan funds (about $685 million spread over six years), which it used to finance secret operations abroad. Through the [[Office of Policy Coordination]] money was directed |
The [[Central Intelligence Agency]] received 5% of the Marshall Plan funds (about $685 million spread over six years), which it used to finance secret operations abroad. Through the [[Office of Policy Coordination]] money was directed toward support for labor unions, newspapers, student groups, artists and intellectuals, who were countering the anti-American counterparts subsidized by the communists. The largest sum went to the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]]. There were no agents working among the Soviets or their satellite states.{{sfn|Weiner|2007|pp=[https://archive.org/details/legacyofasheshis00wein/page/32 32, 40–41]}} The founding conference of the Congress for Cultural Freedom was held in Berlin in June 1950. Among the leading intellectuals from the US and Western Europe were writers, philosophers, critics and historians: [[Raymond Aron]], [[Alfred Ayer]], [[Franz Borkenau]], [[Irving Brown]], [[James Burnham]], [[Benedetto Croce]], [[John Dewey]], [[Sidney Hook]], [[Karl Jaspers]], [[Arthur Koestler]], [[Melvin J. Lasky]], [[Richard Löwenthal]], [[Ernst Reuter]], [[Bertrand Russell]], [[Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.]], [[Ignazio Silone]], [[Hugh Trevor-Roper]], and [[Tennessee Williams]]. There were conservatives among the participants, but non-communist (or former communist) leftists were more numerous.{{sfnm|Jeleński |1970|1p=|Saunders|1999|2p=}} |
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==Effects and legacy== |
==Effects and legacy== |
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[[File:Marshall Plan poster.JPG|thumb|One of the numerous posters created to promote the Marshall Plan in Europe. Note the pivotal position of the American flag. The blue and white flag between those of Germany and Italy is a version of the [[Free Territory of Trieste|Trieste]] flag with the UN blue rather than the traditional red.]] |
[[File:Marshall Plan poster.JPG|thumb|One of the numerous posters created to promote the Marshall Plan in Europe. Note the pivotal position of the American flag. The blue and white flag between those of Germany and Italy is a version of the [[Free Territory of Trieste|Trieste]] flag with the UN blue rather than the traditional red.]] |
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The Marshall Plan was originally scheduled to end in 1953. Any effort to extend it was halted by the growing cost of the [[Korean War]] and rearmament. American Republicans hostile to the plan had also gained seats in the [[United States House of Representatives elections, 1950|1950 Congressional elections]], and conservative opposition to the plan was revived. Thus the plan ended in 1951, though various other forms of American aid to Europe continued |
The Marshall Plan was originally scheduled to end in 1953. Any effort to extend it was halted by the growing cost of the [[Korean War]] and rearmament. American Republicans hostile to the plan had also gained seats in the [[United States House of Representatives elections, 1950|1950 Congressional elections]], and conservative opposition to the plan was revived. Thus the plan ended in 1951, though various other forms of American aid to Europe continued afterward. |
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The years 1948 to 1952 saw the fastest period of growth in European history. Industrial production increased by 35%. Agricultural production substantially surpassed pre-war levels. |
The years 1948 to 1952 saw the fastest period of growth in European history. Industrial production increased by 35%. Agricultural production substantially surpassed pre-war levels.{{sfn|Grogin|2001|p=118}} The poverty and starvation of the immediate postwar years disappeared, and Western Europe embarked upon an unprecedented two decades of growth that saw standards of living increase dramatically. Additionally, the long-term effect of economic integration raised European income levels substantially, by nearly 20 percent by the mid-1970s.{{sfn|Badinger|2005|pp=50–78}} There is some debate among historians over how much this should be credited to the Marshall Plan. Most reject the idea that it alone miraculously revived Europe, as evidence shows that a general recovery was already underway. Most believe that the Marshall Plan sped this recovery, but did not initiate it. Many argue that the structural adjustments that it forced were of great importance. Economic historians [[J. Bradford DeLong]] and [[Barry Eichengreen]] call it "history's most successful structural adjustment program."{{sfn|DeLong|Eichengreen|1993|pp=189–230}} One effect of the plan was that it subtly "Americanized" European countries, especially Austria, through new exposure to American popular culture, including the growth in influence of Hollywood movies and rock n' roll.{{sfn|Bischof|Pelinka |Stiefel |2000|pp=174–75}} |
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The political effects of the Marshall Plan may have been just as important as the economic ones. Marshall Plan aid allowed the nations of Western Europe to relax austerity measures and rationing, reducing discontent and bringing political stability. The communist influence on Western Europe was greatly reduced, and throughout the region, communist parties faded in popularity in the years after the Marshall Plan. The trade relations fostered by the Marshall Plan helped forge the North Atlantic alliance that would persist throughout the Cold War in the form of NATO. At the same time, the nonparticipation of the states of the Eastern Bloc was one of the first clear signs that the continent was now divided. |
The political effects of the Marshall Plan may have been just as important as the economic ones. Marshall Plan aid allowed the nations of Western Europe to relax austerity measures and rationing, reducing discontent and bringing political stability. The communist influence on Western Europe was greatly reduced, and throughout the region, communist parties faded in popularity in the years after the Marshall Plan. The trade relations fostered by the Marshall Plan helped forge the North Atlantic alliance that would persist throughout the Cold War in the form of NATO. At the same time, the nonparticipation of the states of the Eastern Bloc was one of the first clear signs that the continent was now divided. |
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The Marshall Plan also played an important role in European integration. Both the Americans and many of the European leaders felt that European integration was necessary to secure the peace and prosperity of Europe, and thus used Marshall Plan guidelines to foster integration. In some ways, this effort failed, as the [[OEEC]] never grew to be more than an agent of economic cooperation. Rather, it was the separate [[European Coal and Steel Community]], which |
The Marshall Plan also played an important role in European integration. Both the Americans and many of the European leaders felt that European integration was necessary to secure the peace and prosperity of Europe, and thus used Marshall Plan guidelines to foster integration. In some ways, this effort failed, as the [[OEEC]] never grew to be more than an agent of economic cooperation. Rather, it was the separate [[European Coal and Steel Community]], which did not include Britain, that would eventually grow into the [[European Union]]. However, the OEEC served as both a testing and training ground for the structures that would later be used by the [[European Economic Community]]. The Marshall Plan, linked into the [[Bretton Woods system]], also mandated free trade throughout the region. |
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[[File:Netherlands 10 gulden Marshall Plan.jpg|thumb|160px|Dutch [[Dutch guilder|10 guilder]] coin commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Marshall Plan, 1997.]] |
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While some historians today feel some of the praise for the Marshall Plan is exaggerated, it is still viewed favorably and many thus feel that a similar project would help other areas of the world. After the fall of communism, several proposed a "Marshall Plan for Eastern Europe" that would help revive that region. Others have proposed a Marshall Plan for Africa to help that continent, and US [[Al Gore|Vice President Al Gore]] suggested a [[Global Marshall Plan]]. |
While some historians today feel some of the praise for the Marshall Plan is exaggerated, it is still viewed favorably and many thus feel that a similar project would help other areas of the world. The events of 1947 are thus part and parcel of the larger story of the Cold War. These events played a major role, but it would be a mistake to exaggerate their significance. The bloc system in Europe took years to develop, and the Marshall Plan was just one part of the story.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Trachtenberg |first1=Marc |title=The Marshall Plan as Tragedy |journal=Journal of Cold War Studies |date=Winter 2005 |volume=7 |issue=1 |page=140 |doi=10.1162/1520397053326220 |jstor=26925782 |s2cid=57567806 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26925782 |access-date=26 January 2024}}</ref> After the fall of communism, several proposed a "Marshall Plan for Eastern Europe" that would help revive that region. Others have proposed a Marshall Plan for Africa to help that continent, and US [[Al Gore|Vice President Al Gore]] suggested a [[Global Marshall Plan]].{{efn-ua|Marshall Plan style proposals for other parts of the world have been a perennial idea. For instance, [[Tony Blair]] and [[Gordon Brown]] have referred to their African aid goals as "a Marshall Plan".{{sfn|African Marshall Plan|2005}} After the end of the Cold War many felt Eastern Bloc needed a rebuilding plan.}} "Marshall Plan" has become a metaphor for any very large-scale government program that is designed to solve a specific social problem. It is usually used when calling for federal spending to correct a perceived failure of the private sector. |
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Nicholas Shaxson comments: |
[[Nicholas Shaxson]] comments: "It is widely believed that the plan worked by offsetting European countries' yawning deficits. But its real importance ... was simply to compensate for the US failure to institute controls on inflows of hot money from Europe. ... American post-war aid was less than the money flowing in the other direction."{{sfn|Shaxson |2012}} European hot money inflated the US dollar, to the disadvantage of US exporters. |
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==Repayment== |
==Repayment== |
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The [[Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development#Organisation for European Economic Co-operation|Organisation for European Economic Co-operation]] (OEEC) took the leading role in allocating funds, and the OEEC arranged for the transfer of the goods. The American supplier was paid in dollars, which were credited against the appropriate European Recovery Program funds. The European recipient, however, was not given the goods as a gift but had to pay for them (usually on credit) in local currency. These payments were kept by the European government involved in a special '''counterpart fund.''' This counterpart money, in turn, could be used by the government for further investment projects. Five percent of the counterpart money was paid to the US to cover the administrative costs of the ERP.{{sfn|Price|1955|p=106}} In addition to ERP grants, the [[Export-Import Bank of the United States|Export-Import Bank]] (an agency of the US government) at the same time made long-term loans at low interest rates to finance major purchases in the US, all of which were repaid. |
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In the case of Germany, there also were 16 billion marks of debts from the 1920s which had defaulted in the 1930s, but which Germany decided to repay to restore its reputation. This money was owed to government and private banks in the US, France, and Britain. Another 16 billion marks represented postwar loans by the US. Under the [[Agreement on German External Debts|London Debts Agreement]] of 1953, the repayable amount was reduced by 50% to about 15 billion marks and stretched out over 30 years, and compared to the fast-growing German economy were of minor impact. |
In the case of Germany, there also were 16 billion marks of debts from the 1920s which had defaulted in the 1930s, but which Germany decided to repay to restore its reputation. This money was owed to government and private banks in the US, France, and Britain. Another 16 billion marks represented postwar loans by the US. Under the [[Agreement on German External Debts|London Debts Agreement]] of 1953, the repayable amount was reduced by 50% to about 15 billion marks and stretched out over 30 years, and compared to the fast-growing German economy were of minor impact.{{sfn|Guinnane|2005|pp=17, 20–21, 27–28, 30}} |
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==Areas |
==Areas excluded== |
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Large parts of the world devastated by World War II did not benefit from the Marshall Plan. The only major Western European nation excluded was [[Francisco Franco |
Large parts of the world devastated by World War II did not benefit from the Marshall Plan. The only major Western European nation excluded was Spain, whose regime under [[Francisco Franco]] was highly unpopular in Washington. With the escalation of the Cold War, the United States reconsidered its position and in 1951 embraced Spain as an ally since it was encouraged by Franco's aggressive [[anti-communist]] policies. Over the next decade, a considerable amount of American aid would go to Spain but less than its neighbors had received under the Marshall Plan.{{sfn|Crafts|Toniolo|1996|p=363}} |
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The Soviet Union had been as badly affected as any part of the world by the war. The Soviets imposed large [[ |
The Soviet Union had been as badly affected as any other part of the world by the war. The Soviets imposed large [[war reparations|reparations]] payments on the Axis allies that were in its sphere of influence. [[Austria]], [[Finland]], [[Hungary]], [[Romania]], and especially [[East Germany]] were forced to pay vast sums and ship large amounts of supplies to the Soviet Union. Those reparation payments meant the Soviet Union itself received about the same as 16 European countries received in total from Marshall Plan aid.{{sfn|Zwass|1989|p=16}} |
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In accordance with the agreements with the |
In accordance with the agreements with the Soviet Union, shipment of dismantled German industrial installations from the west began on March 31, 1946. Under the terms of the agreement, the Soviet Union would in return ship raw materials such as food and timber to the western zones. In view of the Soviet failure to do so, the western zones halted the shipments east, ostensibly on a temporary basis, although they were never resumed. It was later shown that the main reason for halting shipments east was not the behavior of the Soviet Union but rather the recalcitrant behavior of France.{{sfn|Gimbel |1975}} Examples of material received by the Soviets were equipment from the [[Kugel-Fischer]] ballbearing plant at [[Schweinfurt]], the [[Daimler-Benz]] underground aircraft-engine plant at [[Obrigheim]], the [[Deschimag]] shipyards at [[Bremen-Weser]], and the [[Gendorf powerplant]].{{sfnm|U. S. Analysis of Soviet Note|1957|1p=|Potsdam Reparations Begin|1946|2p=}} |
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The |
The Soviets established [[COMECON]] as a riposte to the Marshall Plan to deliver aid for Eastern Bloc countries, but that was complicated by the Soviet efforts to manage their own recovery from the war. The members of Comecon looked to the Soviet Union for oil and in turn provided machinery, equipment, agricultural goods, industrial goods, and consumer goods to the Soviet Union. Economic recovery in the East was much slower than in the West, resulting in the formation of the [[shortage economy|shortage economies]] and a gap in wealth between East and West. Finland, which the Soviets forbade from joining the Marshall Plan and was required to give large reparations to the Soviets, saw its economy recover to pre-war levels in 1947.{{citation needed|date=September 2021}}<!-- Previous citation's source was blacklisted by Wikipedia --> France, which received billions of dollars through the Marshall Plan, similarly saw its average income per person return to almost pre-war level by 1949.{{sfn|De Long|Eichengreen|1993|p=202}} By mid-1948 industrial production in Poland, Hungary, [[Bulgaria]], and [[Czechoslovakia]] had recovered to a level somewhat above pre-war level.{{sfn|Warriner|1949|pp=157–67}} |
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===Aid to Asia=== |
===Aid to Asia=== |
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From the end of the war to the end of 1953, the US provided grants and credits amounting to $5.9 billion to Asian countries, especially China |
From the end of the war to the end of 1953, the US provided grants and credits amounting to $5.9 billion to Asian countries, especially the Republic of China (Taiwan) ($1.051 billion), India ($255 million), Indonesia ($215 million), Japan ($2.444 billion), South Korea ($894 million), Pakistan ($98 million) and the Philippines ($803 million). In addition, another $282 million went to Israel and $196 million to the rest of the Middle East.{{efn-ua|name=census|All data from the official document: U.S. Bureau of the Census, ''Statistical Abstract of the United States: 1954'' (1955) table 1075 pp. 899–902 [http://www2.census.gov/prod2/statcomp/documents/1954.zip online edition file 1954-08.pdf]}} All this aid was separate from the Marshall Plan.{{sfn|Price|1955|pp=179–219}} |
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===Canada=== |
===Canada=== |
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Canada |
Canada's infrastructure was damaged little by the war, as most of the war was fought in Europe, Asia, and the Pacific. In 1948, the US allowed ERP aid to be used to buy goods from Canada. In its first two years of operation, ERP funded over a billion dollars worth of trade with Canada{{sfn|Bothwell|1998|p=58}} |
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===World total=== |
===World total=== |
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The total of American grants and loans to the world from 1945 to 1953 came to $44.3 billion. |
The total of American grants and loans to the world from 1945 to 1953 came to $44.3 billion.{{efn-ua|name=census}} |
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== |
==Opinion== |
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[[File:Schild Bessere Düngung des Amerikanischen Hilfsprogramms.png|thumb|German sign indicating "agriculture counseling supported by the overseas aid program of the U.S.A."]] |
[[File:Schild Bessere Düngung des Amerikanischen Hilfsprogramms.png|thumb|German sign indicating "agriculture counseling supported by the overseas aid program of the U.S.A."]] |
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[[J. Bradford DeLong|Bradford DeLong]] and [[Barry Eichengreen]] conclude it was "History's Most Successful Structural Adjustment Program." They state: |
[[J. Bradford DeLong|Bradford DeLong]] and [[Barry Eichengreen]] conclude it was "History's Most Successful Structural Adjustment Program." They state: |
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<blockquote>It was not large enough to have significantly accelerated recovery by financing investment, aiding the reconstruction of damaged infrastructure, or easing commodity bottlenecks. We argue, however, that the Marshall Plan did play a major role in setting the stage for post-World War II Western Europe's rapid growth. The conditions attached to Marshall Plan aid pushed European political economy in a direction that left its post World War II "mixed economies" with more "market" and less "controls" in the mix. |
<blockquote>It was not large enough to have significantly accelerated recovery by financing investment, aiding the reconstruction of damaged infrastructure, or easing commodity bottlenecks. We argue, however, that the Marshall Plan did play a major role in setting the stage for post-World War II Western Europe's rapid growth. The conditions attached to Marshall Plan aid pushed European political economy in a direction that left its post World War II "mixed economies" with more "market" and less "controls" in the mix.{{sfn|DeLong|Eichengreen|1993|pp=189–230}}</blockquote> |
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=== |
===Domestic campaign for support=== |
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Prior to passing and enacting the Marshall Plan, President Truman and George Marshall started a domestic overhaul of public opinion from coast to coast. The purpose of this campaign was to sway public opinion in their direction and to inform the common person of what the Marshall Plan was and what the |
Prior to passing and enacting the Marshall Plan, President Truman and George Marshall started a domestic overhaul of public opinion from coast to coast. The purpose of this campaign was to sway public opinion in their direction and to inform the common person of what the Marshall Plan was and what the plan would ultimately do. They spent months attempting to convince Americans that their cause was just and that they should embrace the higher taxes that would come in the foreseeable future.{{sfn|Machado|2007}} The Great Depression left Americans acutely aware of the psychological and political effects of poverty. Though the Marshall Plan is seen as an act of compassion or sympathy for countries struggling after WWII, it is likely fear of slipping into another depression at home caused the United States to invest in diplomacy and pivot away from another economic calamity.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Weissman |first1=Alexander |title=Pivotal Politics: The Marshall Plan: A Turning Point in Foreign Aid and the Struggle for Democracy. |journal=The History Teacher |date=November 2013 |volume=47 |issue=1 |page=112}}</ref> |
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A copious amount of propaganda ended up being highly effective in swaying public opinion |
A copious amount of propaganda ended up being highly effective in swaying public opinion toward supporting the Marshall Plan. During the nationwide campaign for support, "more than a million pieces of pro-Marshall Plan publications-booklets, leaflets, reprints, and fact sheets", were disseminated.{{sfn|Lukacs|1997}} Truman's and Marshall's efforts proved to be effective. A Gallup Poll taken between the months of July and December 1947 shows the percentage of Americans unaware of the Marshall Plan fell from 51% to 36% nationwide.{{sfn|Machado|2007}} By the time the Marshall Plan was ready to be implemented, there was a general consensus throughout the American public that this was the right policy for both America, and the countries who would be receiving aid. |
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=== |
===Change in American ideology=== |
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During the period leading up to World War II, Americans were highly isolationist, and many called The Marshall Plan a "milestone" for American ideology. |
During the period leading up to World War II, Americans were highly isolationist, and many called The Marshall Plan a "milestone" for American ideology.{{sfn|Lukacs|1997}} By looking at polling data over time from pre-World War II to post-World War II, one would find that there was a change in public opinion in regards to ideology. Americans swapped their isolationist ideals for a much more global internationalist ideology after World War II. |
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=== |
===Polling data=== |
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In a [[NORC at the University of Chicago|National Opinion Research Center]] (NORC) poll taken in April 1945, a cross-section of Americans were asked, "If our government keeps on sending lendlease materials, which we may not get paid for, to friendly countries for about three years after the war, do you think this will mean more jobs or fewer jobs for most Americans, or won't it make any difference?" 75% said the same or more jobs; 10% said fewer. |
In a [[NORC at the University of Chicago|National Opinion Research Center]] (NORC) poll taken in April 1945, a cross-section of Americans were asked, "If our government keeps on sending lendlease materials, which we may not get paid for, to friendly countries for about three years after the war, do you think this will mean more jobs or fewer jobs for most Americans, or won't it make any difference?" 75% said the same or more jobs; 10% said fewer.{{sfn|Cantril |Strunk|1951 |p=414}} |
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Before proposing anything to Congress in 1947, the Truman administration made an elaborate effort to organize public opinion in favor of the Marshall Plan spending, reaching out to numerous national organizations representing business, labor, farmers, women, and other interest groups. Political scientist Ralph Levering points out that: |
Before proposing anything to Congress in 1947, the Truman administration made an elaborate effort to organize public opinion in favor of the Marshall Plan spending, reaching out to numerous national organizations representing business, labor, farmers, women, and other interest groups. Political scientist Ralph Levering points out that: |
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<blockquote>Mounting large public relations campaigns and supporting private groups such as the Citizens Committee for the Marshall Plan, the administration carefully built public and bipartisan Congressional support before bringing these measures to a vote. |
<blockquote>Mounting large public relations campaigns and supporting private groups such as the Citizens [[Committee for the Marshall Plan]], the administration carefully built public and bipartisan Congressional support before bringing these measures to a vote.{{sfn|Levering|1978|pp=98–99}}</blockquote> |
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Public opinion polls in 1947 consistently showed strong support for the Marshall plan among Americans. |
Public opinion polls in 1947 consistently showed strong support for the Marshall plan among Americans. Furthermore, Gallup polls in England, France, and Italy showed favorable majorities over 60%.{{sfn|Gallup |1972|pp=691, 708–09, 722}} |
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==Criticism== |
==Criticism== |
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The 1953 Spanish comedy film ''[[Welcome Mr. Marshall!]]'' depicts Castilian villagers preparing for a visit of the American authorities and hoping they will fulfill their desires. |
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When the American motorcade arrives, it speeds through the village and the villagers themselves have to pay for the preparations. |
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Underneath the surface, the film is an anti-[[Francoist Spain|Francoist]] satire despite receiving approval because the censorship board understood it to be an anti-American satire.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Arce |first=Julio |date=2011 |title=Irony, esperpento, and Parody in the Music of ¡Bienvenido Mister Marshall! |url=https://www.academia.edu/2029083 |journal=Journal of the Center for Iberian and Latin American Music}}</ref> |
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===Laissez-faire criticism=== |
===Laissez-faire criticism=== |
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[[Laissez-faire]] criticism of the Marshall Plan came from a number of economists. [[Wilhelm Röpke]], who influenced [[Federal Minister of Economics and Technology (Germany)|German Minister for Economy]] [[Ludwig Erhard]] in his [[Wirtschaftswunder|economic recovery program]], believed recovery would be found in eliminating [[central planning]] and restoring a market economy in Europe, especially in those countries which had adopted more [[fascism|fascist]] and [[corporatism|corporatist]] economic policies. Röpke criticized the Marshall Plan for forestalling the transition to the free market by subsidizing the current, failing systems. Erhard put Röpke's theory into practice and would later credit Röpke's influence for West Germany's preeminent success. |
[[Laissez-faire]] criticism of the Marshall Plan came from a number of economists. [[Wilhelm Röpke]], who influenced [[Federal Minister of Economics and Technology (Germany)|German Minister for Economy]] [[Ludwig Erhard]] in his [[Wirtschaftswunder|economic recovery program]], believed recovery would be found in eliminating [[central planning]] and restoring a market economy in Europe, especially in those countries which had adopted more [[fascism|fascist]] and [[corporatism|corporatist]] economic policies. Röpke criticized the Marshall Plan for forestalling the transition to the free market by subsidizing the current, failing systems. Erhard put Röpke's theory into practice and would later credit Röpke's influence for West Germany's preeminent success.{{sfn|Erhard|p=22}}{{sfn|Zmirak|2001}} |
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[[Henry Hazlitt]] criticized the Marshall Plan in his 1947 book ''Will Dollars Save the World?'', arguing that economic recovery comes through savings, capital accumulation, and private enterprise, and not through large cash subsidies. [[Austrian School]] economist [[Ludwig von Mises]] criticized the Marshall Plan in 1951, believing that "the American subsidies make it possible for [Europe's] governments to conceal partially the disastrous effects of the various socialist measures they have adopted". |
[[Henry Hazlitt]] criticized the Marshall Plan in his 1947 book ''Will Dollars Save the World?'', arguing that economic recovery comes through savings, [[capital accumulation]], and private enterprise, and not through large cash subsidies. [[Austrian School]] economist [[Ludwig von Mises]] criticized the Marshall Plan in 1951, believing that "the American subsidies make it possible for [Europe's] governments to conceal partially the disastrous effects of the various socialist measures they have adopted".{{sfn|Von Mises|2006}} |
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===Modern criticism=== |
===Modern criticism=== |
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The Marshall Plan's role in the rapid recovery of Western Europe has been debated. Most reject the idea that it alone miraculously revived Europe since the evidence shows that a general recovery was already underway. The Marshall Plan grants were provided at a rate that was not much higher in terms of flow than the previous [[UNRRA]] aid and represented less than 3% of the combined [[national income]] of the recipient countries between 1948 and 1951,{{sfn|DeLong|Eichengreen|1993|pp=189–230}} which would mean an increase in [[GDP]] growth of only 0.3%.{{sfn|Crafts|2011|p=6}} In addition, there is no correlation between the amount of aid received and the speed of recovery: both [[France]] and the [[United Kingdom]] received more aid, but [[West Germany]] recovered significantly faster.{{sfn|Crafts|2011|p=6}} |
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Criticism of the Marshall Plan became prominent among historians of the [[Historical revisionism|revisionist]] school, such as [[Walter LaFeber]], during the 1960s and 1970s. They argued that the plan was American economic [[imperialism]] and that it was an attempt to gain control over Western Europe just as the Soviets controlled Eastern Europe economically through the [[Comecon]]. In a review of West Germany's economy from 1945 to 1951, German analyst [[Werner Abelshauser]] concluded that "foreign aid was not crucial in starting the recovery or in keeping it going". The economic recoveries of France, Italy, and Belgium, Cowen argues, began a few months before the flow of US money. Belgium, the country that relied earliest and most heavily on free-market economic policies after its liberation in 1944, experienced swift recovery and avoided the severe housing and food shortages seen in the rest of continental Europe. |
Criticism of the Marshall Plan became prominent among historians of the [[Historical revisionism|revisionist]] school, such as [[Walter LaFeber]], during the 1960s and 1970s. They argued that the plan was American economic [[imperialism]] and that it was an attempt to gain control over Western Europe just as the Soviets controlled Eastern Europe economically through the [[Comecon]]. In a review of West Germany's economy from 1945 to 1951, German analyst [[Werner Abelshauser]] concluded that "foreign aid was not crucial in starting the recovery or in keeping it going". The economic recoveries of France, Italy, and Belgium, Cowen argues, began a few months before the flow of US money. Belgium, the country that relied earliest and most heavily on free-market economic policies after its liberation in 1944, experienced swift recovery and avoided the severe housing and food shortages seen in the rest of continental Europe.{{sfn|Marshall Plan for Iraq?|2003}} |
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Former US Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank [[Alan Greenspan]] gives most credit to German Chancellor [[Ludwig Erhard]] for Europe's economic recovery. Greenspan writes in his memoir ''[[The Age of Turbulence]]'' that Erhard's economic policies were the most important aspect of postwar Western European recovery, even outweighing the contributions of the Marshall Plan. He states that it was Erhard's reductions in economic regulations that permitted Germany's miraculous recovery, and that these policies also contributed to the recoveries of many other European countries. Its recovery is attributed to traditional economic stimuli, such as increases in investment, fueled by a high savings rate and low taxes. Japan saw a large infusion of US investment during the [[Korean War]]. |
Former US Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank [[Alan Greenspan]] gives most credit to German Chancellor [[Ludwig Erhard]] for Europe's economic recovery. Greenspan writes in his memoir ''[[The Age of Turbulence]]'' that Erhard's economic policies were the most important aspect of postwar Western European recovery, even outweighing the contributions of the Marshall Plan. He states that it was Erhard's reductions in economic regulations that permitted Germany's miraculous recovery, and that these policies also contributed to the recoveries of many other European countries. Its recovery is attributed to traditional economic stimuli, such as increases in investment, fueled by a high savings rate and low taxes. Japan saw a large infusion of US investment during the [[Korean War]].{{sfn|Forsberg|2000|p=84}} |
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[[File:2003 Austria 20 Euro The Post-War Period back.jpg|thumb|right|[[Euro gold and silver commemorative coins (Austria)#2003 coinage|The Postwar Period coin]]]] |
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The Marshall Plan has been recently reinterpreted as a public policy approach to complex and multi-causal problems in search of building integrated solutions with multilevel governance.{{sfn|Lassance|2021|pp=1–59}} |
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[[Noam Chomsky]] said the Marshall Plan "set the stage for large amounts of private U.S. investment in Europe, establishing the basis for modern [[Multinational corporation|transnational corporations]]".<ref>Chomsky, p. 9.</ref> |
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==In popular culture== |
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[[Alfred Friendly]], press aide to the US [[Secretary of Commerce]] [[W. Averell Harriman]], wrote a humorous operetta about the Marshall Plan during its first year; one of the lines in the operetta was: "Wines for Sale; will you swap / A little bit of steel for [[Châteauneuf-du-Pape AOC|Chateau Neuf du Pape]]?"<ref name="McKenzie">{{cite web|url=http://www.trumanlibrary.org/oralhist/gordonl.htm|author=Richard D. McKinzie|title=Oral History Interview with Lincoln Gordon|publisher=Truman Library|date=July 17, 1975|accessdate=December 2, 2008}}</ref> |
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Spanish director [[Luis García Berlanga]] co-wrote and directed the movie ''[[Welcome Mr. Marshall!]]'', a comedy about the residents of a small Spanish village who dream about the life of wealth and self-fulfilment the Marshall Plan will bring them. The film highlights the stereotypes held by both the Spanish and the Americans regarding the culture of the other, as well as displays social criticism of 1950s [[Francoist Spain]]. |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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{{Portal|Europe|United States}} |
{{Portal|Europe|United States}} |
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* [[Dulles' Plan]] |
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* [[Foreign policy of the United States]] |
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* [[Timeline of United States diplomatic history]] |
* [[Timeline of United States diplomatic history]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Milton Katz]] |
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* [[GITP International BV|GITP]] (example of a company that was built with Marshall aid) |
* [[GITP International BV|GITP]] (example of a company that was built with Marshall aid) |
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* ''[[Basket of Bread]]'', a 1945 painting by [[Salvador Dalí]] used to illustrate the plan. |
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{{Clear}} |
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== |
==Footnotes== |
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{{ |
{{notelist-ua|30em}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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* Alesina, Alberto and Weder, Beatrice, "Do Corrupt Governments Receive Less Foreign Aid?" ''American Economic Review'' 92#4: (September 2002) |
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* {{Cite book|last=Beschloss|first=Michael R|title=The Conquerors: Roosevelt, Truman and the Destruction of Hitler's Germany, 1941-1945|publisher=[[Simon & Schuster]]|year=2003|isbn=978-0-7432-6085-5|ref=harv}} |
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===Bibliography=== |
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* Bischof, Gunter, Anton Pelinka, and Dieter Stiefel. "Contemporary Austrian Studies." The Marshall Plan in Austria. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction, 2000. 174-75. |
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{{refbegin|30em}} |
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* Bothwell, Robert. ''The Big Chill: Canada and the Cold War'' (Toronto: Irwin Publishing Ltd., 1998). |
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* {{cite book |title=The Marshall Plan Today: Model and Metaphor |year=2004 |author1-last=Agnew |author1-first=John |author2-last=Entrikin |author2-first=Nicholas |isbn=0714655147|location=Oxfordshire, England |publisher=Routledge}} |
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* Chomsky, Noam, & Ruggiero, Greg, The Umbrella of U.S. Power: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the contradictions of U.S. policy, Seven Stories Press, 2002 {{ISBN|1-58322-547-1}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Badinger |first=Harald |title=Growth effects of economic integration: evidence from the EU member states |date=2005 |pages=50–78 |journal=Review of World Economics |volume=141 |doi=10.1007/s10290-005-0015-y |s2cid=153722570}} |
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* Cini, Michelle, in Schain, Martin, (ed.) "From the Marshall Plan to the EEC", in ''The Marshall Plan: Fifty Years After'', New York: Palgrave, 2001 |
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* {{ |
* {{cite book |last=Bailey |first=Thomas A. |title=The Marshall Plan Summer: An Eyewitness Report on Europe and the Russians in 1947 |date=1977 |author-link= |location=Stanford |publisher=Hoover Institution Press |isbn=0817942017 |oclc=932208923}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Balabkins |first=Nicholas |title=Germany Under Direct Controls: Economic Aspects of Industrial Disarmament 1945–1948 |date=1964 |publisher=Rutgers University Press}} |
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* Crafts, Nicholas, and Gianni Toniolo, eds. ''Economic Growth in Europe Since 1945'' (Cambridge UP, 1996). |
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* {{cite book |last=Bartlett |first=Thomas |title=The Cambridge History of Ireland: Volume 4, 1880 to the Present |year=2018 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KwFWDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA626 |publisher=Cambridge UP |isbn=978-1108605823}} |
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* {{cite journal|jstor=24356953|title=The Marshall Plan in Retrospect: A Review of Recent Scholarship|journal=Journal of International Affairs|volume=41|issue=2|pages=421–435|last1=Diebold|first1=William|year=1988}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Behrman |first=Greg |title=The Most Noble Adventure: The Marshall Plan and the Time When America Helped Save Europe |date=2007 |author-link= |location=New York |publisher=Free Press |isbn=978-0743282635 |oclc=934013761}} |
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* Erhard, Ludwig, "Veröffentlichung von Wilhelm Röpke", in In Memoriam Wilhelm Röpke, Ed., Universität Marburg, Rechts-und-Staatswissenschaftlice Fakultät, |
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* {{ |
* {{cite book |last=Beschloss |first=Michael R |title=The Conquerors: Roosevelt, Truman and the Destruction of Hitler's Germany, 1941–1945 |year=2003 |publisher=[[Simon & Schuster]] |isbn=978-0-7432-6085-5}} |
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* {{ |
* {{cite book |last=Biesinger |first=Josepha A. |title=Germany: A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present |year=2006 |publisher=Facts on File |location=New York}} |
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* {{cite web |title=Biography of Wilhelm Röpke (1899–1966): Humane Economist |url=https://www.mises.org/about/3241 |publisher=Mises.org |access-date=2009-08-18}} |
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*Gaddis, John Lewis. We Now Know: Rethinking Cold War History. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997 |
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* {{cite book |last1=Bischof |first1=Gunter |last2=Pelinka |first2=Anton |last3=Stiefel |first3=Dieter |title=Contemporary Austrian Studies: The Marshall Plan in Austria |date=2000 |location=New Brunswick, NJ |publisher=Transaction}} |
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* {{Cite book|last=Grenville|first=John Ashley Soames|title=A History of the World from the 20th to the 21st Century|publisher=Routledge|year=2005|isbn=978-0-415-28954-2|ref=harv}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Bischof |title=The Post–World War II Allied Occupation of Austria: What Can We Learn about It for Iraq in Successful Nation Building? |date=2020 |pages=38–72 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5325/jaustamerhist.4.0038 |journal=Journal of Austrian-American History |volume=4 |doi=10.5325/jaustamerhist.4.0038 |jstor=10.5325/jaustamerhist.4.0038|s2cid=226469224 }} |
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* {{Cite book|last1=Grenville|first1=John Ashley Soames|last2=Wasserstein|first2=Bernard|title=The Major International Treaties of the Twentieth Century: A History and Guide with Texts|publisher=Taylor & Francis|year=2001|isbn=978-0-415-23798-7|ref=harv}} |
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* {{ |
* {{cite book |last=Bothwell |first=Robert |title=The Big Chill: Canada and the Cold War |year=1998 |location=Toronto |publisher=Irwin Publishing Ltd}} |
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* {{cite web |author=Brookings Institution |title=Brookings's Role in the Marshall Plan |url=http://www.brookings.edu/about/history/marshallplan |publisher=brookings.edu |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130806040018/http://www.brookings.edu/about/history/marshallplan |archive-date=2013-08-06 |author-link=Brookings Institution}} |
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* Hogan, Michael J. ''The Marshall Plan: America, Britain, and the Reconstruction of Western Europe, 1947–1952'' (Cambridge UP, 1987). |
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* {{cite news |title=Brown calls for African Marshall Plan |date=3 June 2005 |newspaper=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/society/2005/jun/03/internationalaidanddevelopment.hearafrica05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210917073330/https://www.theguardian.com/society/2005/jun/03/internationalaidanddevelopment.hearafrica05 |archive-date=17 September 2021 |ref={{SfnRef |African Marshall Plan |2005}}}} |
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*Lewkowicz, Nicolas. [https://www.amazon.com/United-States-Geopolitical-Implications-Origins/dp/1783087994/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1539871405&sr=1-1&keywords=Nicolas+Lewkowicz ''The United States, the Soviet Union and the Geopolitical Implications and the Origins of the Cold War'']. New York and London: Anthem Press, 2018 {{ISBN|9781783087990}} |
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* {{cite book| |
* {{cite book |last=Buchanon |first=Tom |title=Europe's Troubled Peace 1945–2000 |isbn=0631221638|year=2006|publisher=Wiley }} |
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* {{ |
* {{cite book |last=Campbell |first=John C. |title=The United States in World affairs: 1947–1948 |year=1948 |publisher=Harper (for the Council on Foreign Relations |location=New York}} |
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* {{cite book |title=Public Opinion, 1935–1946 |date=1951 |editor-last1=Cantril |editor-first1=Albert H. |editor-first2=Mildred |editor-last2=Strunk |location=Princeton |publisher=Princeton University Press |oclc=558666851}} |
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* Schain, Martin, ed. The Marshall Plan: Fifty Years After. New York: Palgrave, 2001. |
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* {{cite book |last=Carew |first=Anthony |title=Labour Under the Marshall Plan: The Politics of Productivity and the Marketing of Management Science |year=1987 |url=https://archive.org/details/labourundermarsh0000care |url-access=registration |publisher=Manchester University Press |isbn=978-0-7190-2553-2 }} |
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* {{Cite book|last=Shirer|first=William L.|title=The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany|publisher=Simon & Schuster|year=1990|isbn=978-0-671-72868-7|ref=harv}} |
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* {{cite magazine |title=Carnations |date=February 9, 1948 |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,855998,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081015174328/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,855998,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=October 15, 2008 |magazine=Time|access-date=2009-02-01 |ref={{SfnRef |Carnations |1948}}}} |
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* Stern, Susan, ''Marshall Plan 1947–1997 A German View"{{cite web|url=http://www.germany.info/relaunch/culture/history/marshall.html |title=German Missions in the United States — Home |publisher=Germany.info |accessdate=2009-08-18 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060709055340/http://www.germany.info/relaunch/culture/history/marshall.html |archivedate=July 9, 2006 }} |
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* Stueck, William Whitney, ed. The Korean War in World History. Lexington, Ky.: [[University Press of Kentucky]], 2004. |
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* {{cite book |last1=Cini |first1=Michelle |chapter=From the Marshall Plan to the EEC |title=The Marshall Plan: Fifty Years After |date=2001 |editor-last=Schain |editor-first=Martin |location=New York |publisher=Palgrave}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Clayton |first=William L. |title=GATT, the Marshall Plan, and OECD |date=1963 |pages=493–503 |journal=Political Science Quarterly |volume=78 |number=4 |doi=10.2307/2146352 |jstor=2146352 }} |
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* Van der Eng, Pierre (1988). 'Marshall Aid as a Catalyst in the Decolonisation of Indonesia 1947-1949', ''Journal of Southeast Asian Studies'', 19: 335-352. |
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* {{cite news |title=Conferences: Pas de Pagaille! |date=28 Jul 1947 |magazine=Time |url=https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,887417,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071014043427/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,887417,00.html |archive-date=14 October 2007 |url-status=live |ref={{SfnRef |Pas de Pagaille! |1947}}}} |
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* von Mises, Ludwig, "Profit and Loss" presented to the Mont Pèlerin Society held in Beauvallon, France, September 9 to 16, 1951; reprinted in ''Planning for Freedom'', South Holland, Ill., Libertarian Press, 1952 {{cite web|url=https://www.mises.org/story/2321 |title=Profit and Loss — Ludwig von Mises — Mises Institute |publisher=Mises.org |accessdate=2009-08-18|date=2006-09-12 }} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Crafts |first=Nicholas |title=The Marshall Plan: A Reality Check |year=2011 |page=6 |language=en |citeseerx=10.1.1.570.8467 |author-link=Nicholas Crafts |journal=University of Warwick CAGE Working Paper |volume=49}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Cromwell |first=William C. |title=The Marshall Plan, Britain and the Cold War |date=1982 |pages=233–49 |journal=Review of International Studies |volume=8 |number=4 |doi=10.1017/S0260210500115645 |jstor=20096957 |s2cid=146282742 }} |
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* {{cite book |last1=De Long |first1=J. |last2=Eichengreen |first2=Barry |chapter=The Marshall Plan |title=Postwar Economic Reconstruction and Lessons for the East Today |year=1993 |page=202 |publisher=MIT Press |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kGCfmmlGtPEC&q=%22marshall+plan%22+france+recover+pre-war+&pg=PA189 |isbn=978-0262041362}} |
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* {{cite book |last1=DeLong |first1=J. Bradford |last2=Eichengreen |first2=Barry |chapter=The Marshall Plan: History's Most Successful Structural Adjustment Program |title=Postwar Economic Reconstruction and Lessons for the East Today |year=1993 |pages=189–230 |author2-link=Barry Eichengreen |publisher=MIT Press |isbn=978-0-262-04136-2 |editor-last=Dornbusch |editor-first=Rudiger |editor1-link=Rudi Dornbusch |editor2-last=Nolling |editor2-first=Wilhelm |editor3-last=Layard |editor3-first=Richard |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kGCfmmlGtPEC&pg=PA189 |via=[[Google Books]]}} |
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* {{cite book |last1=Erhard |first1=Ludwig |chapter=Veröffentlichung von Wilhelm Röpke |title=In Memoriam Wilhelm Röpke |publisher=Universität Marburg, Rechts-und-Staatswissenschaftlice Fakultät [Law and Political Science Faculty]}} |
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* {{cite book |last1=Fifield |first1=Adam |title=A Mighty Purpose: How Jim Grant Sold the World on Saving Its Children |date=2015 |publisher=Other Press, LLC |isbn=978-1-59051-604-1 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8HAlBgAAQBAJ&pg=PT69 |language=en}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Fossat |first=Sissel Bjerrum |title=American Lessons in Mass Production and Mass Consumption: Danish Study Visits to the United States under the Marshall Plan's Technical Assistance Programme |date=2018 |pages=582–600 |journal=Contemporary European History |volume=27 |number=4 |doi=10.1017/S0960777318000450 |s2cid=159794820 }} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Frankenfeld |first=Peter |title=A Marshall Plan for Greece? The European Union and the Financial Crisis in Greece. A Theoretical and Political Analysis in the Global World Against a Background of Regional Integration: Table 1. European Recovery Programme – Marshall Plan ($ million) |date=2012 |pages=69 |url=http://bazekon.icm.edu.pl/bazekon/element/bwmeta1.element.ekon-element-000171238489 |journal=Prace i Materiały Instytutu Handlu Zagranicznego Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego |language=EN |issue=31/1 |issn=2300-6153}} |
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* {{cite web |title=The U.S. State Department Analyzes the Soviet Note on Berlin|date=7 Jan 1959|url=http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/docpage.cfm?docpage_id=3403 |publisher=Germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org |access-date=2010-03-07|ref= {{SfnRef|U. S. Analysis of Soviet Note|1957}}}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Grünbacher |first=Armin |title=Cold-War Economics: The Use of Marshall Plan Counterpart Funds in Germany, 1948–1960 |date=2012 |pages=697–716 |journal=Central European History |volume=45 |number=4 |url=https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/185471673.pdf |doi=10.1017/S0008938912000659 |s2cid=154541961 }} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Hardach |first=Gerd |title=The Marshall Plan in Germany, 1948–1952 |date=1987 |pages=433–85 |journal=Journal of European Economic History |volume=16 |number=3 }} |
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* {{cite book |title=Financing the Future: KfW – the German Bank with a Public Mission: 1948–1998 |year=1998 |author1-last=Harries |author1-first=Heinrich |author2-last=Underwood |author2-first=Peter |publisher=F. Knapp, 1998}} |
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* {{cite journal |last1=Hitchens |first1=Harold L. |title=Influences on the Congressional Decision to Pass the Marshall Plan |year=1968 |pages=51–68 |jstor=446512 |journal=The Western Political Quarterly |volume=21 |issue=1 |doi=10.2307/446512}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Hogan |first=Michael J. |title=The Marshall Plan: America, Britain, and the Reconstruction of Western Europe, 1947–1952 |date=1987 |url= |location=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=0521378400 |oclc=416668932 }} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Johnson |first=Gordon |title=Lessons for Today from the Marshall Plan |year=2002 |page=2 |journal=CIPE.ORG Feature Service: Technical Paper Series |url=https://docplayer.net/35800768-Lessons-for-today-from-the-marshall-plan-by-gordon-o-f-johnson.html}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Judt |first=Tony |title=The Marshall Plan: Fifty Years After |date=2001 |editor1-last=Schain |editor1-first=Martin |author-link=Tony Judt |location=New York |publisher=Palgrave |isbn= |oclc=45284585}} |
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* {{cite interview |last=Kaplan |first=Jacob J. |title=An overview of a career with foreign assistance |date=22 March 1999 |interviewer=W. Haven North |location=Arlington, VA |publisher=Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training |work=Foreign Affairs Oral History Project, Foreign Assistance Series |url=http://www.adst.org/OH%20TOCs/Kaplan,%20Jacob.toc.pdf}} |
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* {{cite journal |last1=Knapp |first1=Manfred |last2=Stolper |first2=Wolfgang F. |last3=Hudson |first3=Michael |title=Reconstruction and West-Integration: The Impact of the Marshall Plan on Germany |date=1981 |pages=415–33 |journal=Zeitschrift für die Gesamte Staatswissenschaft / Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics |volume=137 |number=3 |jstor=40750368}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Kuisel |first=Richard F. |title=Seducing the French: The Dilemma of Americanization |date=1993 |location=Berkeley |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=0520079620 |oclc= 26363961}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Kunz |first=Diane B. |title=The Marshall Plan reconsidered: a complex of motives |date=1997 |pages=162–70 |journal=Foreign Affairs |volume=76 |number=43 |doi=10.2307/20048105 |jstor=20048105 }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Lampe |first=John R. |title=Yugoslav-American Economic Relations Since World War II |year=1990 |url=https://archive.org/details/yugoslavamerican00lamp |url-access=registration |publisher=Duke University Press |display-authors=etal |isbn=978-0822310617}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Lassance |first=Antonio |title=O Plano Marshall: uma abordagem atual à formulação, ao desenho e à coordenação de políticas públicas e programas governamentais |date=June 2021 |pages=61 |url=https://www.ipea.gov.br/portal/images/stories/PDFs/TDs/td_2661_substituio.pdf |journal=Working Paper 2661 |via=Brazilian Institute of Applied Economic Research}} |
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* {{cite news |last=Lukacs |first=John |title=A Look At ... The Legacy of the Marshall Plan |date=May 25, 1997 |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/opinions/1997/05/25/a-look-at-the-legacy-of-the-marshall-plan/47b5b44c-e1eb-4c68-bd46-5a29c5c76c73/ |newspaper=The Washington Post}} |
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* {{cite encyclopedia |title=Marshall Plan|date=27 Jan 2020|url=https://www.britannica.com/event/Marshall-Plan |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Britannica |access-date=20 Sep 2021 |language=en|ref={{sfnRef|Marshall Plan|2020}}|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210817141443/https://www.britannica.com/event/Marshall-Plan|archive-date=17 August 2021}} |
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* {{cite web |title=A Marshall Plan for Iraq? |date=May 9, 2003 |url=http://www.cato.org/research/articles/vasquez-030509.html |publisher=Cato.org |access-date=2009-02-01 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090122130923/https://www.cato.org/research/articles/vasquez-030509.html |archive-date=January 22, 2009 |ref=CITEREFMarshall Plan for Iraq?2003}} |
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* {{cite interview |last=Miall |first=Leonard |title=BBC Correspondent Leonard Miall and the Marshall Plan Speech: An Interview |date=September 19, 1977 |interviewer=Barbara Vandegrift |url=http://www.marshallfoundation.org/library/oral_histories_miall_interview.html |publisher=The Marshall Foundation |access-date=2007-08-15 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070803202225/http://www.marshallfoundation.org/library/oral_histories_miall_interview.html |archive-date=August 3, 2007 }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Mills |first=Nicolaus |title=Winning the Peace: the Marshall Plan and America's Coming of Age as a Superpower |year=2008 |publisher=Wiley |isbn=978-0-470-09755-7 |url=https://archive.org/details/winningpeacemars00mill/page/195}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Milward |first=Alan S. |title=The Reconstruction of Western Europe 1945–51 |year=1984 |author-link=Alan S. Milward |place=Berkeley |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0520060357}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Newton |first=C. C. S. |title=The Sterling Crisis of 1947 and the British Response to the Marshall Plan |date=1984 |pages=391–408 |journal=Economic History Review |volume=37 |number=3 |doi=10.2307/2597288 |jstor=2597288 }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Pelletiere |first=Stephen C. |chapter=3. The Fall of Mosadeq and the Triumph of the Oil Cartel in the United States |title=Iraq and the International Oil System: Why America Went to War in the Gulf |date=2001 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=978-0-275-94562-6 }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Price |first=Harry B. |title=The Marshall Plan and Its Meaning |date=1955 |url= |location=Ithaca, NY|publisher=Cornell University press |oclc=1260514771}} |
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* {{cite journal |last1=Smuckler |first1=Ralph H. |title=The Region of Isolationism |year=1953 |pages=386–401 |jstor=1952029 |journal=The American Political Science Review |volume=47 |issue=2 |doi=10.2307/1952029|s2cid=144875635 }} |
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* {{cite web |last=Sobell |title=A Look back at the Marshall Plan |date=2 June 1987 |url=https://catalog.osaarchivum.org/catalog/osa:ce0b7065-d784-4a25-8963-2f3208320e88 |website=[[Blinken Open Society Archives]]}} |
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* {{cite book |title=Statistical Abstract of the United States: 1949 |year=1949 |location=Washington D. C. |publisher=United States Census Bureau |url=https://www.census.gov/library/publications/1949/compendia/statab/70ed.html |ref={{SfnRef |U.S. Statistical Abstract |1949}}}} |
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* {{cite speech |last=Truman |first=Harry S. |title=March 17, 1948 address to a Joint Session |year=1948 |publisher=trumanlibrary.gov |url=https://www.trumanlibrary.gov/library/public-papers/52/special-message-congress-threat-freedom-europe |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210920034909/https://www.trumanlibrary.gov/library/public-papers/52/special-message-congress-threat-freedom-europe |archive-date=September 20, 2021 }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Volkogonov |first=Dmitri |title=Stalin: Triumph and Tragedy |isbn= 0761507183|year=1996 |publisher=Forum}} |
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* {{cite web |last=Von Mises |first=Ludwig |title=Profit and loss |date=2006 |publisher=Ludwig von Mises Institute |url=https://mises.org/library/profit-and-loss}} |
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* {{cite speech |last=Vyshinsky |first=Andrei |title=Speech to U.N. General Assembly |date=Sep 1947 |url=http://isc.temple.edu/hist249/course/Documents/vyshinsky_speech_to_un.htm |publisher=Temple University |location=Philadelphia |access-date=2009-03-03 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100714183802/http://isc.temple.edu/hist249/course/Documents/vyshinsky_speech_to_un.htm |archive-date=2010-07-14 }} |
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* {{cite web |title=Potsdam Reparations Begin|year=1946|url=http://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/GerRecon/omg1946n039/reference/history.omg1946n039.i0007.pdf |access-date=2011-12-09|ref={{SfnRef|Potsdam Reparations Begin|1946}}|website=wisc.edu}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Wala |first=Michael |title=The Council on Foreign Relations and American Foreign Policy in the Early Cold War |date=1995 |location=Providence, RI |publisher=Berghahn Books |isbn= 157181003X |oclc=503864539}} |
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* {{cite journal |last1=Warriner |first1=Doreen |title=Economic Changes in Eastern Bloc. Since the War |year=1949 |pages=157–67 |jstor=3017377 |journal=International Affairs |volume=25 |issue=2 |publisher=Royal Institute of International Affairs |doi=10.2307/3017377 }} |
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* {{cite journal |title=BLS and the Marshall Plan: The Forgotten Story |date=Jun 2005 |author1-last=Wasser |author1-first=Solidelle F |author2-last=Dolfman |author2-first=Michael L. |journal=Monthly Labor Review |url=https://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2005/article/bls-and-the-marshall-plan-the-forgotten-story.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210812132824/https://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2005/06/art4full.pdf |archive-date=12 August 2021}} |
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* {{cite book |last1=Weiner |first1=Tim |title=Legacy of Ashes: History of the CIA |date=2007 |publisher=Doubleday |location=New York |isbn=978-0385514453 |url=https://archive.org/details/legacyofasheshis00wein}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Wettig |first=Gerhard |title=Stalin and the Cold War in Europe |year=2008 |publisher=[[Rowman & Littlefield]] |isbn=978-0-7425-5542-6}} |
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* {{cite web |title=Wiederaufbau Deutschlands mit finanzieller Hilfe der Alliierten |year=2012 |language=de |trans-title=Reconstruction of Germany with Financial Help from the Allies |url=https://www.kfw.de/%C3%9Cber-die-KfW/F%C3%B6rderauftrag-und-Geschichte/Geschichte-der-KfW/KfW-Themen/Marshallplan-und-ERP/ |website=KFW |ref={{SfnRef |Reconstruction of Germany |2021}}}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Zmirak |first=John |title=Wilhelm Röpke: Swiss Localist, Global Economist |date=2001 |location=Wilmington, Del |publisher=ISI Books |isbn= 1882926560 |oclc=48568155}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Zwass |first=Adam |title=The Council for Mutual Economic Assistance: the thorny path from political to economic integration |year=1989 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2db3MMq1W70C&q=%22soviet+union%22+%22marshall+plan%22+reparations&pg=PA16 |publisher=M.E. Sharpe |isbn=978-0-87332-496-0}} |
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{{refend}} |
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==Further reading== |
==Further reading== |
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{{refbegin|30em}} |
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* Agnew, John and Entrikin, J. Nicholas eds. ''The Marshall Plan Today: Model and Metaphor'' Routledge. (2004) [https://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=108516906 online version] |
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* Arkes, Hadley. ''Bureaucracy, the Marshall Plan, and the National Interest'' (1972). |
* Arkes, Hadley. ''Bureaucracy, the Marshall Plan, and the National Interest'' (1972), ISBN 0691646236. |
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* Behrman, Greg, ''The Most Noble Adventure: The Marshall Plan and the Time When America Helped Save Europe'' (2007) {{ISBN|0-7432-8263-9}} |
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* Bischof, Günter, and Hans Petschar. ''The Marshall Plan: Saving Europe, Rebuilding Austria'' (U of New Orleans Publishing, 2017) 336 pp. [http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showpdf.php?id=50939 Online review] |
* Bischof, Günter, and Hans Petschar. ''The Marshall Plan: Saving Europe, Rebuilding Austria'' (U of New Orleans Publishing, 2017) 336 pp. [http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showpdf.php?id=50939 Online review] |
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* Bonds, John Bledsoe. ''Bipartisan Strategy: Selling the Marshall Plan'' (2002) [https://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=102124797 online version] |
* Bonds, John Bledsoe. ''Bipartisan Strategy: Selling the Marshall Plan'' (2002) [https://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=102124797 online version] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091204060025/http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=102124797 |date=2009-12-04 }} |
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* Bryan, Ferald J. "George C. Marshall at Harvard: A Study of the Origins and Construction of the 'Marshall Plan' Speech." ''Presidential Studies Quarterly'' (1991): |
* Bryan, Ferald J. "George C. Marshall at Harvard: A Study of the Origins and Construction of the 'Marshall Plan' Speech." ''Presidential Studies Quarterly'' (1991): 489–502. [http://streitcouncil.org/uploads/Early%20Leaders/Clayton_Marshall-Origins.pdf Online] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200203013337/http://streitcouncil.org/uploads/Early%20Leaders/Clayton_Marshall-Origins.pdf |date=2020-02-03 }} |
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* Djelic, Marie-Laure A. ''Exporting the American Model: The Post-War Transformation of European Business'' (1998) [https://www.questia.com/library/book/exporting-the-american-model-the-post-war-transformation-of-european-business-by-marie-laure-a-djelic.jsp online version] |
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* Elwood, David, "Was the Marshall Plan Necessary?" in ''Alan S. Milward and a Century of European Change,'' ed. Fernando Guirao, Frances M. B. Lynch, and Sigfrido M. Ramírez Pérez, 179–98. (Routledge, 2012) ISBN 1138107530 |
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* Esposito, Chiarella. ''America's Feeble Weapon: Funding the Marshall Plan in France and Italy, 1948–1950'' (1994) [https://www.questia.com/library/book/americas-feeble-weapon-funding-the-marshall-plan-in-france-and-italy-1948-1950-by-chiarella-esposito.jsp online version] |
* Esposito, Chiarella. ''America's Feeble Weapon: Funding the Marshall Plan in France and Italy, 1948–1950'' (1994) [https://www.questia.com/library/book/americas-feeble-weapon-funding-the-marshall-plan-in-france-and-italy-1948-1950-by-chiarella-esposito.jsp online version] |
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* Fossedal, Gregory A. ''Our Finest Hour: Will Clayton, the Marshall Plan, and the Triumph of Democracy.'' (1993). ISBN 0817992014 |
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* Djelic, Marie-Laure A. ''Exporting the American Model: The Post-War Transformation of European Business '' (1998) [https://www.questia.com/library/book/exporting-the-american-model-the-post-war-transformation-of-european-business-by-marie-laure-a-djelic.jsp online version] |
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* Elwood, David, "Was the Marshall Plan Necessary?" in ''Alan S. Milward and a Century of European Change,'' ed. Fernando Guirao, Frances M. B. Lynch, and Sigfrido M. Ramírez Pérez, 179–98. (Routledge, 2012) |
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* Fossedal, Gregory A. ''Our Finest Hour: Will Clayton, the Marshall Plan, and the Triumph of Democracy.'' (1993). |
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* Gimbel, John, ''The origins of the Marshall plan'' (1976) ([https://www.jstor.org/pss/2701645 reviewed]) |
* Gimbel, John, ''The origins of the Marshall plan'' (1976) ([https://www.jstor.org/pss/2701645 reviewed]) |
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* Jackson, Scott. "Prologue to the Marshall Plan: The Origins of the American Commitment for a European Recovery Program," ''Journal of American History'' 65#4 (1979), pp. |
* Jackson, Scott. "Prologue to the Marshall Plan: The Origins of the American Commitment for a European Recovery Program," ''Journal of American History'' 65#4 (1979), pp. 1043–68 [https://www.jstor.org/stable/1894559 in JSTOR] |
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* Kipping, Matthias and Bjarnar, Ove. ''The Americanisation of European Business: The Marshall Plan and the Transfer of Us Management Models'' (1998) [https://www.questia.com/library/book/the-americanisation-of-european-business-the-marshall-plan-and-the-transfer-of-us-management-models-by-ove-bjarnar-matthias-kipping.jsp online version] |
* Kipping, Matthias and Bjarnar, Ove. ''The Americanisation of European Business: The Marshall Plan and the Transfer of Us Management Models'' (1998) [https://www.questia.com/library/book/the-americanisation-of-european-business-the-marshall-plan-and-the-transfer-of-us-management-models-by-ove-bjarnar-matthias-kipping.jsp online version] |
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* Reynolds, David. "Marshall Plan Commemorative Section: The European Response: Primacy of Politics" ''Foreign Affairs'' (May/June 1997) [https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/europe/1997-05-01/marshall-plan-commemorative-section-european-response-primacy-politics online] |
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* Lewkowicz, Nicolas. ''The German Question and the International Order, 1943-48'' (Palgrave Macmillan: Basingstoke and New York) (2010) |
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* Lewkowicz, Nicolas. ''The German Question and the Origins of the Cold War'' (IPOC: Milan) (2008) |
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* Mee, Charles L. ''The Marshall Plan: The Launching of the Pax Americana'' (1984). |
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* Milward, Alan S. ''The Reconstruction of Western Europe, 1945–51.'' (1984). |
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*Röpke, Wilhelm, Humane Economist,{{cite web|url=https://www.mises.org/about/3241|title=Biography of Wilhelm Röpke (1899–1966): Humane Economist|publisher=Mises.org|accessdate=2009-08-18}} |
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* Vickers, Rhiannon. ''Manipulating Hegemony: State Power, Labour and the Marshall Plan in Britain'' (2000) [https://www.questia.com/library/book/manipulating-hegemony-state-power-labour-and-the-marshall-plan-in-britain-by-rhiannon-vickers-andrew-gamble.jsp online edition] |
* Vickers, Rhiannon. ''Manipulating Hegemony: State Power, Labour and the Marshall Plan in Britain'' (2000) [https://www.questia.com/library/book/manipulating-hegemony-state-power-labour-and-the-marshall-plan-in-britain-by-rhiannon-vickers-andrew-gamble.jsp online edition] |
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* Wallich, Henry Christopher. ''Mainsprings of the German Revival'' (1955) |
* Wallich, Henry Christopher. ''Mainsprings of the German Revival'' (1955) ISBN 0837190177 |
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* Wasser, Solidelle F. and Dolfman, Michael L., "BLS and the Marshall Plan: The Forgotten Story: The Statistical Technical Assistance of BLS Increased Productive Efficiency and Labor Productivity in Western European Industry after World War II; Technological Literature Surveys and Plan-Organized Plant Visits Supplemented Instruction in Statistical Measurement", Monthly Labor Review, Vol. 128, 2005 |
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* Wend, Henry Burke. ''Recovery and Restoration: U.S. Foreign Policy and the Politics of Reconstruction of West Germany's Shipbuilding Industry, 1945–1955'' (2001) [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/44728190 online version] |
* Wend, Henry Burke. ''Recovery and Restoration: U.S. Foreign Policy and the Politics of Reconstruction of West Germany's Shipbuilding Industry, 1945–1955'' (2001) [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/44728190 online version] |
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* Weissman, Alexander D. "Pivotal |
* Weissman, Alexander D. "Pivotal politics – The Marshall Plan: A turning point in foreign aid and the struggle for democracy." ''History Teacher'' 47.1 (2013): 111–29. [http://www.societyforhistoryeducation.org/pdfs/THT-NHDWeissman.pdf online], for middle and high school students |
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{{refend}} |
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* Zmirak, John, ''Wilhelm Röpke: Swiss Localist, Global Economist'' (ISI Books, 2001) |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{Spoken Wikipedia|Marshall_plan.ogg|2012-12-17}} |
{{Spoken Wikipedia|Marshall_plan.ogg|date=2012-12-17}} |
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{{Commons |
* {{Commons-inline}} |
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*[https://www.archives.gov/exhibits/featured-documents/marshall-plan Marshall Plan from the National Archives] |
* [https://www.archives.gov/exhibits/featured-documents/marshall-plan Marshall Plan from the National Archives] |
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*[http://www.marshallfoundation.org George C. Marshall Foundation] |
* [http://www.marshallfoundation.org George C. Marshall Foundation] |
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*[http://www.gmfus.org The German Marshall Fund of the United States] |
* [http://www.gmfus.org The German Marshall Fund of the United States] |
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*[http://www.spartacus-educational.com/USAmarshallP.htm Excerpts from book by Allen W. Dulles] |
* [http://www.spartacus-educational.com/USAmarshallP.htm Excerpts from book by Allen W. Dulles] |
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*[http://usa.usembassy.de/etexts/ga4-460906.htm United States Secretary of State |
* [http://usa.usembassy.de/etexts/ga4-460906.htm Speech by J.F. Byrnes, United States Secretary of State, Restatement of Policy on Germany, Stuttgart, September 6, 1946]. The speech marked the turning point away from the [[Morgenthau Plan]] philosophy of economic dismantlement of Germany and toward a policy of economic reconstruction. |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060727123239/http://www.foreignaffairs.org/1928/3.html Marshall Plan Commemorative Section: Lessons of the Plan: Looking Forward to the Next Century] |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060727123239/http://www.foreignaffairs.org/1928/3.html Marshall Plan Commemorative Section: Lessons of the Plan: Looking Forward to the Next Century] |
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*[http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlestop/study_collections/marshall/large/index.php Truman Presidential Library online collection of original Marshall Plan documents from the year 1946 |
*[http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlestop/study_collections/marshall/large/index.php Truman Presidential Library online collection of original Marshall Plan documents from the year 1946 onward] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190329072721/https://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlestop/study_collections/marshall/large/index.php |date=2019-03-29 }} |
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* [http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/764/1/Tragedy_of_American_diplomacy.pdf "The Tragedy of American Diplomacy? Rethinking the Marshall Plan"] by Michael Cox and Caroline Kennedy-Pipe and [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/249563757_The_Marshall_Plan_as_Tragedy Response] by Marc Trachtenberg, both published in the Journal of Cold War Studies, vol. 7, no. 1 (Winter 2005) |
* [http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/764/1/Tragedy_of_American_diplomacy.pdf "The Tragedy of American Diplomacy? Rethinking the Marshall Plan"] by Michael Cox and Caroline Kennedy-Pipe and [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/249563757_The_Marshall_Plan_as_Tragedy Response] by Marc Trachtenberg, both published in the Journal of Cold War Studies, vol. 7, no. 1 (Winter 2005) |
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* [http://www.mediathek.at/atom/08DF9D2E-32D-00050-00000E24-08DEFBE4 '''Speech'''] by George Marshall on June 5, 1947 at Harvard University (original recording) |
* [http://www.mediathek.at/atom/08DF9D2E-32D-00050-00000E24-08DEFBE4 '''Speech'''] by George Marshall on June 5, 1947 at Harvard University (original recording) |
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* [https://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/georgecmarshall.html As delivered transcript of Marshall Plan speech on June 5, 1947 at Harvard University] |
* [https://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/georgecmarshall.html As delivered transcript of Marshall Plan speech on June 5, 1947 at Harvard University] |
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{{Cold War}} |
{{Cold War}} |
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{{Economy of the United Kingdom}} |
{{Economy of the United Kingdom}} |
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{{US history}} |
{{US history}} |
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{{Harry S. Truman}} |
{{Harry S. Truman}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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[[Category:1940s economic history]] |
[[Category:1940s in economic history]] |
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[[Category:1950s economic history]] |
[[Category:1950s in economic history]] |
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[[Category:1948 in law]] |
[[Category:1948 in American law]] |
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[[Category:Aftermath of World War II in the United States]] |
[[Category:Aftermath of World War II in the United States]] |
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[[Category:Cold War history of the United States]] |
[[Category:Cold War history of the United States]] |
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[[Category:Economic history of Europe]] |
[[Category:Economic history of Europe]] |
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[[Category:1948 in |
[[Category:1948 in economic history]] |
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[[Category:United States–European relations]] |
[[Category:United States–European relations]] |
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[[Category:1960s economic history]] |
[[Category:1960s in economic history]] |
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[[Category:Development in Europe]] |
[[Category:Development in Europe]] |
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[[Category:History of diplomacy]] |
[[Category:History of diplomacy]] |
Latest revision as of 00:05, 25 December 2024
Long title | An act to promote world peace and the general welfare, national interest, and foreign policy of the United States through economic, financial, and other measures necessary to the maintenance of conditions abroad in which free institutions may survive and consistent with the maintenance of the strength and stability of the United States. |
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Enacted by | the 80th United States Congress |
Effective | April 3, 1948 |
Citations | |
Public law | 80-472 |
Statutes at Large | 62 Stat. 137 |
Legislative history | |
|
The Marshall Plan (officially the European Recovery Program, ERP) was an American initiative enacted in 1948 to provide foreign aid to Western Europe. The United States transferred $13.3 billion (equivalent to $173.8 billion in 2024) in economic recovery programs to Western European economies after the end of World War II. Replacing an earlier proposal for a Morgenthau Plan, it operated for four years beginning on April 3, 1948,[1] though in 1951, the Marshall Plan was largely replaced by the Mutual Security Act. The goals of the United States were to rebuild war-torn regions, remove trade barriers, modernize industry, improve European prosperity and prevent the spread of communism.[2] The Marshall Plan proposed the reduction of interstate barriers and the economic integration of the European Continent while also encouraging an increase in productivity as well as the adoption of modern business procedures.[3]
The Marshall Plan aid was divided among the participant states roughly on a per capita basis. A larger amount was given to the major industrial powers, as the prevailing opinion was that their resuscitation was essential for the general European revival. Somewhat more aid per capita was also directed toward the Allied nations, with less for those that had been part of the Axis or remained neutral. The largest recipient of Marshall Plan money was the United Kingdom (receiving about 26% of the total). The next highest contributions went to France (18%) and West Germany (11%). Some eighteen European countries received Plan benefits.[4] Although offered participation, the Soviet Union refused Plan benefits and also blocked benefits to Eastern Bloc countries, such as Romania and Poland.[5] The United States provided similar aid programs in Asia, but they were not part of the Marshall Plan.[A]
Its role in rapid recovery has been debated. The Marshall Plan's accounting reflects that aid accounted for about 3% of the combined national income of the recipient countries between 1948 and 1951,[6] which means an increase in GDP growth of less than half a percent.[7]
Graham T. Allison states that "the Marshall Plan has become a favorite analogy for policy-makers. Yet few know much about it."[8] Some new studies highlight not only the role of economic cooperation but approach the Marshall Plan as a case concerning strategic thinking to face some typical challenges in policy, as problem definition, risk analysis, decision support to policy formulation, and program implementation.[9]
In 1947, two years after the end of the war, industrialist Lewis H. Brown wrote, at the request of General Lucius D. Clay, A Report on Germany, which served as a detailed recommendation for the reconstruction of post-war Germany and served as a basis for the Marshall Plan. The initiative was named after United States Secretary of State George C. Marshall. The plan had bipartisan support in Washington, where the Republicans controlled Congress and the Democrats controlled the White House with Harry S. Truman as president. Some businessmen feared the Marshall Plan, unsure whether reconstructing European economies and encouraging foreign competition was in the US' best interests.[10] The plan was largely the creation of State Department officials, especially William L. Clayton and George F. Kennan, with help from the Brookings Institution, as requested by Senator Arthur Vandenberg, chairman of the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.[11] Marshall spoke of an urgent need to help the European recovery in his address at Harvard University in June 1947.[12] The purpose of the Marshall Plan was to aid in the economic recovery of nations after World War II and secure US geopolitical influence over Western Europe.[13] To combat the effects of the Marshall Plan, the USSR developed its own economic recovery program, known as the Molotov Plan. However, the plan was said to have not worked as well due to the USSR particularly having been hit hard by the effects of World War II.[14]
The phrase "equivalent of the Marshall Plan" is often used to describe a proposed large-scale economic rescue program.[15]
Development and deployment
[edit]The reconstruction plan, developed at a meeting of the participating European states, was drafted on June 5, 1947. It offered the same aid to the Soviet Union and its allies, but they refused to accept it, under Soviet pressure (as was the case for Finland's rejection) as doing so would allow a degree of US control over the communist economies.[16][17][18] Secretary Marshall became convinced Stalin had no interest in helping restore economic health in Western Europe.[19]
President Harry Truman signed the Marshall Plan on April 3, 1948, granting $5 billion in aid to 16 European nations. During the four years that the plan was in effect, the United States donated $17 billion (equivalent to $240.95 billion in 2023) in economic and technical assistance to help the recovery of the European countries that joined the Organisation for European Economic Co-operation. The $17 billion was in the context of a US GDP of $258 billion in 1948, and on top of $17 billion in American aid to Europe between the end of the war and the start of the plan that is counted separately from the Marshall Plan.[20] The Marshall Plan was replaced by the Mutual Security Plan at the end of 1951; that new plan gave away about $7.5 billion annually until 1961 when it was replaced by another program.[21]
The ERP addressed each of the obstacles to postwar recovery. The plan looked to the future and did not focus on the destruction caused by the war. Much more important were efforts to modernize European industrial and business practices using high-efficiency American models, reducing artificial trade barriers, and instilling a sense of hope and self-reliance.[22]
By 1952, as the funding ended, the economy of every participant state had surpassed pre-war levels; for all Marshall Plan recipients, output in 1951 was at least 35% higher than in 1938.[23][B] Over the next two decades, Western Europe enjoyed unprecedented growth and prosperity, but economists are not sure what proportion was due directly to the ERP, what proportion indirectly, and how much would have happened without it. A common American interpretation of the program's role in European recovery was expressed by Paul Hoffman, head of the Economic Cooperation Administration, in 1949 when he told Congress Marshall aid had provided the "critical margin" on which other investment needed for European recovery depended.[24] The Marshall Plan was one of the first elements of European integration, as it erased trade barriers and set up institutions to coordinate the economy on a continental level—that is, it stimulated the total political reconstruction of Western Europe.[25]
Belgian economic historian Herman Van der Wee concludes the Marshall Plan was a "great success":
It gave a new impetus to reconstruction in Western Europe and made a decisive contribution to the renewal of the transport system, the modernization of industrial and agricultural equipment, the resumption of normal production, the raising of productivity, and the facilitating of intra-European trade.[26]
Wartime destruction
[edit]By the end of World War II, much of Europe was devastated. Sustained aerial bombardment during the war had badly damaged most major cities, and industrial facilities were especially hard-hit. Millions of refugees were in temporary camps.[27] The region's trade flows had been thoroughly disrupted; millions were in refugee camps living on aid from the United States, which was provided by the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration and other agencies. Food shortages were severe, especially in the harsh winter of 1946–47. From July 1945 through June 1946, the United States shipped 16.5 million tons of food, primarily wheat, to Europe and Japan. It amounted to one-sixth of the American food supply and provided 35 trillion calories, enough to provide 400 calories a day for one year to 300 million people.[28]
Especially damaged was transportation infrastructure, as railways, bridges, and docks had been specifically targeted by airstrikes, while much merchant shipping had been sunk. Although most small towns and villages had not suffered as much damage, the destruction of transportation left them economically isolated. None of these problems could be easily remedied, as most nations engaged in the war had exhausted their treasuries in the process.[29]
The only major powers whose infrastructure had not been significantly harmed in World War II were the United States and Canada.[30][31] They were much more prosperous than before the war, but exports were a small factor in their economy. Much of the Marshall Plan aid would be used by the Europeans to buy manufactured goods and raw materials from the United States and Canada.
Initial post-war events
[edit]Slow recovery
[edit]Most of Europe's economies were recovering slowly, as unemployment and food shortages led to strikes and unrest in several nations. Agricultural production was 83% of 1938 levels, industrial production was 88%, and exports 59%.[32] Exceptions were the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and France, where by the end of 1947 production had already been restored to pre-war levels before the Marshall Plan. Italy and Belgium would follow by the end of 1948.[33] In Germany in 1945–46 housing and food conditions were bad, as the disruption of transport, markets, and finances slowed a return to normality. In the West, the bombing had destroyed 5,000,000 houses and apartments, and 12,000,000 refugees from the east had crowded in.[34]
Food production was two-thirds of the pre-war level in 1946–48, while normal grain and meat shipments no longer arrived from the East. The drop in food production can be attributed to a drought that killed a major portion of the wheat crop while a severe winter destroyed most of the wheat crop the following year. This caused most Europeans to rely on a 1,500-calorie-per-day diet.[35] Furthermore, the large shipments of food stolen from occupied nations during the war no longer reached Germany. Industrial production fell more than half and reached pre-war levels at the end of 1949.[36] While Germany struggled to recover from the destruction of the War, the recovery effort began in June 1948, moving on from emergency relief. The currency reform in 1948 was headed by the military government and helped Germany to restore stability by encouraging production. The reform revalued old currency and deposits and introduced a new currency. Taxes were also reduced and Germany prepared to remove economic barriers.[37]
During the first three years of occupation of Germany, the Allied occupational authorities vigorously pursued a military disarmament program in Germany, partly by removal of equipment but mainly through an import embargo on raw materials, part of the Morgenthau Plan approved by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.[38] Historian Nicholas Balabkins concluded that "as long as German industrial capacity was kept idle the economic recovery of Europe was delayed."[39] By July 1947, Washington realized that economic recovery in Europe could not go forward without the reconstruction of the German industrial base, deciding that an "orderly, prosperous Europe requires the economic contributions of a stable and productive Germany."[40] In addition, the strength of Moscow-controlled communist parties in France and Italy worried Washington.[41]
In the view of the State Department under President Harry S Truman, the United States needed to adopt a definite position on the world scene or fear losing credibility. The emerging doctrine of containment (as opposed to rollback) argued that the United States needed to substantially aid non-communist countries to stop the spread of Soviet influence. There was also some hope that the Eastern Bloc nations would join the plan, and thus be pulled out of the emerging Soviet bloc, but that did not happen.[42]
Need to rebuild Germany
[edit]In January 1947, Truman appointed retired General George Marshall as Secretary of State. In July 1947 Marshall scrapped Joint Chiefs of Staff Directive 1067, which was based on the Morgenthau Plan which had decreed "take no steps looking toward the economic rehabilitation of Germany [or] designed to maintain or strengthen the German economy." The new plan JCS 1779 stated that "an orderly and prosperous Europe requires the economic contributions of a stable and productive Germany."[43] The restrictions placed on German heavy industry production were partly ameliorated; permitted steel production levels were raised from 25% of pre-war capacity to a new limit placed at 50% of pre-war capacity.[40]
With a communist, although non-Soviet, insurgency threatening Greece, and Britain financially unable to continue its aid, the President announced his Truman Doctrine on March 12, 1947, "to support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures", with an aid request for consideration and decision, concerning Greece and Turkey. Herbert Hoover noted that "The whole economy of Europe is interlinked with the German economy through the exchange of raw materials and manufactured goods. The productivity of Europe cannot be restored without the restoration of Germany as a contributor to that productivity."[44] Hoover's report led to a realization in Washington that a new policy was needed; "almost any action would be an improvement on current policy."[45] In Washington, the Joint Chiefs declared that the "complete revival of German industry, particularly coal mining" was now of "primary importance" to American security.[43]
The United States was already spending a great deal to help Europe recover. Over $14 billion was spent or loaned during the postwar period through the end of 1947 and is not counted as part of the Marshall Plan. Much of this aid was designed to restore infrastructure and help refugees. Britain, for example, received an emergency loan of $3.75 billion.[46]
The United Nations also launched a series of humanitarian and relief efforts almost wholly funded by the United States. These efforts had important effects, but they lacked any central organization and planning, and failed to meet many of Europe's more fundamental needs.[47] Already in 1943, the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) was founded to provide relief to areas liberated from Germany. UNRRA provided billions of dollars of rehabilitation aid and helped about 8 million refugees. It ceased the operation of displaced persons camps in Europe in 1947; many of its functions were transferred to several UN agencies.[48][49]
Soviet negotiations
[edit]After Marshall's appointment in January 1947, administration officials met with Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov and others to press for an economically self-sufficient Germany, including a detailed accounting of the industrial plants, goods and infrastructure already removed by the Soviets in their occupied zone.[50] Molotov refrained from supplying accounts of Soviet assets.[citation needed] The Soviets took a punitive approach, pressing for a delay rather than an acceleration in economic rehabilitation, demanding unconditional fulfillment of all prior reparation claims, and pressing for progress toward nationwide socioeconomic transformation.[51]
After six weeks of negotiations, Molotov rejected all of the American and British proposals.[51] During negotiations with the French and the British, Molotov received a ciphered telegram from Vyshinsky, Soviet Minister of Foreign Affairs. The official position of the Soviet Union, on Stalin's orders, had changed dramatically, and now Moscow's representatives in Paris were forcefully rejecting the Marshall Plan.[52] Due to this change, Molotov rejected the counteroffer to scrap the British-American "Bizonia" and to include the Soviet zone within the newly constructed Germany.[51] Marshall was particularly discouraged after personally meeting with Stalin to explain that the United States could not possibly abandon its position on Germany, while Stalin expressed little interest in a solution to German economic problems.[51]
Marshall's speech
[edit]After the adjournment of the Moscow conference following six weeks of failed discussions with the Soviets regarding a potential German reconstruction, the United States concluded that a solution could not wait any longer. To clarify the American position, a major address by Secretary of State George Marshall was planned. Marshall gave the address at Harvard University on June 5, 1947. He offered American aid to promote European recovery and reconstruction. The speech described the dysfunction of the European economy and presented a rationale for US aid:
The modern system of the division of labor upon which the exchange of products is based is in danger of breaking down. ... Aside from the demoralizing effect on the world at large and the possibilities of disturbances arising as a result of the desperation of the people concerned, the consequences to the economy of the United States should be apparent to all. It is logical that the United States should do whatever it is able to do to assist in the return of normal economic health to the world, without which there can be no political stability and no assured peace. Our policy is not directed against any country, but against hunger, poverty, desperation and chaos. Any government that is willing to assist in recovery will find full co-operation on the part of the United States. Its purpose should be the revival of a working economy in the world so as to permit the emergence of political and social conditions in which free institutions can exist.[53]
Marshall was convinced that economic stability would provide political stability in Europe. He offered aid, but the European countries had to organize the program themselves.
The speech, written at Marshall's request and guidance by Charles Bohlen[54] contained virtually no details and no numbers. More a proposal than a plan, it was a challenge to European leaders to cooperate and coordinate. It asked Europeans to create their own plan for rebuilding Europe, indicating the United States would then fund this plan. The administration felt that the plan would likely be unpopular among many Americans, and the speech was mainly directed at a European audience. In an attempt to keep the speech out of American papers, journalists were not contacted, and on the same day, Truman called a press conference to take away headlines. In contrast, Dean Acheson, an Under Secretary of State, was dispatched to contact the European media, especially the British media, and the speech was read in its entirety on the BBC.[55]
In the audience at Harvard was International Law and Diplomacy graduate student Malcolm Crawford, who had just written his Master's thesis entitled "A Blueprint for the Financing of Post-War Business and Industry in the United Kingdom and Republic of France." Crawford's thesis was read by future Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas and presented to President Truman as the solution for Marshall's proposal. It was Crawford's thesis which provided the key to selling the Marshall Plan to Congress by laying out the idea of "strategic partnerships." Instead of the Federal government granting money directly to Europe, American businesses would provide technology, expertise, and materials to Europe as a strategic partner, and in exchange, the Federal government would purchase stock in the US businesses to reimburse them. In this way, Europe would receive the aid it needed, American businesses would receive capital investment, and the federal government would make a profit when the stock was sold.[56]
Rejection by Stalin
[edit]Eastern Bloc |
---|
British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin heard Marshall's radio broadcast speech and immediately contacted French Foreign Minister Georges Bidault to begin preparing a quick European response to (and acceptance of) the offer, which led to the creation of the Committee of European Economic Co-operation. The two agreed that it would be necessary to invite the Soviets as the other major allied power. Marshall's speech had explicitly included an invitation to the Soviets, feeling that excluding them would have been a sign of distrust. State Department officials, however, knew that Stalin would almost certainly not participate and that any plan that would send large amounts of aid to the Soviets was unlikely to get Congressional approval.[57]
Initial reactions
[edit]Speaking at the Paris Peace Conference on October 10, 1946, Molotov had already stated Soviet fears: "If American capital was given a free hand in the small states ruined and enfeebled by the war [it] would buy up the local industries, appropriate the more attractive Romanian, Yugoslav ... enterprises and would become the master in these small states."[58] While the Soviet ambassador in Washington suspected that the Marshall Plan could lead to the creation of an anti-Soviet bloc, Stalin was open to the offer.[59] He directed that—in negotiations to be held in Paris regarding the aid—countries in the Eastern Bloc should not reject economic conditions being placed upon them.[59] Stalin only changed his outlook when he learned that (a) credit would only be extended under conditions of economic cooperation, and (b) aid would also be extended to Germany in total, an eventuality which Stalin thought would hamper the Soviets' ability to exercise influence in western Germany.[59][clarification needed]
Initially, Stalin maneuvered to kill the plan, or at least hamper it using destructive participation in the Paris talks regarding conditions.[59] He quickly realized, however, that this would be impossible after Molotov reported—following his arrival in Paris in July 1947—that conditions for the credit were non-negotiable.[59] Looming as just as large a concern was the Czechoslovak eagerness to accept the aid, as well as indications of a similar Polish attitude.[59]
Compulsory Eastern Bloc rejection
[edit]Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov left Paris, rejecting the plan.[60] After that, statements were made suggesting a future confrontation with the West, calling the United States both a "fascizing" power and the "center of worldwide reaction and anti-Soviet activity", with all U.S.-aligned countries branded as enemies.[60] The Soviets blamed the United States for communist losses in elections in Belgium, France, and Italy months earlier, in the spring of 1947.[60] It claimed that "marshallization" must be resisted and prevented by any means and that French and Italian communist parties were to make maximum efforts to sabotage the implementation of the plan.[60] In addition, Western embassies in Moscow were isolated, with their personnel being denied contact with Soviet officials.[60]
On July 12, a larger meeting was convened in Paris. Every country in Europe was invited, with the exceptions of Spain (a World War II neutral that had sympathized with the Axis powers) and the small states of Andorra, San Marino, Monaco, and Liechtenstein. The Soviet Union was invited with the understanding that it would likely refuse. The states of the future Eastern Bloc were also approached, and Czechoslovakia and Poland agreed to attend. In one of the most evident signs and reflections of tight Soviet control and domination over the region, Jan Masaryk, the foreign minister of Czechoslovakia, was summoned to Moscow and berated by Stalin for considering Czechoslovakia's possible involvement with and joining of the Marshall Plan. The prime minister of Poland, Józef Cyrankiewicz, was rewarded by Stalin for his country's rejection of the plan which came in the form of the Soviet Union's offer of a lucrative trade agreement lasting for five years, a grant amounting to the approximate equivalent of $450 million (in 1948; the sum would have been $4.4 billion in 2014 [61]) in the form of long-term credit and loans and the provision of 200,000 tonnes of grain, heavy and manufacturing machinery and factories and heavy industries to Poland.[62]
The Marshall Plan participants were not surprised when the Czechoslovakian and Polish delegations were prevented from attending the Paris meeting. The other Eastern Bloc states immediately rejected the offer.[63] Finland also declined, to avoid antagonizing the Soviets (see also Finlandization). The Soviet Union's "alternative" to the Marshall plan which was purported to involve Soviet subsidies and trade with western Europe, became known as the Molotov Plan, and later, the Comecon. In a 1947 speech to the United Nations, Soviet deputy foreign minister Andrei Vyshinsky said that the Marshall Plan violated the principles of the United Nations. He accused the United States of attempting to impose its will on other independent states while at the same time using economic resources distributed as a relief to needy nations as an instrument of political pressure.[64]
Yugoslavia
[edit]Although all other communist European countries had deferred to Stalin and rejected the aid, the Yugoslavs, led by Josip Broz (Tito), initially went along and rejected the Marshall Plan. However, in 1948 Tito broke decisively with Stalin on other issues. Yugoslavia requested American aid. American leaders were internally divided, but finally agreed and began sending money on a small scale in 1949 and on a much larger scale in 1950–53. The American aid was not part of the Marshall Plan.[65]
Szklarska Poręba meeting
[edit]In late September, the Soviet Union called a meeting of nine European communist parties at the resort town of Szklarska Poręba in southwest Poland.[66] A Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) report was read at the outset to set the heavily anti-Western tone, stating now that "international politics is dominated by the ruling clique of the American imperialists" which have embarked upon the "enslavement of the weakened capitalist countries of Europe".[67]Communist parties were to struggle against the US presence in Europe by any means necessary, including sabotage.[68] The report further claimed that "reactionary imperialist elements throughout the world, particularly in the United States, in Britain and France, had put particular hope on Germany and Japan, primarily on Hitlerite Germany—first as a force most capable of striking a blow at the Soviet Union".[69]
Referring to the Eastern Bloc, the report stated that "the Red Army's liberating role was complemented by an upsurge of the freedom-loving peoples' liberation struggle against the fascist predators and their hirelings."[69]It argued that "the bosses of Wall Street" were "tak[ing] the place of Germany, Japan, and Italy".[69] The Marshall Plan was described as "the American plan for the enslavement of Europe".[69] It described the world now breaking down "into basically two camps—the imperialist and antidemocratic camp on the one hand, and the anti-imperialist and democratic camp on the other".[69]
Although the Eastern Bloc countries, except Czechoslovakia, had immediately rejected Marshall Plan aid, Eastern Bloc communist parties were blamed for permitting even minor influence by non-communists in their respective countries during the run-up to the Marshall Plan.[70] The meeting's chair, Andrei Zhdanov, who was in permanent radio contact with the Kremlin from whom he received instructions,[67] also castigated communist parties in France and Italy for collaboration with those countries' domestic agendas.[71] Zhdanov warned that if they continued to fail to maintain international contact with Moscow to consult on all matters, "extremely harmful consequences for the development of the brother parties' work" would result.[71]
Party rules prevented Italian and French communist leaders from pointing out that it was Stalin who had directed them not to take opposition stances in 1944.[71] The French communist party, like others, was then to redirect its mission to "destroy capitalist economy" and that the Soviet Communist Information Bureau (Cominform) would take control of the French Communist Party's activities to oppose the Marshall Plan.[68] When they asked Zhdanov if they should prepare for armed revolt when they returned home, he did not answer.[68] In a follow-up conversation with Stalin, he explained that an armed struggle would be impossible and that the struggle against the Marshall Plan was to be waged under the slogan of national independence.[72]
Passage in Congress
[edit]Congress, under the control of conservative Republicans, agreed to the program for multiple reasons. The 20-member conservative isolationist Senate wing of the party, based in the rural Midwest and led by Senator Kenneth S. Wherry (R-Nebraska), was outmaneuvered by the emerging internationalist wing, led by Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg (R-Michigan). The opposition argued that it made no sense to oppose communism by supporting the socialist governments in Western Europe; and that American goods would reach Russia and increase its war potential. They called it "a wasteful 'operation rat-hole'"[73] Vandenberg, assisted by Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R-Massachusetts) admitted there was no certainty that the plan would succeed, but said it would halt economic chaos, sustain Western civilization, and stop further Soviet expansion. Senator Robert A. Taft (R-Ohio) hedged on the issue. He said it was without economic justification; however, it was "absolutely necessary" in "the world battle against communism." In the end, only 17 senators voted against it on March 13, 1948[74] A bill granting an initial $5 billion passed Congress with strong bipartisan support. Congress eventually allocated $12.4 billion in aid over the four years of the plan.[75]
Congress reflected public opinion, which resonated with the ideological argument that communism flourishes in poverty. Across America, multiple interest groups, including business, labor, farming, philanthropy, ethnic groups, and religious groups, saw the Marshall Plan as an inexpensive solution to a massive problem, noting it would also help American exports and stimulate the American economy as well. Major newspapers were highly supportive, including such conservative outlets as Time magazine. Vandenberg made sure of bipartisan support on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The Solid Democratic South was highly supportive, the upper Midwest was dubious, but heavily outnumbered. The plan was opposed by conservatives in the rural Midwest, who opposed any major government spending program and were highly suspicious of Europeans.[76] The plan also had some opponents on the left, led by Henry A. Wallace, the former vice president. He said the plan was hostile to the Soviet Union, a subsidy for American exporters, and sure to polarize the world between East and West.[77] However, opposition against the Marshall Plan was greatly reduced by the shock of the communist coup in Czechoslovakia in February 1948. The appointment of the prominent businessman Paul G. Hoffman as director reassured conservative businessmen that the gigantic sums of money would be handled efficiently.[78]
Negotiations
[edit]Turning the plan into reality required negotiations among the participating nations. Sixteen nations met in Paris to determine what form the American aid would take, and how it would be divided. The negotiations were long and complex, with each nation having its own interests. France's major concern was that Germany not be rebuilt to its previous level of might. The Benelux countries (Belgium, Netherlands, and Luxembourg), despite also suffering under the Nazis, had long been closely linked to the German economy and felt their prosperity depended on its revival. The Scandinavian nations, especially Sweden, insisted that their long-standing trading relationships with the Eastern Bloc nations not be disrupted and that their neutrality not be infringed.[79]
The United Kingdom insisted on special status as a longstanding belligerent during the war, concerned that if it were treated equally with the devastated continental powers, it would receive virtually no aid. The Americans were pushing the importance of free trade and European unity to form a bulwark against communism. The Truman administration, represented by William L. Clayton, promised the Europeans that they would be free to structure the plan themselves, but the administration also reminded the Europeans that implementation depended on the plan's passage through Congress. A majority of Congress members were committed to free trade and European integration and were hesitant to spend too much of the money on Germany.[79] However, before the Marshall Plan was in effect, France, Austria, and Italy needed immediate aid. On December 17, 1947, the United States agreed to give $40 million to France, Austria, China, and Italy.[80]
Agreement was eventually reached, and the Europeans sent a reconstruction plan to Washington, which was formulated and agreed upon by the Committee of European Economic Co-operation in 1947. In the document, the Europeans asked for $22 billion in aid. Truman cut this to $17 billion in the bill he put to Congress. On March 17, 1948, Truman addressed European security and condemned the Soviet Union before a hastily convened Joint Session of Congress. Attempting to contain spreading Soviet influence in the Eastern Bloc, Truman asked Congress to restore a peacetime military draft and to swiftly pass the Economic Cooperation Act, the name given to the Marshall Plan. Of the Soviet Union Truman said, "The situation in the world today is not primarily the result of the natural difficulties which follow a great war. It is chiefly due to the fact that one nation has not only refused to cooperate in the establishment of a just and honorable peace but—even worse—has actively sought to prevent it.[81]
Members of the Republican-controlled 80th Congress (1947–1949) were skeptical. "In effect, he told the Nation that we have lost the peace, that our whole war effort was in vain.", noted Representative Frederick Smith of Ohio. Others thought he had not been forceful enough to contain the USSR. "What [Truman] said fell short of being tough", noted Representative Eugene Cox, a Democrat from Georgia, "there is no prospect of ever winning Russian cooperation." Despite its reservations, the 80th Congress implemented Truman's requests, further escalating the Cold War with the USSR.[81]
Truman signed the Economic Cooperation Act into law on April 3, 1948; the Act established the Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA) to administer the program. ECA was headed by economic cooperation administrator Paul G. Hoffman. In the same year, the participating countries (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, West Germany, the United Kingdom, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, and the United States) signed an accord establishing a master financial-aid-coordinating agency, the Organisation for European Economic Co-operation (later called the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development or OECD), which was headed by Frenchman Robert Marjolin.[citation needed]
Implementation
[edit]According to Armin Grünbacher:
The U.S. government did not give money directly to the participating countries so that they could buy whatever they thought they needed. Instead the U.S. delivered the goods and provided services, mainly transatlantic shipping, to the participating governments, which then sold the commodities to businesses and individuals who had to pay the dollar value of the goods in local currency ("counterparts") into so-called ERP Special Accounts that were set up at the country's central bank. This way of operation held three advantages: the provision of U.S. goods to Europe without European dollar payments helped to narrow the dollar gap that strangled European reconstruction; the accumulated funds could be used for investments in long-term reconstruction (as happened in France and Germany) or for paying off a government's war debts (as in Great Britain); and the payments of the goods in local currencies helped to limit inflation by taking these funds temporarily out of circulation while they were held in the Special Accounts.[82]
The ECA's official mission statement was to give a boost to the European economy: to promote European production, to bolster European currency, and to facilitate international trade, especially with the United States, whose economic interest required Europe to become wealthy enough to import US goods. Another unofficial goal of ECA (and of the Marshall Plan) was the containment of growing Soviet influence in Europe, evident especially in the growing strength of communist parties in France, and Italy.
The Marshall Plan money was transferred to the governments of the European nations. The funds were jointly administered by the local governments and the ECA. Each European capital had an ECA envoy, generally a prominent American businessman who would advise on the process. The cooperative allocation of funds was encouraged, and panels of government, business and labor leaders were convened to examine the economy and see where aid was needed. The recipient nations were represented collectively by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), headed by British statesman Oliver Franks.[83]
The Marshall Plan aid was mostly used for goods from the United States. The European nations had all but exhausted their foreign-exchange reserves during the war, and the Marshall Plan aid represented almost their sole means of importing goods from abroad. At the start of the plan, these imports were mainly much-needed staples such as food and fuel, but later the purchases turned toward reconstruction needs as was originally intended. In the latter years, under pressure from the United States Congress and with the outbreak of the Korean War, an increasing amount of the aid was spent on rebuilding the militaries of Western Europe. Of the some $13 billion allotted by mid-1951, $3.4 billion had been spent on imports of raw materials and semi-manufactured products; $3.2 billion on food, feed, and fertilizer; $1.9 billion on machines, vehicles and equipment; and $1.6 billion on fuel.[84]
Also established were counterpart funds, which used Marshall Plan aid to establish funds in the local currency. According to ECA rules, recipients had to invest 60% of these funds in industry. This was prominent in Germany where these government-administered funds played a crucial role in lending money to private enterprises which would spend the money rebuilding. These funds played a central role in the reindustrialization of Germany. In 1949–50, for instance, 40% of the investment in the German coal industry was by these funds.[85]
The companies were obligated to repay the loans to the government, and the money would then be lent out to another group of businesses. This process has continued to this day in the guise of the state-owned KfW bank, (Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau, meaning Reconstruction Credit Institute). The Special Fund, then supervised by the Federal Economics Ministry, was worth over DM 10 billion in 1971. In 1997 it was worth DM 23 billion. Through the revolving loan system, the Fund had by the end of 1995 made low-interest loans to German citizens amounting to around DM 140 billion. The other 40% of the counterpart funds were used to pay down the debt, stabilize the currency, or invest in non-industrial projects. France made the most extensive use of counterpart funds, using them to reduce the budget deficit. In France, and most other countries, the counterpart fund money was absorbed into general government revenues, and not recycled as in Germany.[86]
The Netherlands received US aid for economic recovery in the Netherlands Indies. However, in January 1949, the American government suspended this aid in response to the Dutch efforts to restore colonial rule in Indonesia during the Indonesian National Revolution, and it implicitly threatened to suspend Marshall aid to the Netherlands if the Dutch government continued to oppose the independence of Indonesia.[87]
At the time the United States was a significant oil producing nation—one of the goals of the Marshall Plan was for Europe to use oil in place of coal, but the Europeans wanted to buy crude oil and use the Marshall Plan funds to build refineries instead. However, when independent American oil companies complained, the ECA denied funds for European refinery construction.[88]
Technical Assistance Program
[edit]A high priority was increasing industrial productivity in Europe, which proved one of the more successful aspects of the Marshall Plan.[89] The US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) contributed heavily to the success of the Technical Assistance Program. The United States Congress passed a law on June 7, 1940, that allowed the BLS to "make continuing studies of labor productivity"[90] and appropriated funds for the creation of a Productivity and Technological Development Division. The BLS could then use its expertise in the field of productive efficiency to implement a productivity drive in each Western European country receiving Marshall Plan aid. Counterpart funds were used to finance large-scale tours of American industry. France, for example, sent 500 missions with 4700 businessmen and experts to tour American factories, farms, stores, and offices. They were especially impressed with the prosperity of American workers, and how they could purchase an inexpensive new automobile for nine months work, compared to 30 months in France.[91]
By implementing technological literature surveys and organized plant visits, American economists, statisticians, and engineers were able to educate European manufacturers in statistical measurement. The goal of the statistical and technical assistance from the Americans was to increase productive efficiency of European manufacturers in all industries.
To conduct this analysis, the BLS performed two types of productivity calculations. First, they used existing data to calculate how much a worker produces per hour of work—the average output rate. Second, they compared the existing output rates in a particular country to output rates in other nations. By performing these calculations across all industries, the BLS was able to identify the strengths and weaknesses of each country's manufacturing and industrial production. From that, the BLS could recommend technologies (especially statistical) that each individual nation could implement. Often, these technologies came from the United States; by the time the Technical Assistance Program began, the United States used statistical technologies "more than a generation ahead of what [the Europeans] were using".[90]
The BLS used these statistical technologies to create Factory Performance Reports for Western European nations. The American government sent hundreds of technical advisers to Europe to observe workers in the field. This on-site analysis made the Factory Performance Reports especially helpful to the manufacturers. In addition, the Technical Assistance Program funded 24,000 European engineers, leaders, and industrialists to visit America and tour America's factories, mines, and manufacturing plants.[92] This way, the European visitors would be able to return to their home countries and implement the technologies used in the United States. The analyses in the Factory Performance Reports and the "hands-on" experience had by the European productivity teams effectively identified productivity deficiencies in European industries; from there, it became clearer how to make European production more effective.
Before the Technical Assistance Program even went into effect, United States Secretary of Labor Maurice Tobin expressed his confidence in American productivity and technology to both American and European economic leaders. He urged that the United States play a large role in improving European productive efficiency by providing four recommendations for the program's administrators:
- That BLS productivity personnel should serve on American-European councils for productivity;
- that productivity targets (based on American productivity standards) can and should be implemented to increase productivity;
- that there should be a general exchange and publication of information; and
- that the "technical abstract" service should be the central source of information.[90]
The effects of the Technical Assistance Program were not limited to improvements in productive efficiency. While the thousands of European leaders took their work/study trips to the United States, they were able to observe a number of aspects of American society as well. The Europeans could watch local, state, and federal governments work together with citizens in a pluralist society. They observed a democratic society with open universities and civic societies in addition to more advanced factories and manufacturing plants. The Technical Assistance Program allowed Europeans to bring home many types of American ideas.[92]
Another important aspect of the Technical Assistance Program was its low cost. While $19.4 billion was allocated for capital costs in the Marshall Plan, the Technical Assistance Program only required $300 million. Only one-third of that $300 million cost was paid by the United States.[93]
United Kingdom
[edit]The economy was precarious during the age of austerity, as wartime restrictions and rationing continued, and the wartime bombing damage was slowly being rebuilt at great cost.[94] The Treasury depended heavily on American money, especially the 1946 loan of $3.75 billion at a low 2% interest rate.[46] Even more helpful was the gift of $2.694 billion in Marshall Plan funds in 1948-1951. Canada also provided gifts and $1.25 billion in loans.[95][96][97][98] The Marshall money was a gift but carried requirements that Britain balance its budget, control tariffs, improve management, and maintain adequate currency reserves. The British Labour government under Prime Minister Clement Attlee was an enthusiastic participant.[99][100]
The American goals for the Marshall plan were to help rebuild the postwar British economy, help modernize the economy, and minimize trade barriers. When the Soviet Union refused to participate or allow its satellites to participate, the Marshall plan became an element of the emerging Cold War.[101]
There were political tensions between the two nations regarding Marshall plan requirements.[102] London was dubious about Washington's emphasis on European economic integration as the solution to postwar recovery. Integration with Europe at this point would mean cutting close ties to the emerging Commonwealth. London tried to convince Washington that American economic aid, especially to the sterling currency area, was necessary to solve the dollar shortage. British economists argued that their position was validated by 1950 as European industrial production exceeded prewar levels. Washington demanded convertibility of sterling currency on 15 July 1947, which produced a severe financial crisis for Britain. Convertibility was suspended on 20 August 1947. However, by 1950, American rearmament and heavy spending on the Korean War and Cold War finally ended the dollar shortage.[99] The balance of payment problems that troubled the postwar government was caused less by economic decline and more by political overreach, according to Jim Tomlinson.[103]
According to economic historians N.F.R. Crafts and Nicholas Woodward, the Marshall Plan money had a powerful multiplier effect. In 1948-1949 free imports from the United States amounted to 2.4 percent of British GNP. However, they calculate that the multiplier effects increased the 1949 GNP by 10% to 20%.[104]
West Germany and Austria
[edit]The Marshall Plan was implemented in West Germany (1948–1950), as a way to modernize business procedures and utilize the best practices. As a major prerequisite for delivery of aid, the Currency Reform of 1948 was implemented on June 20. The Marshall Plan made it possible for West Germany to return quickly to its traditional pattern of industrial production with a strong export sector. Without the plan, agriculture would have played a larger role in the recovery period, which itself would have been longer.[105][106][107] With respect to Austria, Günter Bischof has noted that "the Austrian economy, injected with an overabundance of European Recovery Program funds, produced "miracle" growth figures that matched and at times surpassed the German ones."[108]
Marshall aid in general and the counterpart funds in particular had a significant impact in Cold-War propaganda and economic matters in Western Europe, which most likely contributed to the declining appeal of domestic communist parties.[82]
Expenditures
[edit]The Marshall Plan aid was divided among the participant states on a roughly per capita basis. A larger amount was given to the major industrial powers, as the prevailing opinion was that their resuscitation was essential for general European revival. Somewhat more aid per capita was also directed toward the Allied nations, with less for those that had been part of the Axis or remained neutral. The exception was Iceland, which had been neutral during the war, but received far more on a per capita basis than the second highest recipient.[109]
The table below shows Marshall Plan aid by country and year (in millions of dollars) from The Marshall Plan Fifty Years Later.[4] There is no clear consensus on exact amounts, as different scholars differ on exactly what elements of American aid during this period were part of the Marshall Plan.
Country | 1948/49 ($ millions) |
1949/50 ($ millions) |
1950/51 ($ millions) |
Cumulative ($ millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Austria | 232 | 166 | 70 | 468 |
Belgium and Luxembourg | 195 | 222 | 360 | 777 |
Denmark | 103 | 87 | 195 | 385 |
France | 1,085 | 691 | 520 | 2,296 |
West Germany | 510 | 438 | 500 | 1,448 |
Greece | 175 | 156 | 45 | 376 |
Iceland | 6 | 22 | 15 | 43 |
Ireland | 88 | 45 | 0 | 133 |
Italy and Trieste | 594 | 405 | 205 | 1,204 |
Netherlands | 471 | 302 | 355 | 1,128 |
Norway | 82 | 90 | 200 | 372 |
Portugal | 0 | 0 | 70 | 70 |
Sweden | 39 | 48 | 260 | 347 |
Switzerland | 0 | 0 | 250 | 250 |
Turkey | 28 | 59 | 50 | 137 |
United Kingdom | 1,316 | 921 | 1,060 | 3,297 |
Totals | 4,924 | 3,652 | 4,155 | 12,731 |
Loans and grants
[edit]The Marshall Plan, just as GARIOA, consisted of aid both in the form of grants and in the form of loans.[110] Out of the total, US$1.2 billion were loan-aid.[111]
Ireland which received US$146.2 million through the Marshall Plan, received US$128.2 million as loans, and the remaining US$18 million as grants.[112] By 1969 the Irish Marshall Plan debt, which was still being repaid, amounted to 31 million pounds, out of a total Irish foreign debt of 50 million pounds.[113] The UK received US$385 million of its Marshall Plan aid in the form of loans.[111] Unconnected to the Marshall Plan the UK also received direct loans from the US amounting to US$4.6 billion.[111] The proportion of Marshall Plan loans versus Marshall Plan grants was roughly 15% to 85% for both the UK and France.[114]
Germany, which up until the 1953 debt agreement had to work on the assumption that all the Marshall Plan aid was to be repaid, spent its funds very carefully. Payment for Marshall Plan goods, "counterpart funds", were administered by the Reconstruction Credit Institute, which used the funds for loans inside Germany. In the 1953 debt agreement, the amount of Marshall Plan aid that Germany was to repay was reduced to less than US$1 billion.[115] This made the proportion of loans versus grants to Germany similar to that of France and the UK.[114] The final German loan repayment was made in 1971.[116] Since Germany chose to repay the aid debt out of the German Federal budget, leaving the German ERP fund intact, the fund was able to continue its reconstruction work. By 1996 it had accumulated a value of 23 billion Deutsche Mark.[117]
Countries | Total (m$.) | Grants (m$.) | Loans (m$.) |
---|---|---|---|
Austria | 677.8 | 677.8 | / |
Belgium-Luxembourg | 559.3 | 491.3 | 68.0[a] |
Denmark | 273.0 | 239.7 | 33.3 |
France | 2,713.6 | 2,488.0 | 255.6 |
Germany (FRG) | 1,390.6 | 1,173.7 | 216.9[b] |
Greece | 706.7 | 706.7 | / |
Iceland | 29.3 | 24.0 | 5.3 |
Ireland | 147.5 | 19.3 | 128.2 |
Italy (incl. Trieste) | 1,208.8 | 1,113.2 | 95.6 |
Netherlands (*Indonesia)[c] | 1,083.5 | 916.8 | 166.7 |
Norway | 255.3 | 216.1 | 39.2 |
Portugal | 51.2 | 15.1 | 36.1 |
Sweden | 107.3 | 86.9 | 20.4 |
Turkey | 225.1 | 140.1 | 85.0 |
United Kingdom | 3,189.8 | 2,895.0 | 384.8 |
Regional | 407.0[d] | 407.0 | / |
Total for all countries | 13,325.8 | 11,820.7 | 1,505.1 |
- ^ The total of the loan includes $65 million for Belgium and $3 million for Luxembourg: it is impossible to define the respective grants among the two countries.
- ^ This includes a first loan of $16.9 million, to which were added $200 million representing a proportionally divided portion of grants converted into loans according to an agreement signed on 27 February 1953.
- ^ Aid of the Marshall Plan to the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia) extended to the Netherlands before the transfer of sovereignty on 30 December 1949. Total aids for the Dutch East Indies amounted to $101.4 million ($84.2 million in grants, $17.2 million in loans).
- ^ This includes the US contribution to the funds of the European Payments Union, $361.4 million; general freight account $33.5 million; European authorisations for technical assistance (multi-countries or regional) $12.1 million.
Funding for CIA fronts
[edit]The Central Intelligence Agency received 5% of the Marshall Plan funds (about $685 million spread over six years), which it used to finance secret operations abroad. Through the Office of Policy Coordination money was directed toward support for labor unions, newspapers, student groups, artists and intellectuals, who were countering the anti-American counterparts subsidized by the communists. The largest sum went to the Congress for Cultural Freedom. There were no agents working among the Soviets or their satellite states.[118] The founding conference of the Congress for Cultural Freedom was held in Berlin in June 1950. Among the leading intellectuals from the US and Western Europe were writers, philosophers, critics and historians: Raymond Aron, Alfred Ayer, Franz Borkenau, Irving Brown, James Burnham, Benedetto Croce, John Dewey, Sidney Hook, Karl Jaspers, Arthur Koestler, Melvin J. Lasky, Richard Löwenthal, Ernst Reuter, Bertrand Russell, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Ignazio Silone, Hugh Trevor-Roper, and Tennessee Williams. There were conservatives among the participants, but non-communist (or former communist) leftists were more numerous.[119]
Effects and legacy
[edit]The Marshall Plan was originally scheduled to end in 1953. Any effort to extend it was halted by the growing cost of the Korean War and rearmament. American Republicans hostile to the plan had also gained seats in the 1950 Congressional elections, and conservative opposition to the plan was revived. Thus the plan ended in 1951, though various other forms of American aid to Europe continued afterward.
The years 1948 to 1952 saw the fastest period of growth in European history. Industrial production increased by 35%. Agricultural production substantially surpassed pre-war levels.[75] The poverty and starvation of the immediate postwar years disappeared, and Western Europe embarked upon an unprecedented two decades of growth that saw standards of living increase dramatically. Additionally, the long-term effect of economic integration raised European income levels substantially, by nearly 20 percent by the mid-1970s.[120] There is some debate among historians over how much this should be credited to the Marshall Plan. Most reject the idea that it alone miraculously revived Europe, as evidence shows that a general recovery was already underway. Most believe that the Marshall Plan sped this recovery, but did not initiate it. Many argue that the structural adjustments that it forced were of great importance. Economic historians J. Bradford DeLong and Barry Eichengreen call it "history's most successful structural adjustment program."[121] One effect of the plan was that it subtly "Americanized" European countries, especially Austria, through new exposure to American popular culture, including the growth in influence of Hollywood movies and rock n' roll.[122]
The political effects of the Marshall Plan may have been just as important as the economic ones. Marshall Plan aid allowed the nations of Western Europe to relax austerity measures and rationing, reducing discontent and bringing political stability. The communist influence on Western Europe was greatly reduced, and throughout the region, communist parties faded in popularity in the years after the Marshall Plan. The trade relations fostered by the Marshall Plan helped forge the North Atlantic alliance that would persist throughout the Cold War in the form of NATO. At the same time, the nonparticipation of the states of the Eastern Bloc was one of the first clear signs that the continent was now divided.
The Marshall Plan also played an important role in European integration. Both the Americans and many of the European leaders felt that European integration was necessary to secure the peace and prosperity of Europe, and thus used Marshall Plan guidelines to foster integration. In some ways, this effort failed, as the OEEC never grew to be more than an agent of economic cooperation. Rather, it was the separate European Coal and Steel Community, which did not include Britain, that would eventually grow into the European Union. However, the OEEC served as both a testing and training ground for the structures that would later be used by the European Economic Community. The Marshall Plan, linked into the Bretton Woods system, also mandated free trade throughout the region.
While some historians today feel some of the praise for the Marshall Plan is exaggerated, it is still viewed favorably and many thus feel that a similar project would help other areas of the world. The events of 1947 are thus part and parcel of the larger story of the Cold War. These events played a major role, but it would be a mistake to exaggerate their significance. The bloc system in Europe took years to develop, and the Marshall Plan was just one part of the story.[123] After the fall of communism, several proposed a "Marshall Plan for Eastern Europe" that would help revive that region. Others have proposed a Marshall Plan for Africa to help that continent, and US Vice President Al Gore suggested a Global Marshall Plan.[C] "Marshall Plan" has become a metaphor for any very large-scale government program that is designed to solve a specific social problem. It is usually used when calling for federal spending to correct a perceived failure of the private sector.
Nicholas Shaxson comments: "It is widely believed that the plan worked by offsetting European countries' yawning deficits. But its real importance ... was simply to compensate for the US failure to institute controls on inflows of hot money from Europe. ... American post-war aid was less than the money flowing in the other direction."[125] European hot money inflated the US dollar, to the disadvantage of US exporters.
Repayment
[edit]The Organisation for European Economic Co-operation (OEEC) took the leading role in allocating funds, and the OEEC arranged for the transfer of the goods. The American supplier was paid in dollars, which were credited against the appropriate European Recovery Program funds. The European recipient, however, was not given the goods as a gift but had to pay for them (usually on credit) in local currency. These payments were kept by the European government involved in a special counterpart fund. This counterpart money, in turn, could be used by the government for further investment projects. Five percent of the counterpart money was paid to the US to cover the administrative costs of the ERP.[126] In addition to ERP grants, the Export-Import Bank (an agency of the US government) at the same time made long-term loans at low interest rates to finance major purchases in the US, all of which were repaid.
In the case of Germany, there also were 16 billion marks of debts from the 1920s which had defaulted in the 1930s, but which Germany decided to repay to restore its reputation. This money was owed to government and private banks in the US, France, and Britain. Another 16 billion marks represented postwar loans by the US. Under the London Debts Agreement of 1953, the repayable amount was reduced by 50% to about 15 billion marks and stretched out over 30 years, and compared to the fast-growing German economy were of minor impact.[127]
Areas excluded
[edit]Large parts of the world devastated by World War II did not benefit from the Marshall Plan. The only major Western European nation excluded was Spain, whose regime under Francisco Franco was highly unpopular in Washington. With the escalation of the Cold War, the United States reconsidered its position and in 1951 embraced Spain as an ally since it was encouraged by Franco's aggressive anti-communist policies. Over the next decade, a considerable amount of American aid would go to Spain but less than its neighbors had received under the Marshall Plan.[128]
The Soviet Union had been as badly affected as any other part of the world by the war. The Soviets imposed large reparations payments on the Axis allies that were in its sphere of influence. Austria, Finland, Hungary, Romania, and especially East Germany were forced to pay vast sums and ship large amounts of supplies to the Soviet Union. Those reparation payments meant the Soviet Union itself received about the same as 16 European countries received in total from Marshall Plan aid.[129]
In accordance with the agreements with the Soviet Union, shipment of dismantled German industrial installations from the west began on March 31, 1946. Under the terms of the agreement, the Soviet Union would in return ship raw materials such as food and timber to the western zones. In view of the Soviet failure to do so, the western zones halted the shipments east, ostensibly on a temporary basis, although they were never resumed. It was later shown that the main reason for halting shipments east was not the behavior of the Soviet Union but rather the recalcitrant behavior of France.[130] Examples of material received by the Soviets were equipment from the Kugel-Fischer ballbearing plant at Schweinfurt, the Daimler-Benz underground aircraft-engine plant at Obrigheim, the Deschimag shipyards at Bremen-Weser, and the Gendorf powerplant.[131]
The Soviets established COMECON as a riposte to the Marshall Plan to deliver aid for Eastern Bloc countries, but that was complicated by the Soviet efforts to manage their own recovery from the war. The members of Comecon looked to the Soviet Union for oil and in turn provided machinery, equipment, agricultural goods, industrial goods, and consumer goods to the Soviet Union. Economic recovery in the East was much slower than in the West, resulting in the formation of the shortage economies and a gap in wealth between East and West. Finland, which the Soviets forbade from joining the Marshall Plan and was required to give large reparations to the Soviets, saw its economy recover to pre-war levels in 1947.[citation needed] France, which received billions of dollars through the Marshall Plan, similarly saw its average income per person return to almost pre-war level by 1949.[132] By mid-1948 industrial production in Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Czechoslovakia had recovered to a level somewhat above pre-war level.[133]
Aid to Asia
[edit]From the end of the war to the end of 1953, the US provided grants and credits amounting to $5.9 billion to Asian countries, especially the Republic of China (Taiwan) ($1.051 billion), India ($255 million), Indonesia ($215 million), Japan ($2.444 billion), South Korea ($894 million), Pakistan ($98 million) and the Philippines ($803 million). In addition, another $282 million went to Israel and $196 million to the rest of the Middle East.[D] All this aid was separate from the Marshall Plan.[134]
Canada
[edit]Canada's infrastructure was damaged little by the war, as most of the war was fought in Europe, Asia, and the Pacific. In 1948, the US allowed ERP aid to be used to buy goods from Canada. In its first two years of operation, ERP funded over a billion dollars worth of trade with Canada[135]
World total
[edit]The total of American grants and loans to the world from 1945 to 1953 came to $44.3 billion.[D]
Opinion
[edit]Bradford DeLong and Barry Eichengreen conclude it was "History's Most Successful Structural Adjustment Program." They state:
It was not large enough to have significantly accelerated recovery by financing investment, aiding the reconstruction of damaged infrastructure, or easing commodity bottlenecks. We argue, however, that the Marshall Plan did play a major role in setting the stage for post-World War II Western Europe's rapid growth. The conditions attached to Marshall Plan aid pushed European political economy in a direction that left its post World War II "mixed economies" with more "market" and less "controls" in the mix.[121]
Domestic campaign for support
[edit]Prior to passing and enacting the Marshall Plan, President Truman and George Marshall started a domestic overhaul of public opinion from coast to coast. The purpose of this campaign was to sway public opinion in their direction and to inform the common person of what the Marshall Plan was and what the plan would ultimately do. They spent months attempting to convince Americans that their cause was just and that they should embrace the higher taxes that would come in the foreseeable future.[136] The Great Depression left Americans acutely aware of the psychological and political effects of poverty. Though the Marshall Plan is seen as an act of compassion or sympathy for countries struggling after WWII, it is likely fear of slipping into another depression at home caused the United States to invest in diplomacy and pivot away from another economic calamity.[137]
A copious amount of propaganda ended up being highly effective in swaying public opinion toward supporting the Marshall Plan. During the nationwide campaign for support, "more than a million pieces of pro-Marshall Plan publications-booklets, leaflets, reprints, and fact sheets", were disseminated.[138] Truman's and Marshall's efforts proved to be effective. A Gallup Poll taken between the months of July and December 1947 shows the percentage of Americans unaware of the Marshall Plan fell from 51% to 36% nationwide.[136] By the time the Marshall Plan was ready to be implemented, there was a general consensus throughout the American public that this was the right policy for both America, and the countries who would be receiving aid.
Change in American ideology
[edit]During the period leading up to World War II, Americans were highly isolationist, and many called The Marshall Plan a "milestone" for American ideology.[138] By looking at polling data over time from pre-World War II to post-World War II, one would find that there was a change in public opinion in regards to ideology. Americans swapped their isolationist ideals for a much more global internationalist ideology after World War II.
Polling data
[edit]In a National Opinion Research Center (NORC) poll taken in April 1945, a cross-section of Americans were asked, "If our government keeps on sending lendlease materials, which we may not get paid for, to friendly countries for about three years after the war, do you think this will mean more jobs or fewer jobs for most Americans, or won't it make any difference?" 75% said the same or more jobs; 10% said fewer.[139]
Before proposing anything to Congress in 1947, the Truman administration made an elaborate effort to organize public opinion in favor of the Marshall Plan spending, reaching out to numerous national organizations representing business, labor, farmers, women, and other interest groups. Political scientist Ralph Levering points out that:
Mounting large public relations campaigns and supporting private groups such as the Citizens Committee for the Marshall Plan, the administration carefully built public and bipartisan Congressional support before bringing these measures to a vote.[140]
Public opinion polls in 1947 consistently showed strong support for the Marshall plan among Americans. Furthermore, Gallup polls in England, France, and Italy showed favorable majorities over 60%.[141]
Criticism
[edit]The 1953 Spanish comedy film Welcome Mr. Marshall! depicts Castilian villagers preparing for a visit of the American authorities and hoping they will fulfill their desires. When the American motorcade arrives, it speeds through the village and the villagers themselves have to pay for the preparations. Underneath the surface, the film is an anti-Francoist satire despite receiving approval because the censorship board understood it to be an anti-American satire.[142]
Laissez-faire criticism
[edit]Laissez-faire criticism of the Marshall Plan came from a number of economists. Wilhelm Röpke, who influenced German Minister for Economy Ludwig Erhard in his economic recovery program, believed recovery would be found in eliminating central planning and restoring a market economy in Europe, especially in those countries which had adopted more fascist and corporatist economic policies. Röpke criticized the Marshall Plan for forestalling the transition to the free market by subsidizing the current, failing systems. Erhard put Röpke's theory into practice and would later credit Röpke's influence for West Germany's preeminent success.[143][144]
Henry Hazlitt criticized the Marshall Plan in his 1947 book Will Dollars Save the World?, arguing that economic recovery comes through savings, capital accumulation, and private enterprise, and not through large cash subsidies. Austrian School economist Ludwig von Mises criticized the Marshall Plan in 1951, believing that "the American subsidies make it possible for [Europe's] governments to conceal partially the disastrous effects of the various socialist measures they have adopted".[145]
Modern criticism
[edit]The Marshall Plan's role in the rapid recovery of Western Europe has been debated. Most reject the idea that it alone miraculously revived Europe since the evidence shows that a general recovery was already underway. The Marshall Plan grants were provided at a rate that was not much higher in terms of flow than the previous UNRRA aid and represented less than 3% of the combined national income of the recipient countries between 1948 and 1951,[121] which would mean an increase in GDP growth of only 0.3%.[7] In addition, there is no correlation between the amount of aid received and the speed of recovery: both France and the United Kingdom received more aid, but West Germany recovered significantly faster.[7]
Criticism of the Marshall Plan became prominent among historians of the revisionist school, such as Walter LaFeber, during the 1960s and 1970s. They argued that the plan was American economic imperialism and that it was an attempt to gain control over Western Europe just as the Soviets controlled Eastern Europe economically through the Comecon. In a review of West Germany's economy from 1945 to 1951, German analyst Werner Abelshauser concluded that "foreign aid was not crucial in starting the recovery or in keeping it going". The economic recoveries of France, Italy, and Belgium, Cowen argues, began a few months before the flow of US money. Belgium, the country that relied earliest and most heavily on free-market economic policies after its liberation in 1944, experienced swift recovery and avoided the severe housing and food shortages seen in the rest of continental Europe.[146]
Former US Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank Alan Greenspan gives most credit to German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard for Europe's economic recovery. Greenspan writes in his memoir The Age of Turbulence that Erhard's economic policies were the most important aspect of postwar Western European recovery, even outweighing the contributions of the Marshall Plan. He states that it was Erhard's reductions in economic regulations that permitted Germany's miraculous recovery, and that these policies also contributed to the recoveries of many other European countries. Its recovery is attributed to traditional economic stimuli, such as increases in investment, fueled by a high savings rate and low taxes. Japan saw a large infusion of US investment during the Korean War.[147]
The Marshall Plan has been recently reinterpreted as a public policy approach to complex and multi-causal problems in search of building integrated solutions with multilevel governance.[148]
See also
[edit]- Dulles' Plan
- Foreign policy of the United States
- Timeline of United States diplomatic history
- Milton Katz
- GITP (example of a company that was built with Marshall aid)
- Basket of Bread, a 1945 painting by Salvador Dalí used to illustrate the plan.
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ There was large-scale American aid to Nationalist China, and North Korea, as well as French Indochina, Thailand, Burma and the Philippines. (Price 1955, pp. 179–219)
- ^ West Germany was 6% higher, the other countries 45% higher (Eichengreen 2008, p. 57).
- ^ Marshall Plan style proposals for other parts of the world have been a perennial idea. For instance, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown have referred to their African aid goals as "a Marshall Plan".[124] After the end of the Cold War many felt Eastern Bloc needed a rebuilding plan.
- ^ a b All data from the official document: U.S. Bureau of the Census, Statistical Abstract of the United States: 1954 (1955) table 1075 pp. 899–902 online edition file 1954-08.pdf
References
[edit]- ^ Marshall Plan 2020.
- ^ Hogan 1987, p. 27.
- ^ Carew 1987.
- ^ a b Schain 2001.
- ^ Sobell 1987.
- ^ DeLong & Eichengreen 1993, p. 189-230.
- ^ a b c Crafts 2011, p. 6.
- ^ The Marshall Plan.
- ^ Lassance, Antonio (2022). The making of a public policy in large-scale: strategy, planning and decision support of the Marshall Plan (PDF) (in Portuguese). Brasília-DF, Brazil: Brazilian Institute for Applied Economic Research (Ipea).
- ^ Weissman, Alexander (November 2013). "Pivotal Politics – The Marshal Plan: A Turning Point in Foreign Aid and the Struggle for Democracy". The History Teacher. 47 (1): 113.
- ^ Brookings Institution.
- ^ Hogan 1987, p. 43.
- ^ Lassance 2021, pp. 61.
- ^ "Research Starters: Worldwide Deaths in World War II". The National WWII Museum | New Orleans. Retrieved 2023-06-28.
- ^ Roberts 1990, p. 97.
- ^ Volkogonov 1996, p. 531.
- ^ Roberts 2000, p. 30; McMahon 2003, p. 30.
- ^ Seppinen 2003, p. 1.
- ^ Kaplan 1999, p. 4.
- ^ Milward 1984, p. 46.
- ^ Mills 2008, p. 195.
- ^ Hogan 1987, pp. 427–45; Eichengreen 2008, pp. 64–73.
- ^ Eichengreen 2008, p. 57.
- ^ Hogan 1987, p. 189.
- ^ Milward 1984, p. 466.
- ^ Van der Wee 1984, p. 44.
- ^ Buchanon 2006, ch. 1.
- ^ Matusow 1967, pp. 35–36.
- ^ Judt 2001.
- ^ "The Marshall Plan: Definition, Date & Cold War". HISTORY. 2022-11-01. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
- ^ Canada, Veterans Affairs (2021-06-07). "Canada's Industries Gear up for War - Historical Sheet - Second World War - History - Veterans Affairs Canada". www.veterans.gc.ca. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
- ^ Hogan 1987, p. 30.
- ^ van Zanden 1998; Klemann 1997, p. 3–40.
- ^ Raff 1988, p. 335.
- ^ Schaff 2009, p. 1.
- ^ Milward 1984, pp. 356, 436.
- ^ Price 1955, p. 264.
- ^ Balabkins 1964, p. 207.
- ^ Balabkins 1964, p. 209.
- ^ a b Pas de Pagaille! 1947.
- ^ Gaddis 1997.
- ^ "History of the Marshall Plan". Office of the Historian. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
- ^ a b Beschloss 2003, p. 277.
- ^ Wala 1995, pp. 104–05.
- ^ Hogan 1987, pp. 34–35.
- ^ a b U.S. Statistical Abstract 1949, p. 846.
- ^ Judt 2001, p. 4.
- ^ UNRRA, p. 317.
- ^ Fifield 2015, p. 69.
- ^ Wettig 2008, p. 116.
- ^ a b c d Wettig 2008, p. 117.
- ^ Zulean, Marian. "Romania and the Marshall Plan". www.wilsoncenter.org. The Wilson Center. Retrieved March 30, 2024.
- ^ Hanhimäki & Westad 2004, p. 122.
- ^ Mee 1984, p. 97; Miall 1977.
- ^ Mee 1984, p. 99.
- ^ The Marshall Plan: The Economic Exchange of the Century by Tyler Bray, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nymHILU_XNg
- ^ "Soviet Union rejects Marshall Plan assistance". HISTORY. A&E Television Networks. June 29, 2020. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
- ^ McCauley 2016, p. 147.
- ^ a b c d e f Wettig 2008, p. 138.
- ^ a b c d e Wettig 2008, p. 139.
- ^ U.S. Inflation Calculator 2021.
- ^ Carnations 1948.
- ^ Schain 2001, p. 132.
- ^ Vyshinsky 1947.
- ^ Lampe 1990, pp. 28–37.
- ^ Behrman 2007.
- ^ a b Wettig 2008, p. 140.
- ^ a b c Wettig 2008, p. 146.
- ^ a b c d e Wettig 2008, p. 142.
- ^ Wettig 2008, p. 148.
- ^ a b c Wettig 2008, p. 145.
- ^ Wettig 2008, p. 147.
- ^ Bailey 1977, p. 232.
- ^ Campbell 1948, pp. 500–05.
- ^ a b Grogin 2001, p. 118.
- ^ Smuckler 1953, pp. 386–401.
- ^ Hogan 1987, p. 93.
- ^ Hitchens 1968, pp. 51–68; Kunz 1997.
- ^ a b Cini 2001, p. 24.
- ^ Sorel & Padoan 2008, pp. 15–16.
- ^ a b Truman 1948.
- ^ a b Grünbacher 2012.
- ^ Clayton 1963.
- ^ Hogan 1987, p. 415.
- ^ Crafts & Toniolo 1996, p. 464.
- ^ Harries & Underwood 1998.
- ^ Van der Eng 1988, pp. 335–52.
- ^ Pelletiere 2001, ch. 3.
- ^ Fossat 2018, pp. 582–600.
- ^ a b c Wasser & Dolfman 2005, p. 44.
- ^ Kuisel 1993, pp. 70–102.
- ^ a b Johnson 2002, p. 2.
- ^ Wasser & Dolfman 2005, p. 49.
- ^ David Kynaston, Austerity Britain, 1945–1951 (2008)
- ^ Derek H. Aldcroft, The British Economy: Volume 1 The Years of Turmoil, 1920-1951 (1986) pp.206, 209. online.
- ^ Michael J. Hogan, The Marshall Plan: America, Britain and the Reconstruction of Western Europe, 1947-1952 (Cambridge Up, 1987), pp. 29, 31, 48, 82–84.
- ^ Kenneth O. Morgan, Labour in Power, 1945-1951 (1984) pp.270–272, 366.
- ^ Norman Moss, Picking up the Reins: America, Britain and the Postwar World(Duckworth, 2008) pp.131–151.
- ^ a b Newton 1984.
- ^ Pelling 1988.
- ^ Cromwell 1982.
- ^ Maier 1990.
- ^ Tomlinson 2009.
- ^ N.F.R. Crafts and Nicholas Woodward, The British Economy since 1945 (Clarendon Press, 1991) pp.172–173.
- ^ Hardach 1987.
- ^ Knapp, Stolper & Hudson 1981.
- ^ Major 1996.
- ^ Bischof 2020, pp. 38–72.
- ^ Jonsson & Snævarr 2008, p. 385.
- ^ Guinnane 2005, p. 17.
- ^ a b c Agnew & Entrikin 2004, p. 110.
- ^ Bartlett 2018, p. 626.
- ^ Lydon 1998, p. 391.
- ^ a b Guinnane 2005, p. 28.
- ^ Reconstruction of Germany 2021: Im Londoner Schuldenabkommen wurde jedoch festgelegt, dass Deutschland von den erhaltenen Mitteln lediglich knapp 1 Mrd. US-Dollar zurückzahlen musste. [In the London debt agreement, it was stipulated that Germany only had to repay just under US $ 1 billion of the funds received.]
- ^ Biesinger 2006, p. 556.
- ^ Hardach 2004, p. 306.
- ^ Weiner 2007, pp. 32, 40–41.
- ^ Jeleński 1970; Saunders 1999.
- ^ Badinger 2005, pp. 50–78.
- ^ a b c DeLong & Eichengreen 1993, pp. 189–230.
- ^ Bischof, Pelinka & Stiefel 2000, pp. 174–75.
- ^ Trachtenberg, Marc (Winter 2005). "The Marshall Plan as Tragedy". Journal of Cold War Studies. 7 (1): 140. doi:10.1162/1520397053326220. JSTOR 26925782. S2CID 57567806. Retrieved 26 January 2024.
- ^ African Marshall Plan 2005.
- ^ Shaxson 2012.
- ^ Price 1955, p. 106.
- ^ Guinnane 2005, pp. 17, 20–21, 27–28, 30.
- ^ Crafts & Toniolo 1996, p. 363.
- ^ Zwass 1989, p. 16.
- ^ Gimbel 1975.
- ^ U. S. Analysis of Soviet Note 1957; Potsdam Reparations Begin 1946.
- ^ De Long & Eichengreen 1993, p. 202.
- ^ Warriner 1949, pp. 157–67.
- ^ Price 1955, pp. 179–219.
- ^ Bothwell 1998, p. 58.
- ^ a b Machado 2007.
- ^ Weissman, Alexander (November 2013). "Pivotal Politics: The Marshall Plan: A Turning Point in Foreign Aid and the Struggle for Democracy". The History Teacher. 47 (1): 112.
- ^ a b Lukacs 1997.
- ^ Cantril & Strunk 1951, p. 414.
- ^ Levering 1978, pp. 98–99.
- ^ Gallup 1972, pp. 691, 708–09, 722.
- ^ Arce, Julio (2011). "Irony, esperpento, and Parody in the Music of ¡Bienvenido Mister Marshall!". Journal of the Center for Iberian and Latin American Music.
- ^ Erhard, p. 22.
- ^ Zmirak 2001.
- ^ Von Mises 2006.
- ^ Marshall Plan for Iraq? 2003.
- ^ Forsberg 2000, p. 84.
- ^ Lassance 2021, pp. 1–59.
Bibliography
[edit]- Agnew, John; Entrikin, Nicholas (2004). The Marshall Plan Today: Model and Metaphor. Oxfordshire, England: Routledge. ISBN 0714655147.
- Badinger, Harald (2005). "Growth effects of economic integration: evidence from the EU member states". Review of World Economics. 141: 50–78. doi:10.1007/s10290-005-0015-y. S2CID 153722570.
- Bailey, Thomas A. (1977). The Marshall Plan Summer: An Eyewitness Report on Europe and the Russians in 1947. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press. ISBN 0817942017. OCLC 932208923.
- Balabkins, Nicholas (1964). Germany Under Direct Controls: Economic Aspects of Industrial Disarmament 1945–1948. Rutgers University Press.
- Bartlett, Thomas (2018). The Cambridge History of Ireland: Volume 4, 1880 to the Present. Cambridge UP. ISBN 978-1108605823.
- Behrman, Greg (2007). The Most Noble Adventure: The Marshall Plan and the Time When America Helped Save Europe. New York: Free Press. ISBN 978-0743282635. OCLC 934013761.
- Beschloss, Michael R (2003). The Conquerors: Roosevelt, Truman and the Destruction of Hitler's Germany, 1941–1945. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-6085-5.
- Biesinger, Josepha A. (2006). Germany: A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present. New York: Facts on File.
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Further reading
[edit]- Arkes, Hadley. Bureaucracy, the Marshall Plan, and the National Interest (1972), ISBN 0691646236.
- Bischof, Günter, and Hans Petschar. The Marshall Plan: Saving Europe, Rebuilding Austria (U of New Orleans Publishing, 2017) 336 pp. Online review
- Bonds, John Bledsoe. Bipartisan Strategy: Selling the Marshall Plan (2002) online version Archived 2009-12-04 at the Wayback Machine
- Bryan, Ferald J. "George C. Marshall at Harvard: A Study of the Origins and Construction of the 'Marshall Plan' Speech." Presidential Studies Quarterly (1991): 489–502. Online Archived 2020-02-03 at the Wayback Machine
- Djelic, Marie-Laure A. Exporting the American Model: The Post-War Transformation of European Business (1998) online version
- Elwood, David, "Was the Marshall Plan Necessary?" in Alan S. Milward and a Century of European Change, ed. Fernando Guirao, Frances M. B. Lynch, and Sigfrido M. Ramírez Pérez, 179–98. (Routledge, 2012) ISBN 1138107530
- Esposito, Chiarella. America's Feeble Weapon: Funding the Marshall Plan in France and Italy, 1948–1950 (1994) online version
- Fossedal, Gregory A. Our Finest Hour: Will Clayton, the Marshall Plan, and the Triumph of Democracy. (1993). ISBN 0817992014
- Gimbel, John, The origins of the Marshall plan (1976) (reviewed)
- Jackson, Scott. "Prologue to the Marshall Plan: The Origins of the American Commitment for a European Recovery Program," Journal of American History 65#4 (1979), pp. 1043–68 in JSTOR
- Kipping, Matthias and Bjarnar, Ove. The Americanisation of European Business: The Marshall Plan and the Transfer of Us Management Models (1998) online version
- Reynolds, David. "Marshall Plan Commemorative Section: The European Response: Primacy of Politics" Foreign Affairs (May/June 1997) online
- Vickers, Rhiannon. Manipulating Hegemony: State Power, Labour and the Marshall Plan in Britain (2000) online edition
- Wallich, Henry Christopher. Mainsprings of the German Revival (1955) ISBN 0837190177
- Wend, Henry Burke. Recovery and Restoration: U.S. Foreign Policy and the Politics of Reconstruction of West Germany's Shipbuilding Industry, 1945–1955 (2001) online version
- Weissman, Alexander D. "Pivotal politics – The Marshall Plan: A turning point in foreign aid and the struggle for democracy." History Teacher 47.1 (2013): 111–29. online, for middle and high school students
External links
[edit]- Media related to Marshall Plan at Wikimedia Commons
- Marshall Plan from the National Archives
- George C. Marshall Foundation
- The German Marshall Fund of the United States
- Excerpts from book by Allen W. Dulles
- Speech by J.F. Byrnes, United States Secretary of State, Restatement of Policy on Germany, Stuttgart, September 6, 1946. The speech marked the turning point away from the Morgenthau Plan philosophy of economic dismantlement of Germany and toward a policy of economic reconstruction.
- Marshall Plan Commemorative Section: Lessons of the Plan: Looking Forward to the Next Century
- Truman Presidential Library online collection of original Marshall Plan documents from the year 1946 onward Archived 2019-03-29 at the Wayback Machine
- "The Tragedy of American Diplomacy? Rethinking the Marshall Plan" by Michael Cox and Caroline Kennedy-Pipe and Response by Marc Trachtenberg, both published in the Journal of Cold War Studies, vol. 7, no. 1 (Winter 2005)
- Speech by George Marshall on June 5, 1947 at Harvard University (original recording)
- As delivered transcript of Marshall Plan speech on June 5, 1947 at Harvard University
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