The Economic Consequences of the Peace eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 239 pages of information about The Economic Consequences of the Peace.

The Economic Consequences of the Peace eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 239 pages of information about The Economic Consequences of the Peace.

On the 13th May, 1919, Count Brockdorff-Rantzau addressed to the Peace Conference of the Allied and Associated Powers the Report of the German Economic Commission charged with the study of the effect of the conditions of Peace on the situation of the German population.  “In the course of the last two generations,” they reported, “Germany has become transformed from an agricultural State to an industrial State.  So long as she was an agricultural State, Germany could feed forty million inhabitants.  As an industrial State she could insure the means of subsistence for a population of sixty-seven millions; and in 1913 the importation of foodstuffs amounted, in round figures, to twelve million tons.  Before the war a total of fifteen million persons in Germany provided for their existence by foreign trade, navigation, and the use, directly or indirectly, of foreign raw material.”  After rehearsing the main relevant provisions of the Peace Treaty the report continues:  “After this diminution of her products, after the economic depression resulting from the loss of her colonies, her merchant fleet and her foreign investments, Germany will not he in a position to import from abroad an adequate quantity of raw material.  An enormous part of German industry will, therefore, be condemned inevitably to destruction.  The need of importing foodstuffs will increase considerably at the same time that the possibility of satisfying this demand is as greatly diminished.  In a very short time, therefore, Germany will not be in a position to give bread and work to her numerous millions of inhabitants, who are prevented from earning their livelihood by navigation and trade.  These persons should emigrate, but this is a material impossibility, all the more because many countries and the most important ones will oppose any German immigration.  To put the Peace conditions into execution would logically involve, therefore, the loss of several millions of persons in Germany.  This catastrophe would not be long in coming about, seeing that the health of the population has been broken down during the War by the Blockade, and during the Armistice by the aggravation of the Blockade of famine.  No help, however great, or over however long a period it were continued, could prevent those deaths en masse.”  “We do not know, and indeed we doubt,” the report concludes, “whether the Delegates of the Allied and.  Associated Powers realize the inevitable consequences which will take place if Germany, an industrial State, very thickly populated, closely bound up with the economic system of the world, and under the necessity of importing enormous quantities of raw material and foodstuffs, suddenly finds herself pushed back to the phase of her development, which corresponds to her economic condition and the numbers of her population as they were half a century ago.  Those who sign this Treaty will sign the death sentence of many millions of German men, women and children.”

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The Economic Consequences of the Peace from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.