The Marshall plan in Austria - an analysis


Seminar Paper, 2006

35 Pages, Grade: A


Excerpt


Inhalt

1 Introduction: The Austrian “economic miracle” after World War II

2 The State of Austrian Affairs from 1945 to 1946 – Shortage Economy

3 The Birth of the Marshall Plan in 1946/47
3.1 The American Origins of an Economic Aid Program for Western Europe
3.2 The European Response and the Setup of the European Recovery Program

4 Austria’s Participation in the Marshall Plan
4.1 A Risky Decision
4.2 The Launching of the ERP
4.3 The Marshall Plan’s Implementation
4.4 Priorities and Highlights of the ERP between 1949 and 1951
4.5 The Stabilization Crisis and its Overcoming between 1951 and 1953

5 Occupation, the ERP, and Austrian Identity

6 Conclusion

Bibliography

Abbreviations

Chronology

The Marshall Plan Speech

1 Introduction: The Austrian “Economic Miracle” After World War II

The Austrian Republic, which had been unable to survive economically in the aftermath of World War I, recovered surprisingly quickly from the serious economic consequences of World War II. In fact, it became one of the world’s wealthiest nations within a few years only, achieving extraordinarily high growth rates and per-capita income increases on an international scale.

Which factors contributed to this “economic miracle” in the years following World War II? According to Bischof (2005:13-14), both endogenous and exogenous explanations can be emphasized. The Austrians’ industriousness, creativity, inventiveness and entrepreneurial spirit in trade and industry, the marketing of the Austrian landscape by tourism, and the corporate system balancing the interests of different groups are among the endogenous reasons which played an important role in the quick reconstruction. Of equal importance was the impact of exogenous factors, especially of American foreign aid programs. Immediately after the war, the mere survival of the Austrian population was ensured by food supplies from the GARIOA and the UNRRA which were funded mainly by the USA. An interim aid program of the American Congress followed in 1947/48, until the Marshall Plan came into effect from 1948 to 1952.

The economic and political conditions in Western Europe after World War II differed significantly from those after World War I (Hansen 2001:275-276): Firstly, because of air warfare and the movement of the war fronts over large distances, material destruction was far greater. Secondly, besides the USA, the Soviet Union had become a superpower; Western Europe’s influence was reduced to a buffer zone between East and West. Thirdly, a more interventionist economic policy replaced the previously liberal attitude. Politically, left-wing movements had gained popularity in European countries. Finally, the status of Germany and its eventual future independence were unclear.

Comparing the Marshall Plan with the economic aid provided by the League of Nations after World War I – a credit amounting to 611 million Gold Crowns with an interest of 11 percent, both instruments imposed strict economic conditions, but the Plan was more obliging and flexible in moments of crises. Moreover, the Plan’s much greater success is due to its character as partly interest-free donations: From about 1.6 billion dollars US economic aid, Austria received almost one billion as grants.

The Marshall Plan, whose historical role for Austria is a topic that has been rather neglected by historians for several decades, employed a recovery strategy which was comprised of three stages (Lacina 2000:11-12). Initially, in 1948/49, direct aid in the form of mainly food and raw materials was offered. In 1950/51, the focus lay on the reconstruction and adaption of basic industries. Finally, in 1952/53, most financial means were devoted to manufacturers of finished products and of export goods and to the tourism industry.

The Plan became stressed particularly in 2005 which was a year of many anniversaries for the Republic of Austria: the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II, the 50th anniversary of the signing of the State Treaty which finally put an end to Austria’s occupation by the allied powers, and the 10th anniversary of Austria’s accession to the European Union. In this context it should be highlighted that by participating in the Marshall Plan, Austria was also embarking on a future of participation in European integration. Therefore, the Marshall Plan’s role lies far beyond a simple economic aid program. Several exhibitions and publications in 2005 made sure that these events did not fall into oblivion.

By writing this paper I would like to make a contribution to the memory of the Marshall Plan which was the biggest reconstruction aid project ever. Perhaps no country benefited more from it than Austria: Between 1948 and 1952, the United States supported Austria with goods worth approximately one billion dollars, which cost each American tax payer 80 dollars. Each Austrian received 133 dollars from the Plan, more than any other of the sixteen participating Western European countries. Apart from its economic effect, the Marshall Plan also transported the American way of life to Western Europe and Austria.

I would like to start this paper by giving an overview of how Austria’s economic situation was like immediately after the end of World War II. The following chapter discusses the birth of the Marshall Plan, first on the Western, then on the Eastern side of the Atlantic. Then I will focus chronologically on the stages of Austria’s participation in the Plan, before its impact on Austrian post-war identity-building will be explained. A conclusion will finish the paper.

2 The State of Austrian Affairs from 1945 to 1946 – Shortage Economy

The whole European continent suffered severely from the destructions caused by World War II (Bischof 2005:18). Austria’s economy shared the fate with many other European countries – it was highly irritated due to heavy bombardments by the allied forces from 1943 to 1945 which had damaged many cities and transportation facilities; hundreds of thousands of people were killed; general confusion and apathy reigned. An economically very productive group, the Austrian Jews, were missing because they had emigrated or had been murdered in the Holocaust. During the last weeks of the war, the Nazis themselves ruined still existing infrastructural facilities when fighting the advancing Red Army. Soldiers of the Soviet Union dismantled factories and requisitioned numerous engines and railroad cars as reparations. Besides material destructions, they raped tens of thousands of Austrian women, thus nourishing pre-existing anti-Bolshevist prejudices and contributing to Austria’s orientation towards the West.

Abbildung in dieser Leseprobe nicht enthalten

After the ceasefire on 8 May 1945, Austria was divided into four occupied zones by the Soviet Union, the USA, Great Britain, and France (Bischof 2005:19-20). These zones were strictly separated from each other in economic terms until the fall of 1945, the Soviet zone until 1953. Each zone had a provisional Austrian government which cooperated with the respective occupying power in order to survive economically. Barter with neighboring regions and cross-border commodity trade resembled medieval economic organisation. Starting up the industrial production, bottlenecks particularly in foreign coal supplies became obvious: Austria was short of dollars and thus unable to pay for Polish coal; coal from the Ruhr region was not available before a solution to the German reparations issue was found. Austria was unable to solve the energy issue with its own resources: The entire Austrian oil production in the Marchfeld region had been confiscated by the Soviets as “German asset”, and the Nazis had ripped off the Austrian lumber and coal supplies prior to and during the war. The steel and chemicals, aluminium and pulp fibers industry – those sectors in which the Nazi armaments industry had invested, particularly in Upper Austria – succeeded in achieving European standards comparatively quickly once raw materials became available again.

[...]

Excerpt out of 35 pages

Details

Title
The Marshall plan in Austria - an analysis
College
Johns Hopkins University  (SAIS, Bologna Center)
Grade
A
Author
Year
2006
Pages
35
Catalog Number
V48817
ISBN (eBook)
9783638454094
ISBN (Book)
9783638683135
File size
787 KB
Language
English
Keywords
Marshall, Austria
Quote paper
MMag. M.A. Gisela Spreitzhofer (Author), 2006, The Marshall plan in Austria - an analysis, Munich, GRIN Verlag, https://www.grin.com/document/48817

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