How far did the Nazi regime resolve the economic problems it inherited?
Member rating: No Rating | Words: | Submitted: Thu Dec 11 2003
On the left is an image preview of every page of this document, and below are the first 150 words with formatting removed:
How far did the Nazi regime resolve the economic problems it inherited? It is unquestionable that the Nazi regime achieved what they set out to achieve within the German economy. National pride had been non-existent since their defeat in WWI and the weakness of the economy had a great deal to do with this. Even before the Wall Street crash and resulting Great Depression in 1929 had sent Germany spiralling back into similar depths of despair they had been in after the Treaty of Versailles, they had struggled to recapture anything like the same sorts of economic prosperity they had achieved before WWI began. It has been suggested that Germany may not have needed the Wall Street crash to send the economy into depression but this merely sped up and heightened the severity of the depression. It would be unfair to lay the blame of economic difficulties during the 1920's...

