Key Question 2: Why were the Stresemann years considered ...

    Cards (43)

    • August 1923
      Stresemann becomes Chancellor and Foreign Minister
    • November 1923
      Rentenmark introduced
    • August 1924
      Dawes Plan
    • March 1925
      Hindenburg is elected as President after Ebert dies
    • October 1925
      Locarno Pact
    • September 1926
      Germany joins League of Nations
    • 1926
      Stresemann awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace
    • August 1928
      Kellogg Briand Pact
    • September 1929
      Young Plan comes into effect
    • October 1929
      Stresemann dies
      Wall Street Crash in the USA
    • “The German economy is doing well only on the surface. Germany is in fact dancing on a volcano. If the short-term loans are called in by America, most of our economy will collapse.“
      Stresemann, September 1929
    • The Golden Age was the period from 1924-29 and it saw significant changes in the standard of living and the position of women. Economic prosperity reduced support for extremists like the Nazis.
    • In 1923 Stresemann introduced a temporary currency - the Rentenmark.
    • In 1924 the Rentenmark became the Reichsmark, a new currency backed by gold reserves.
    • Due to the Dawes plan, in August 1924 reparations were reduced to Germany’s ability to pay.
    • Due to the Dawes Plan, allied troops left the Ruhr in 1925.
    • Due to the Dawes Plan, the USA loaned Germany $3,000 million over six years.
    • In 1929 the Young plan reduced reparations from £6,600 million to £1,850 million.
    • Due to the Young plan, the length of time Germany had to pay was extended to 59 years.
    • Due to Stresemann's recovery:
      • Public works provided new stadiums, apartment blocks and opera houses.
      • Big businesses paid their debts so there was industrial growth.
      • There were fewer strikes between 1924 and 1929.
    • The German economy was dangerously dependent on American loans.
    • Rentenmark
      Temporary German currency from November 1923, which became the Reichsmak in 1924
    • Hyperinflation
      When money loses its value
    • Dawes Plan
      An agreement where the USA would lend Germany $3,000 million over six years
    • Young Plan
      This lowered the reparations payment to £1,850 million and gave Germany 59 more years to pay
    • Treaty of Versailles
      This decided how Germany was going to be treated after WW1
    • Locarno Pact

      An agreement on borders signed by Britain, France, Italy and Belgium
    • Kellogg Briand Pact
      65 countries including Germany agreed to resolve conflict peacefully
    • Stresemann:
      • ended the hyperinflation crisis.
      • arranged American loans that helped the German economy recover.
      • re-established the international position of Germany.
    • Germany had the best paid workers in Europe by 1928.
    • 1924 -1931 more than two million new homes were built.
    • In the golden age, there were tax breaks, land grants and low-interest loans for new houses
    • unemployment Insurance Law 1927 - unemployment benefits
    • In the golden age, there were benefits for war veterans, war widows, single mothers and the disabled.
    • In the golden age, women over 20 were given the vote
    • In the golden age, there were growing numbers of women in new areas of employment - the civil service, teaching, social work, shops work, in factories
    • In the golden age, women enjoyed more social freedom, socially - went out unescorted, drank and smoked in public and were more fashion conscious
    • In the golden age, middle class had been bankrupted by hyperinflation and struggled to get professional jobs
    • In the golden age, farmers struggled to increase production
    • In the golden age, 9% of the working population were unemployed (6% in 1924)
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