Lessons for Greece from Germany, the world’s biggest debt transgressor of the 20th century
Submitting Institution
London School of Economics & Political ScienceUnit of Assessment
HistorySummary Impact Type
EconomicResearch Subject Area(s)
Economics: Applied Economics
History and Archaeology: Historical Studies
Summary of the impact
LSE research on German debts after the two World Wars has received
considerable public attention since the start of the Eurozone crisis. By
raising awareness of Germany's own debt history between the Wars,
Professor Albrecht Ritschl has influenced public opinion on Germany's
harsh debt policies towards Greece. Ritschl has influenced public opinion
in Germany and internationally by using the media and public engagement
opportunities to emphasise that Germany's own post-war recovery under the
Marshall Plan was, in essence, the result of debt forgiveness, and that a
similar approach to recovery will be needed for Greece. His argument has
also influenced political debate in Germany.
Underpinning research
Research Insights and Outputs:
The underlying research of this impact case study has, at its core,
Professor Ritschl's new interpretation of the post-war Marshall Plan.
Contrary to widespread public perceptions, U.S. transfers under the
Marshall Plan to Europe, including to West Germany, were remarkably small.
What gave the Marshall Plan its lasting effect was a combination of
sweeping debt relief for Germany and a far-reaching political agenda for
European integration. Germany was freed of internal and external debt of
close to 400% of her 1950 GDP [1]. This debt forgiveness laid the
foundation for Germany's fast post-war recovery. Germany was reconstituted
as an export-led economy, committed to orthodox fiscal and monetary
policies. Fiscal and monetary conservatism, greatly facilitated in its
implementation by the debt relief, served to curb domestic consumption and
generate persistent trade surpluses [2]. These affected the resource
transfers to Western Europe that reparations after World War I had failed
to generate.
Professor Ritschl's research characterizes the post-World War II order as
the result of lessons learnt from the failed post-war settlement after
World War I [3, 5]. Keen to withdraw quickly from the battlefields after
1918, America had left it to the Europeans to deal with an enemy that had
not been fully `knocked out'. America's European allies sought to
complete, by economic means, what military action had left unfinished. The
limits of this policy became apparent in the German hyperinflation of 1923
and the French occupation of the Ruhr, which failed to discipline Germany
[3]. As a response, America stepped in to stabilize Germany under the
Dawes Plan of 1924, bankrolling its currency and providing fresh credit.
This exercise of dollar diplomacy led to a German borrowing binge, causing
the U.S. to indirectly fund Germany's reparations to Europe for the rest
of the 1920s. Attempts were made to tighten credit conditions again and
force Germany to pay out of surpluses. But instead of restoring stability
the austerity policies now imposed on Germany brought about her entry into
the Great Depression, an ignominious end to reparations, a sovereign debt
default, and the collapse of democracy [4]. This was an experience that
the Americans were determined to avoid repeating post-1945.
The formula found, after considerable infighting, was a tacit arrangement
by which West Germany would be `readmitted to humanity' on the condition
that she curbed her own consumption in favour of exports to her former
victims in Europe. To make this incentive acceptable to Germany, large
parts of these transfers were financed through private capital exports,
allowing the Germans to rebuild their foreign asset position. To
incentivise the Europeans to play along, the provision of Marshall Aid was
made conditional on the recipient countries' acceptance of a debt
moratorium for Germany, which was formalised after the Marshall Plan
expired.
For the first sixty years of its existence, this system worked with
remarkable smoothness. West Germany, and after 1990 unified Germany,
became the principal underwriter of Europe's economic integration and also
its major capital exporter. However, persistent international imbalances
risk running into trouble when the accumulated debts reach critical
levels. In the European debt crisis since 2010, private capital flows from
Germany to the European periphery experienced a sudden stop, throwing the
historical arrangements underlying Europe's integration into disarray.
Professor Ritschl's research has also highlighted the provisional nature
of the debt relief given to Germany after World War II. A significant
portion of the historical claims against Germany was to be settled after a
future unification. Importantly, this included Germany's foreign World War
II debt, as well as reparations. But no such settlement took place when
German unification arrived in 1990. The unification treaty, carefully
worded as a final settlement with respect to Germany, did not mention
debts or reparations. According to Professor Ritschl's estimates,
Germany's World War II debts nearly equalled her GDP of 1938, the last
pre-war year [1]. A debt principal equal in size to Germany's GDP today
would compensate easily for any bad debts incurred by the European
periphery. This insight caused a minor media sensation in 2011 and again
in 2012, with far reaching implications for the direction of the public
debate both in Germany and abroad. Ritschl's radical interpretation [3,4]
of Germany's policy of deflation and budget stabilisation in the years
preceding Hitler has, for some, foreshadowed the Greek economic crisis.
His argument that the deflation policies adopted by Germany in the 1920s
were not the result of misguided policy doctrine, but were really the
austerity response to pressure from Germany's external creditors, has made
Greece's mounting debt crisis sound eerily familiar to many observers.
Key Researcher: Professor Ritschl has been at LSE since 2007.
References to the research
2. Ritschl,A. and B. Eichengreen (2009) "Understanding West German
Economic Growth in the 1950s," Cliometrica 3: 191-219. DOI:
10.1007/s11698-008-0035-7
3. Ritschl, A. (2012) "The German Transfer Problem, 1920-1933: A
Sovereign Debt Perspective," European Review of History 10:
943-964. DOI: 10.1080/13507486.2012.739147
4. Ritschl, A. (2013) "Reparations, Deficits, and Debt Default: the Great
Depression in Germany," in Nicholas Crafts/Peter Fearon (eds.), The
Great Depression of the 1930s, Oxford: Oxford University
Press,110-139. Available from LSE on request.
5. Ritschl, A. and T. Straumann (2010) "Business Cycles and Economic
Policy, 1914-1945", in: Stephen Broadberry/Kevin O'Rourke (eds.), Cambridge
Economic History of Modern Europe Vol. 2, Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 156-180. LSE Research Online ID: 32432
Evidence of quality: peer-reviewed publications in top journals
and the CEHME.
Details of the impact
Nature of the Impact: This ICS is claiming impact in terms of
public discourse and policy debates as specified in Table D 1 of Section D
3 of the Panel Criteria and Working Methods guidelines. Professor
Ritschl's work on Germany's interwar debt crisis and the debt forgiveness
that fostered post-war Germany's economic miracle has had a strong impact
on public discourse and policy debates about Greece, both within Germany
and abroad.
In June 2011, Christiane Giesen, a journalist from Deutschlandradio
Kultur [A] contacted Professor Ritschl specifically to discuss his
new interpretations of Germany's deflationary policy in the years
preceding Hitler as an austerity policy imposed by her foreign creditors.
The interview explored the possible risks to Greece's society and economy
of imposing similar austerity policies. Ritschl argued the only way to
prevent political destabilisation in Greece was a major debt haircut, the
sooner the better.
The next day, Yasmin el-Sharif from Spiegel Online, the largest
German-speaking news website, contacted Ritschl for a similar interview,
specifically to place Greece's threatening bankruptcy in an historical and
international context. Over the course of the extended interview, Ritschl
also mentioned how Germany's various debt defaults easily made her the
largest debt defaulter in the 20th century, a remark that the interviewer
promptly turned into the headline.
This interview appeared on 21 June 2011 [B] and caused a minor media
sensation. The morning it was published, el-Sharif contacted Ritschl to
report that over 100,000 readers had clicked on it; later in the day, the
tally had more than doubled. During the day, Ritschl was contacted by The
Guardian for an op-ed piece summarizing his views [C].
Other interview requests came in starting on the same day, including from
Greece's leading newspaper, To Vima [D]. This paper has since been
a major catalyst of the debate, with many interviews and mentions. During
the 12 months up to July 2013, this outlet mentioned or interviewed
Ritschl eight times. An avalanche of similar interview requests followed
[samples in E]. These interviews covered public concerns such as, "Is
there a way out of the debt crisis through austerity? Will the Eurozone
break up? Would the technocratic governments of Monti, Papademos and
others bring stability to Southern Europe and achieve a turnaround? Could
political extremists be kept at bay?" [typical sample F].
Such concerns, buttressed by the public impact of Ritschl's historical
evidence on Germany's own past as a debt defaulter, also led to a
political rift in the German government, which became apparent in 2011.
Discussions within the Economics Ministry's advisory board (of which
Ritschl is an active member) were bringing about a consensus that some
sort of insolvency process for Greece should be initiated. The minister,
Philipp Roesler, took this to the public in September 2011 and started an
open spat with Schaeuble, the German finance minister. Schaeuble's harsh
answer provoked an open letter by prominent academics [G] from the
advisory boards of both Ministries, as well as a related plan for debt
writedowns by Germany's Council of Economic Advisors
(Sachverstaendigenrat).
Sharp rises in transfers to Southern Europe within the ECB's Eurosystem
payment facility, Target-2, caused some concern amongst members of the
advisory board of Germany's economics Ministry. At a meeting of that board
in September 2011, Bundesbank president Helmut Schlesinger pointed out a
suspicious increase in the short-term Target-2 balances of the Bundesbank.
Ritschl drew parallels with the Reichsbank's short term clearing balances
from World War II, which also reflected substantial current account
imbalances, just with signs reversed. Hans-Werner Sinn, also present at
the meeting, weeks later presented the first of a series of warnings
against the transfers to southern Europe in this system. This culminated
in an op-ed in the New York Times in the summer of 2012 [H] in
which Sinn charged that, through Target-2 and other programmes, Greece had
already received more financial assistance than Germany under the postwar
Marshall Plan.
Ritschl was invited by The Economist to respond. Ritschl's op-ed
pointed out a fundamental fallacy in Sinn's argument: Sinn had forgotten
to include the large amounts of debt forgiveness, inter alia on its World
War II clearing balances, which Germany received after World War II as a
dowry to her postwar reconstruction [I]. The angry exchange that followed
[J] again caused a spike in interest with Ritschl's media mentions
doubling [K-Reference from LSE media mentions].
Ritschl reiterated his calls for an orderly Greek debt workout in an
interview with Germany's Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ) in
February of 2012, which was again widely reported in the European press
and led to another spike in his press mentions.[K]. Ritschl has twice
appeared at European Parliament conferences, has featured in a German TV
documentary on Germany's postwar reconstruction [L] centring on Ritschl's
narrative and with him as the lead expert, and he has been interviewed by
major international media outlets.
Ritschl's influence has been described as `immense' [M] by the honorary
head of the British-Hellenic chamber of commerce and his influence and
predictions have been cited in a survey of leading economists [N].
Sources to corroborate the impact
All Sources listed below can also be seen at https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/case_study/view/75
A. Interview `Athens going down the way of the Weimar Republic', Deutschlandradio
Kultur, 16 June 2011, http://www.dradio.de/dkultur/sendungen/thema/1480975/
Source file:
https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/699
B. Interview `Economic Historian: Germany Was Biggest Debt Transgressor
of 20th Century'. Spiegel Online International, 21 June 2011,
- in German: http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/soziales/euro-krise-deutschland-ist-der-groesste-schuldensuender-des-20-jahrhunderts-a-769052.html
- in English: http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/economic-historian-germany-was-biggest-debt-transgressor-of-20th-century-a-769703.html
[Including all related emails]. Source file: https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/701
C. Ritschl: `Germany owes Greece a Debt'. The Guardian, 21 June
2011,
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/jun/21/germany-greece-greek-debt-crisis
Source file: https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/702
D. Email Christian Science Monitor; Email To Vima; Email
Greek National Radio; To Vima Searches 2012:9-2013:9.
Source file: https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/703
E. Sources from Greece and Southern European papers (Interview, Makedonia,
26 June 2011; Interview request Kosmos, 27 June 2011; Interview
request Athens International Radio, 7 July 2011; Interview To
Vima, 21 Aug 2011. Source file: https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/704
F. Sample of Interview: `The Wisdom of Socrates', BBC Business Daily,
29 June 2012, http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/p00trrn7/Business_Daily_The_wisdom_of_Socrates/
Source file: https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/707
G. http://www.faz.net/aktuell/wirtschaft/eurokrise/insolvenz-griechenlands-in-betracht-ziehen-oekonomen-unterstuetzen-wirtschaftsminister-roesler-11228684.html
H. Sinn: "Why Berlin is Balking On A Bailout", New York Times, 12
June 2012,
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/13/opinion/germany-cant-fix-the-euro-crisis.html?hp
Source file: https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/710
I. Ritschl: "Germany, Greece and the Marshall Plan", The Economist —
Free Exchange, 15 June 2012, http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2012/06/economic-history
Source file:
https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/712
J. Sinn: http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2012/06/economic-history-1;
Ritschl: http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2012/06/economic-history-2;
Sinn: http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2012/06/economic-history-3
Source file:
https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/719
K. LSE press mentions data, e.g. spikes correlate with interview: `Like
Chancellor Bruening in the Weimar Republic' (in German), Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung, 6 Feb 2012, http://www.faz.net/aktuell/wirtschaft/europas-schuldenkrise/wirtschaftshistoriker-albrecht-ritschl-ueber-griechenland-wie-reichskanzler-bruening-in-der-weimarer-republik-11640103.html
Source file: https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/1315
L. Documentary featuring interview: `History on Channel One: Our Economic
Miracle. The True Story' (in German), German TV Channel One (ARD),
15 July 2013,
http://www.daserste.de/information/reportage-dokumentation/dokus/sendung/wdr/wirtschaftswunder-100.html
Source file:
https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/717
M. Email British Hellenic Chamber of Commerce. Source file:
https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/716
N. "Top Economists: Eurozone Crisis Is Not Over Yet" (in German), Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung. Source files: https://apps.lse.ac.uk/impact/download/file/715