what were the measures taken by Hitler to improve the economic condition of Germany?
Answers
Answer: hitler is great leader of Germany . He wants to develop his own country and he wants Germany to be the most imperial power in the world . So he wants the young people participation , so he decided to kill the Jews , polish , Dutch peoples . Even he killed the the disabled Germans . What he did is good in improving the economic conditions of Germany , but not at all good for people of germans
Explanation:
Answer:
The three main clauses of the Treaty of Versailles, especially the imposition of penal reparations caused great discontent in Germany. The problems which many countries faced in the post-World War I decades led to the rise of extreme right wing dictatorships in Italy (Mussolini), Germany (Hitler) and Spain (Franco).
Germany experienced both high unemployment and severe inflation after the War, and its currency became practically worthless. There are several pictures of the 1920s when ordinary people had to carry money in wheelbarrows to buy bread. This was blamed on the war reparations which Germany was forced to pay, though in the final analysis, the demands for war reparations weremoderated over several rounds of negotiations.
The German economy, like those of many other western nations, suffered the effects of the Great Depression with unemployment soaring around the Wall Street Crash of 1929. When Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of Germany in 1933, he introduced policies aimed at improving the economy.
The changes included
#privatization of state industries
#autarky (national economic self-sufficiency)
# tariffs on imports.
#reduced foreign trade
# re-arm Germany
#Unemployment Relief Act in June 1933
#The use of oil, iron and steel all tripled (creating a variety of different jobs)
The recruitment for the armed forces and the manufacture of armaments and machinery for the army, navy and air force with large amounts of government spending resulted in an economic revival and solved the problem of unemployment in Germany.
Hope it helps you ! :)