Social Sciences, asked by TheEmma, 1 year ago

What were the situation that led to strengthen turning Nazism in Germany?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
15

\huge{Hitler}

The challenges faced by Germany were:

✍️Workers lost their jobs where paid reduced wages.

✍️The number of unemployed touches 6 Millions.

✍️Small Businessman the self employed and retailer suffered as a business got ruined they were filled with the fear of vaporization.

✍️Big business was in crises.

✍️Peasantry was affected by fall in prices.

✍️Thus cause acute political instability.

✍️Fall in agriculture prices affected large masses of the peasantry.

✍️ successive governments could not provide stability.

Hitler advantages of the situation by.

✍️ promising to restore the dignity of the German people by building a strong nation.

✍️ promising the youth security feature with employment

✍️ promising to remove all foreign authorities and influence.

✍️ being anti communist and aunty capital at the same time and putting forward his own ideas of economic development.

✍️He came to power and ended the Democratic rule.

Answered by yashgandhi74
11

Before the onset of the Great Depression in Germany in 1929–1930, the National Socialist German Workers' Party (or Nazi Party for short) was a small party on the radical right of the German political spectrum. In the Reichstag (parliament) elections of May 2, 1928, the Nazis received only 2.6 percent of the national vote, a proportionate decline from 1924, when the Nazis received 3 percent of the vote. As a result of the election, a "Grand Coalition" of Germany's Social Democratic, Catholic Center, German Democratic, and German People's parties governed Weimar Germany into the first six months of the economic downturn.

During 1930–1933, the mood in Germany was grim. The worldwide economic depression had hit the country hard, and millions of people were out of work. The unemployed were joined by millions of others who linked the Depression to Germany's national humiliation after defeat in World War 1. Many Germans perceived the parliamentary government coalition as weak and unable to alleviate the economic crisis. Widespread economic misery, fear, and perception of worse times to come, as well as anger and impatience with the apparent failure of the government to manage the crisis, offered fertile ground for the rise of Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party.

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