Dan Seitz

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Whereas devaluation had once been a ‘radical’ cause, it now seemed the only way to preserve a degree of normality in the day-to-day business of that part of the German economy that depended on foreign trade. As we have seen, in commercial cities such as Hamburg, unemployment was still painfully high in 1934 and without a revival in foreign trade there was little prospect of any immediate improvement.
The Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy
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