
.
.Ludwig
ERHARD
Ludwig Wilhelm Erhard
(4 February 1897–5 May 1977) was
a German politician (CDU) and Chancellor of West Germany from 1963
until 1966. He is notable for his leading role in German postwar
economic reform and economic recovery, particularly in his role as
Minister of Economics under Chancellor Konrad Adenauer after 1949.
Life and work
Born in Fürth,
Germany, from 1913 to 1916 Erhard was a commercial apprentice.
After his apprenticeship he worked as retail salesman in his
father's draper's shop.
He joined the German forces during
World War I 1916 as an artilleryman, fought in Romania and was
seriously injured near Ypres in 1918. Erhard could no longer work
as a draper and began to study economics, first in Nuremberg,
later in Frankfurt am Main. He received his PhD from Franz
Oppenheimer in 1925.
During his time in Frankfurt he married Luise Lotter
(1893-1975), widow Schuster, on 11 December 1923. After his
graduation they moved to Fürth and he became executive in his
parents' company in 1925. After three years he became assistant at
the Institut für Wirtschaftsbeobachtung der deutschen
Fertigware, a
marketing research institute. Later, he became deputy director
of the institute.
Due to his injuries, Erhard did not have to join the German
military forces during
World War II. Instead, he worked on concepts for a postwar
peace; however, officially such studies were forbidden by the
Nazis, who had declared
Total war. As a result, Erhard lost his job in 1942 but
continued to work on the subject by order of the "Reichsgruppe
Industrie". In 1944 he wrote War Finances and Debt
Consolidation (orig: Kriegsfinanzierung und
Schuldenkonsolidierung). In this study he assumed that Germany
had already lost the war. He sent his thoughts to
Carl Friedrich Goerdeler, a central figure in the
German resistance against the Nazi government, who recommended
Erhard to his comrades. Erhard discussed his concept with
Otto Ohlendorf, deputy secretary of state in the
Reichsministerium für Wirtschaft, as well. Ohlendorf himself spoke
out for "active and courageous entrepreneurship (aktives und
wagemutiges Unternehmertum)", which was intended to replace
bureaucratic state planning of the economy after the war. Erhard
was an outsider who supported the resistance, who personally and
professionally rejected Nazism, and who endorsed efforts to effect
a sensitive, intelligent approach to economic revival during the
approaching postwar period. On the other hand he signed off his
letters with 'Heil Hitler!' and he embraced annexationist policies
that continued to influence his economic policies as finance
minister and chancellor during the postwar period.
Postwar
After the war Erhard became economic consultant for the
American military administration of
Bavaria who made him Minister of Economics in the Bavarian
cabinet of
Wilhelm Hoegner. After the American and
British administration had created the
Bizone, Erhard became chairman of the Sonderstelle Geld und
Kredit in 1947, an expert commission preparing the currency
reform. The newly created Special Department for Money and Credit
in Germany's western zones of occupation in September 1947, under
Erhard, focused attention immediately upon the general theme of
monetary and financial recovery, resulting in the adoption of the
so-called Homburg plan in April 1948 that set the stage for the
recovery of the economy.
In 1948 he was elected Director of Economics by the
Bizonal Economic Council. On 20 June 1948, the
Deutsche Mark was introduced. Erhard abolished the
price-fixing and production controls that had been enacted by the
military administration. This exceeded his authority, but he
succeeded with this courageous step.
In 1949 he stood for election in a constituency in
Baden-Württemberg for the first West German parliament after
the war and gained a direct mandate. Later in the year he is
alleged to have joined the
Christian Democratic Union (CDU), though this fact cannot be
established by any of Erhard's biographers.
Economics
minister
In September, 1949, Erhard was appointed Minister of Economics
in the first cabinet of
Konrad Adenauer. His party made his concept of
social market economy part of the party platform.
Erhard believed in economic liberalism (now known as
Neoliberalism). He joined the
Mont Pelerin Society in 1950 and used this influential body of
neoliberal economic and political thinkers to test his ideas for
the reorganization of the West German economy. Some of the
society's members were members of the Allied High Commission and
Erhard was able to make his case directly to them. The Mont
Pélerin Society welcomed Erhard because this gave its members the
opportunity to have their ideas tested in real life, something
that had been lacking. Late in the 1950s, Erhard's ministry became
involved in the struggle within the society between the European
and the Anglo-American factions and sided with the former. Erhard
viewed the market itself as social and supported only a minimum of
welfare legislation. However Erhard suffered a series of decisive
defeats in his effort to create a free, competitive economy in
1957; he had to compromise on such key issues as the anti-cartel
legislation. Thereafter, the West German economy evolved into a
conventional welfare state.
In July 1948, a group of southwest German businessmen attacked
the restrictive credit policy of Economic Director Erhard. While
Erhard had designed the policy to assure currency stability and
stimulate the economy via consumption, business feared the
scarcity of investment capital would retard economic recovery. He
was deeply critical of a bureaucratic-institutional integration of
Europe on the model of the
European Coal and Steel Community.
Erhard's decision, as economics director for the British and
American occupation zones, to lift many price controls in 1948,
despite opposition from both the social democratic opposition and
Allied authorities, and his consistent advocacy of free markets,
helped set the Federal Republic on its phenomenal growth path.
Erhard's financial and economic policies soon proved widely
popular as the Germany economy made a "miracle" recovery to rapid
growth and widespread prosperity in the 1950s, overcoming the
wartime destruction and successfully integrating millions of
refugees from the east.
Chancellor,
1963-66
After the resignation of Adenauer in 1963, Erhard was elected
Chancellor with 279 against 180 votes on 16 October. In 1965,
he was re-elected. From 1965-1967, he also headed the Christian
Democratic Union.
Foreign policy
Erhard explored using money to make possible reunification of
Germany. Despite Washington's reluctance, Erhard envisaged
offering
Nikita Khrushchev, the leader in Moscow, massive economic aid
in exchange for more political liberty in East Germany and
eventually for reunification. Erhard's objective corresponded in
time with Khrushchev rethinking his relations to West Germany. The
Soviet leader secretly encouraged Erhard to present a realistic
proposal for a 'modus vivendi' and officially accepted the
chancellor's invitation to visit Bonn. However, Khrushchev fell
from power in October 1964, and nothing developed.
Erhard believed the major world problems were soluble through
free trade and the economic unity of Europe (as a prerequisite for
political unification); he alienated French president
Charles de Gaulle, who wanted the opposite. Support for the
American role in the
Vietnam War proved fatal for Erhard's coalition. Through his
endorsement of the American goal of military victory in Vietnam,
Erhard sought closer collaboration with Washington and less with
Paris. Erhard's policy complicated Allied initiatives toward
German unification, a dilemma that the United States placed on the
back burner as it focused on Southeast Asia. Erhard failed to
understand that American global interests—not Europe's
needs—dictated policy in
Washington, D.C., and he rejected Adenauer's policy of
fostering good relations with both the United States and France in
the pursuit of West German national interest. Faced with a
dangerous budget deficit in the 1966-1967
recession, Erhard fell from office in part because of
concessions that he made during a visit to
U.S. President
Lyndon B. Johnson.
In 1961, while vice president,
Johnson had hosted Conrad Adenauer some two years before the
German statesman vacated the chancellorship of the German Federal
Republic. In December 1963, less than a month after he had assumed
the American presidency upon the assassination of John F. Kennedy,
Johnson staged the first ever presidential barbecue in Erhard's
honor. The event was held in and about the Stonewall High School
gymnasium in Stonewall in the Texas Hill Country. Among the
entertainers wss the internationally known concert pianist Van
Cliburn, who appeared in a business suit, rather than his usual
formal wear. As a member of the Texas House of Representatives,
Samuel Ealy Johnson, Jr., Johnson's father, been sensitive to his
German-American constituency and had opposed the Creel Committee's
attempt to disparage German culture and isolate GermanAmericans
during World War I. Adenauer and Erhard had also stayed at
Johnson's ranch in Gillespie County.
Erhard's fall suggested that
progress on German unification required a broader approach and a
more active foreign policy. Chancellor
Willy Brandt in the early 1970s went on to employ Adenauer's
approach, now called "Ostpolitik", seeking improved relations with
the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe and thereby laying the
groundwork for détente and coexistence between East and West. In
the 1980s Chancellor
Helmut Kohl, however, reverted to Erhard's approach in
collaborating with the Reagan Administration in its hard-line
anti-Soviet policy.
Resignation and retirement
On 26 October 1966, Minister
Walter Scheel (FDP) resigned, protesting against the budget
released the day before. The other ministers who were members of
the FDP followed his example — the coalition was broken. On 1
December, Erhard resigned. His successor was Kurt Georg Kiesinger
(CDU), who led a grand coalition.
Erhard continued his political
work by remaining a member of the West German parliament until his
death in Bonn on 5 May 1977. He was buried in Gmund, near the
Tegernsee. The Ludwig Erhard-Berufsschule (professional college)
in Paderborn, Fürth and Münster are named in his honour.
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