Hitler And The Great Depression : Modern Economic Parallels

A new book is exploring Hitler’s rise and Germany’s role as a catalyst in the Great Depression as it draws modern comparisons with today’s economic situation. In How Hitler rose to Power (published by AuthorHouse), author Sara Moore exposes Germany was a forceful country in 1929, asserting that German industrial and political tactics were primarily answerable for the 1929 market crash. Moore claims that Germany also bore a heavy responsibility for the Great Depression and alleges that without it, the German folks wouldn't have voted for Hitler. “This book gives a new perspective for economists drawing comparisons between the present and the Great Depression”, asserts Moore. “Now the anxiety is whether we are going to have the subsequent parallel, a banking crash in Europe.” . Moore reveals that Germany deliberately raised taxes and reduced salary in 1930 in its effort to rid itself of what it called the ‘shackles’ of the Versailles Bargain and to return the country to dictatorship.

Her book also throws illumination on the German industrialists secret agreement to export arms to the USSR between 1929 and 1933, with the special condition that Stalin order the German Communists to vote with Hitler and the Right in the Reichstag. It reveals how a near-bankrupt Stalin paid for the German armaments, by flooding America with wheat, at rock-bottom costs, while his own people starved. “Stalin is dead today and wheat and other commodity prices are buoyant,” claims Moore. Her perspectives are also gaining interest and support from industrial think tanks, including London’s Cobden Centre and the Institute of Business Affairs.

. **FOR Instant RELEASE** . EDITORS : For review copies or interview requests, contact : . Tel : 317.602.7137 . Fax : 317.536.3775 . E-mail : jkiefer (at) bohlsenpr (dot) com . (When requesting a review copy, please provide a street address.

).


Leave a Reply