|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Foreign News: Shouts by Schacht
With his back to the wall of Germany's new moratorium (TIME, June 18), Dr. Hjalmar Schacht, iron-willed President of the Reichsbank, bristled into action last week as a Briton no less stubborn took drastic steps in London to make Germany pay.
Chancellor of the Exchequer Neville Chamberlain, who has a gentlemanly aversion to naming names, asked the House of Commons to empower him to collect "certain debts" from "certain foreign countries" by the extraordinary step of seizing the proceeds of their exports to the United Kingdom, at the discretion of His Majesty's Government. The bill was clearly aimed at Germany and amid a chorus of "Hear! Hear!'' the House rushed it through first reading and sped it on toward second.
When news of this reached Berlin peppery Dr. Schacht, boiling with rage, rushed around to the afternoon teaparty for the foreign press and diplomats at the Ministry of Propaganda (see p. 16). "Nobody will expect Germany to accept such a clearance system!" he snapped at the assembled correspondents, reminding them that while Germany has a favorable trade balance with the United Kingdom she has an unfavorable balance with the British Empire as a whole. This fact gave Dr. Schacht a chance to threaten "complete rejection of all further intercourse" with the Empire, should the Kingdom crack down on Germany.
Any other country which tries to put screws on Germany, Dr. Schacht cried, faces the same threat. Denouncing as "immoral" the 7% rate of interest carried by the Dawes Loan which enabled Germany to end her fantastic post-war inflation, red-faced Dr. Schacht shouted: "There is no purpose in insulting the German Government or the German people! In that case the German people might lose interest in paying at all!" What the Great Powers really ought to do, declared Dr. Schacht as a parting shot, is to return Germany's colonies before asking the Fatherland to pay another pfennig.
Next day Dr. Schacht dramatized the Reichsbank's shortage of gold and foreign exchange by decreeing that on each day hereafter no more money will be permitted to leave Germany in payment for imports than is received on that day from abroad in payment for German exports. Simultaneously Germans were deprived of the right to send private money orders abroad. In Berlin representatives of leading U. S. firms who have been greatly hampered by former exchange restrictions called Dr. Schacht's new decrees the last straw and Remington Office Machinery Co. of Berlin closed up with a bang, discharging 300 German employes.
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Why Brittany Murphy Is Worth Remembering
- Sean Goldman: Home by Christmas?
- How Panera Bread Defies the Recession
- Why Obama Has to Worry About Polls
- In Germany, a Disturbing Rise of Right-Wing Violence
- Lindsey Graham: New GOP Maverick in the Senate
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- Christmas Shopping: For Retailers, Down to Two Crucial Days
- The Pentagon Prepares for a Missile Attack from 'Iran'
- The '00s: Goodbye (at Last) to the Decade from Hell
- How Panera Bread Defies the Recession
- Holland's Plan to Tax Every Kilometer Driven
- In Germany, a Disturbing Rise of Right-Wing Violence
- Lindsey Graham: New GOP Maverick in the Senate
- Rehabilitating Joseph Stalin
- Domestic Terror Incidents Hit a Peak in 2009
- Sean Goldman: Home by Christmas?
- In Cleveland, Worker Co-Ops Look to a Spanish Model
- A Pariah No More: Serbia Bids to Join the E.U.
- Will Your Next Car be Made in India?





RSS