Abstract
Occupation charges paid by France to Nazi Germany represent one of the largest international transfers and contributed significantly to the German war effort. We employ a neoclassical growth model that incorporates essential features of the occupied economy to assess the welfare costs of the policies that managed the payments to Germany. Our lower bound estimates show that occupation payments required a severe cut in consumption. A draft of labor to Germany and a reduction of real wages added to this burden. Management of the accumulated domestic debt required large budget surpluses; but post-Liberation inflation slashed the real debt. © 2008 The Economic History Association.
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CITATION STYLE
Occhino, F., Oosterlinck, K., & White, E. N. (2008). How much can a victor force the vanquished to pay? France under the nazi boot. Journal of Economic History, 68(1), 1–45. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050708000016
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