Many pages have been written about what drove Hitler to
power. While economic factors (from the Great Depression to high
unemployment rates) and socio-cultural conditions (arising from the
oppressive measures in the Treaty of Versailles) played an indisputably
important role, the rapid rise of the Nazi Party is still, nearly a
century later, a topic of considerable debate (Adena et al. 2015, Doerr
et al. 2018, Eichengreen 2018, Ferguson and Voth 2008, Satyanath et al.
2017, Voigtländer and Voth 2012, Voth 2020).
In our recent work, we show how fiscal austerity contributed to Nazi
electoral success in the early 1930s (Galofré-Vilà et al. 2020).
Localities that experienced larger declines in spending and higher rises
in taxes had higher vote shares for the Nazi Party in each and every
German federal election between 1930 and 1933.
Fiscal policy at the time can was implemented through a series of
emergency decrees, largely circumventing parliament, and they were
introduced with the knowledge that they would cause enormous hardship.
Chancellor Heinrich Brüning hoped that international media reports of
German suffering would lead the international community to relax debt
and reparations obligations on an economical prostrate Germany. Yet, as
Hitler foresaw in June of 1931, “[t]his emergency decree will help my
party to victory, and therefore put an end to the illusions of the
present system”.1
The impact of austerity on electoral outcomes
Between 1930 and 1932, in the middle of the Great Depression, Brüning
cut spending, increased taxes and rolled back the social safety net.
Real expenditure was cut by 8% and central real expenditure by 14%.
Relief payments and unemployment benefits were limited, social overhead
expenditures faced the axe and government salaries were reduced. The
impact was substantial in many respects, since government spending was
already around 30% of GDP in 1928. Tax rates were also raised, hitting
the lower income tax brackets the hardest in percentage terms. Rising
numbers of Germans faced economic insecurity and marginalisation at a
time when they needed it the most. Instead of an expansionary fiscal
policy to combat the depression, Germans were forced to rely on an
increasingly exclusionary and exhausted system of relief.
Could these austerity measures have contributed to radicalization of
the electorate? And, if so, did this happen by disenfranchising the
‘squeezed’ middle classes? We test both these hypotheses using data from
official German statistics from over a hundred cities and a thousand
smaller districts in the period covering the four elections between 1930
and 1933. Overall, we find that areas more severely affected by
austerity had relatively higher vote shares for the Nazi Party. Models
controlling for other explanations for the Nazi’s success, while
including city and election fixed effects, show that each one standard
deviation increase in the depth of austerity was associated with between
a two and five percentage point increase in vote share for the Nazis
or, equivalently, between one quarter to one half of one standard
deviation of the dependent variable (Figure 1). We also find that tax
hikes correlate positively with Nazi electoral success. These results
are robust to a range of specifications including an instrumental
variable strategy and a border-pair policy discontinuity design.
We also investigated alternative explanations. The most prominent of
these is, of course, ‘pocket-book voting’: the rise of the Nazi’s came
simply from the economic downturn. Importantly, we can differentiate
party votes in the data. As shown below, most of the shift in political
support associated with austerity came from the Centre Party (which was
Brüning’s party) transitioning to the Nazi Party. Moreover, none of the
other main parties of the German political spectrum (including the
German National People’s Party, which was another party with a far-right
ideology) gained votes that could be linked to austerity. The worst off
economically, the unemployed, turned not to the Nazis but to the
communists. This is consistent with the notion that those just above
them in the economic hierarchy, who had more to lose from the tax hikes
and spending cuts, favoured the Nazis when their party failed to provide
them economic relief.
Figure 1 Impact of city expenditures on the Nazi party vote share, elections 1930, 1932 and 1933
Austerity and worsening avoidable mortality
We also study the impact of austerity on Nazi electoral gains in
relation to different types of expenditure. Here we find that most of
the electoral impact of austerity was driven by cuts to social spending
on health and housing, two of the budget lines severely affected by
austerity. These cuts in social spending plausibly exacerbated the
suffering of many Germans. Indeed, we find that the localities
experiencing relatively severe austerity experienced relatively high
suffering (measured by mortality rates) and electorates in these areas
with higher mortality were often more likely to vote for the Nazi Party.
This is in line with the views of commentators at the time. For
instance, by the fall of October 1930, Hjalmar Schacht (former head of
the Reichsbank) gave an interview to the American press warning that “if
the German people are going to starve, there are going to be many more
Hitlers” (The New York Times, 3 October 1930).
Conclusions
The demise of Weimar Germany and the rise of Nazi fascism reveals
that too much harsh austerity can trigger social unrest and unintended
political consequences. Even after correcting for alternative
explanations, including the economic downturn, it is clear austerity
played a critical role. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis
that austerity led to substantial human suffering and exacerbated
inequality and inequity. At a time when people needed the most from
their government, the government failed them, and they were lured by the
siren calls of radical populist parties.
References
Adena, M, R Enikolopov, M Petrova, V Santarosa, and E Zhuravskaya (2015), “Radio and the Rise of the Nazis in Prewar Germany.” The Quarterly Journal of Economics 130(4): 1885-1939.
Doerr, S, S Gissler, J L Peydró, and H-J Voth (2018), “From Finance to Extremism: The Real Effects of Germany’s 1931 Banking Crisis”, CEPR Discussion Paper 12806.
Eichengreen, B (2018), The Populist Temptation: Economic Grievance and Political Reaction in the Modern Era, Oxford University Press.
Ferguson, T, and H-J Voth (2008), "Betting on Hitler – The Value of Political Connections in Nazi Germany," Quarterly Journal of Economics 123(1): 101-37.
Galofré-Vilà, G, C M Meissner, M McKee, and D Stuckler (2020), "Austerity and the rise of the Nazi party", Journal of Economic History, forthcoming.
Satyanath, S, N Voigtländer, and H-J Voth (2017), “Bowling for Fascism: Social Capital and the Rise of the Nazi Party.” Journal of Political Economy 125(2): 478-526.
Voigtländer, N, and H-J Voth (2012), “Persecution Perpetuated: The Medieval Origins of Anti-Semitic Violence in Nazi Germany”, Quarterly Journal of Economics 127(2): 1339-92.
Voth, H-J (2020), “Roots of war: Hitler’s Rise to Power", in S Broadberry and M Harrison (eds), The Economics of the Second World War: Seventy-Five Years On, CEPR Press.
Endnotes
1 Twelve days after Brüning enacted his fourth and last emergency
decree, Hitler issued a mass pamphlet titled “The Great Illusion of the
Last Emergency Decree” as an attempt to channel mass frustration to
reach the power. For the full text see Hitler, Hitler an Brüning -
Broschürenreihe der Reichspropaganda-Leitung der NSDAP, Heft 5 (Munich:
Franz Eher, 1931).