AMERICAN LOANS TO
GERMANY
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
Inflation destroyed the sound monetary system of Germany
and exhausted all the domestic credit sources based on savings.
But throughout the inflation period the Reichsbank freely
granted credits both to the German government and to German
industries, thus enabling them to function after a fashion.
With the introduction of the rentenmark (November 135, 1923),
the Reichsbank ceased to subsidize the German government,
which compelled the latter to balance its budget through taxa-
tion. But the Reichsbank for many months continued to grant
credits to German industries and this constant extension of arti-
ficial credits was threatening a new breakdown of the currency
system. To prevent such a disaster, the Reichsbank passed
its famous credit restriction resolution which—as inflation had
dried up the resources of all other domestic credit agencies—left
to the German credit seekers practically no other alternative
than to borrow abroad.
The government, therefore, created the Gold-Discount-Bank
which commenced operations on April 7, 1924, the very same
day that the credit restriction resolution went into force. This
Bank negotiated rediscount credits in the United States and in
Great Britain ($25,000,000 through the International Accept-
ance Bank in New York and £5.000,000 through English banks)
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