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German–Polish customs war

The German–Polish customs war was a political and economic conflict between the Second Polish Republic and the Weimar Republic, which began in June 1925 (shortly after the death of German president Friedrich Ebert from SPD) and ended officially in March 1934.[1] The conflict began when Poland's status expired as one of the Entente's most favoured nations in trade with Germany.[note 1] Berlin then decided to raise customs duty, which primarily affected the Polish coal industry, Poland's main export to Germany. In return, Warsaw also raised duty on German goods.[2] Germany's purpose in the war was to cause a breakdown of Poland's economy and gain political concessions.[1] They included revanchist claims to Polish territories.[3]

Poland in 1923, showing its interwar borders and neighboring nations.

Background edit

In 1918, Poland gained independence after 123 years of foreign dominance. The economy of the newly created country was bad, the result of several wars fought on Polish soil between 1914 and 1921, and of many years of division between three partitioning powers. In 1919, industrial production on Polish lands fell by 70% in comparison to 1914, and the government in Warsaw had a difficult task.[2] The country was divided into different economic and political systems, with several kinds of currency in circulation. The Baltic Sea port of the Free City of Danzig was not part of Poland.

The lands of former Congress Poland, which before 1914 had been responsible for 15% of industrial production of the Russian Empire,[4] were cut off from eastern markets after the creation of the Soviet Union. In addition, the collapse of Austria-Hungary destroyed the 19th century economic ties of Galicia with Austria and Bohemia. Poland's closest ally, France, was far away, and trade with Paris was limited. Germany emerged as a main trade partner and market for Polish products. In 1925, 40% of Polish foreign trade was with Germany, and Poland's western, most developed provinces, the Polish part of Upper Silesia, Greater Poland and Pomerelia, were even more dependent on Germany, their powerful western neighbor. Until 1925, Polish Upper Silesia sold half of its coal to Germany; in Poland, there was little demand for the rest because industrial production in Polish territory was a fraction of what it had been; in 1921, it was a mere 35% of its 1913 level.[4]

Polish-German relations edit

After World War I, the German Empire lost its eastern Province of Posen and West Prussia to Poland, partially after uprisings by the Polish population in Greater Poland and Silesia. These areas (Greater Poland and Gdańsk Pomerania) had been taken by Prussia in the Polish Partitions. Further territorial claims of Poland were settled in the East Prussian plebiscite and the Upper Silesia plebiscite. While Germany controlled the territories, more than 154,000 German colonists settled in the region, in addition to at least 378.000 German military and officials which were stationed in Polish territories.[5][6]

 
Polish Prime Minister Władysław Sikorski.

In the early interwar period, in Germany, the Second Polish Republic was regarded a "temporary state" ("Saisonstaat") and tensions between the two nations were high. The German-Polish border was never officially accepted by Germany and from the start of 1919 German foreign policy aimed at revising the Versailles Treaty and acquiring once more Polish territories.[7] To pursue its goals of territorial revisionism, Germany emphasized the presence of a German minority in Poland.[8] In 1924, the situation in Germany improved, both internally and internationally. On 30 August 1924 in Vienna Convention, both governments agreed on the eviction of at least 28,000 Germans living in Poland who had chosen German citizenship ("Optanten" in German) and of 5,000 Poles living in Germany who had chosen Polish citizenship ("Optanci" in Polish).[9][10] The Weimar Republic, which in 1926 became a member of the League of Nations, enjoyed a period of relative prosperity, which had a positive effect on Poland.

The population in the territories of Silesia and parts of Poland of the former Prussian partition, a significant minority of them ethnic Germans, became Polish citizens. Ethnic Germans were entitled to "opt" for German citizenship and leave the country; this group was called "Optanten".[11] The Polish government sought to keep the granting of citizenship in tight limits; people who left the area in the post-war turmoils (the majority of whom were former German military personnel and officials stationed on Polish territory[6]) were regarded "tacit Optants".[12] According to the Minorities Treaty (also called the "Little Versailles Treaty") signed by Poland, all former citizens of partitioning powers who rejected Polish citizenship had to leave the country by 10 January 1923. This concerned citizens of Russia, Hungary, Austria and Germany, though in the case of Germans opting for German citizenship, there was no precise date established for them to leave.[13] Per the treaty of Versailles, the victorious countries, including Poland, were authorized to liquidate the property of German nationals.[14] Helmut Lippelt writes that Germany used the existence of the German minority in Poland for political purposes and as part of its revanchist demands, prompting Polish countermeasures. Polish Prime-Minister Władysław Sikorski stated in 1923 that the de-Germanization of these territories had to be ended by vigorous and quick liquidation of property and eviction of German "Optanten"; German nationalists were to be convinced that their view of the temporary state of Poland's western border was wrong.[15] To Lippelt this was partially a reaction to the German claims and partially nationalism, urging to exclude the German element. In turn, German policy was fueled by anti-Polish prejudice.[15]

 
German Foreign minister Gustav Stresemann

In 1925, Gustav Stresemann proposed an agreement with France (the Locarno Treaties) and made it clear that in doing so, he intended to "gain a free hand to secure a peaceful change of the borders in the East and [...] concentrate on a later incorporation of German territories in the East".[16] Stresemann refused to engage in any international cooperation that would have "prematurely" stabilized the Polish economy. In response to a British proposal, Stresemann wrote to the German ambassador in London, "[A] final and lasting recapitalization of Poland must be delayed until the country is ripe for a settlement of the border according to our wishes and until our own position is sufficiently strong". According to Stresemann's letter, there was to be no settlement "until [Poland's] economic and financial distress ha[d] reached an extreme stage and reduced the entire Polish body politic to a state of powerlessness".[17] However, Stresemann did not intend to provoke a trade war.[18] The German press openly praised the trade war, hoping it would lead to destruction of the Polish state. As the Frankfurter Zeitung wrote on 14 June 1924, "Poland must be mortally wounded after the trade war. With her blood her strength will flow away as well, and finally her independence"[19]

Customs war between Poland and Germany edit

In the immediate post-World War I period, trade between both nations was regulated by the Treaty of Versailles and by the Geneva Convention on Upper Silesia (1922). The Treaty of Versailles required Germany to give most favoured nation status unilaterally to all Triple Entente countries as well as to its newly created eastern neighbors. The export of goods produced in the former territories of the German Empire now in the Second Polish Republic was generally tax-free,[12] to avoid economic collapse of the territories.[20] According to the Geneva Convention, Germany was obliged to allow export of specified quantities of coal from the Polish part of Upper Silesia. Both documents were valid until 15 June 1925.[21]

In June 1924, a new customs law was passed in Poland. Its aim was to protect the Polish market from foreign competitors and cover increased financial needs. It was supposed to serve as a basis for future trade agreements.[22] While divergent terms were settled in bilateral treaties between Poland and France, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Greece, the taxes on other imports were raised 100%.[22]

Poland asked for renewal of the trade privileges but refused to grant most favoured nation status to German goods.[23] In the negotiations of early 1925, Germany tried to buy time by raising trade and minority issues, such as the "Optanten" problem, liquidation measures and settlement rights; on 15 June, the relevant clauses of the treaty would expire. Germany demanded Poland to give up undisputed rights from the Treaty of Versailles and to revise the Vienna Convention, closed six months earlier.[9] The Germans hoped that Poland would make concessions, and once again, German businessmen would follow German trade across the border. That was a sensitive issue for Poland, having just thrown off German political and economic influence.[9]

Also,[when?] Germany demanded privileges[which?] for the German minority.[24]

 
Polish Prime Minister Władysław Grabski

In January 1925, when Germany recovered its trade policy sovereignty,[25] all purchases of Polish coal were stopped[26] and customs duties raised on all Polish-made products. Some Polish exports were subject to a German embargo.

Warsaw responded by raising tariffs on German goods. Negotiations began in Berlin on 3 March 1925. Germany demanded more[quantify] privileges[which?] for the German minority in Poland as a pre-condition for resumption of the coal trade, but Warsaw refused.[24]

The zloty lost value, with a reduction of the Polish industrial output. The most-affected area was Polish Upper Silesia,[2] the most developed part of the nation but also the one most dependent on trade with Germany. In November 1925, the government of Władysław Grabski collapsed.

Germany also blocked Polish attempts to get a British loan from, as Germany planned to annex Polish territory after the fall of the Polish state.[27]

When Polish delegations tried to reach a peaceful understanding with Germany on 10 December 1926, Stresemann rejected the talks by saying there would be no normalization of German-Polish relations until the "border problems" were resolved. To clarify, he identified Upper Silesia, Pomerania and Danzig (Gdańsk) as "border problems".[28] Reichsbank President Hjalmar Schacht agreed and stated that any economic agreements with Poland must be preceded by Poland's relinquishment of Upper Silesia and the Polish Corridor to Germany. Robert Spaulding wrote that over time "German political demands grew fantastic".[29]

Officially, the customs war lasted until March 1934[1] and was settled after the German–Polish declaration of non-aggression. Poland was aided to some extent by Czechoslovakia, Austria and Italy, whose governments reduced rail tariffs on Polish exports and transit, increasing export of Polish coal to there.[note 2][24]

Aftermath edit

 
German ambassador Hans-Adolf von Moltke, Polish leader Józef Piłsudski, German propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels and Józef Beck, Polish Foreign minister, meeting in Warsaw on 15 June 1934, three months after the end of the Polish-German customs-war

The Polish government, facing a breakdown in international trade, was forced to initiate a program of internal investment, which resulted in the growth of local production. Unemployment was reduced by a mass public works program, with two important components, the construction of the new Baltic Sea port of Gdynia, and the Polish Coal Trunk-Line, a rail connection between Upper Silesia and Gdynia. Since the zloty had lost much of its value, export of Polish coal to Scandinavia became profitable.

Paradoxically, the trade war had some positive consequences. Poland found new trade partners, making their economy less dependent on Germany overall, a domestic modernization program was successfully accelerated and the port of Gdynia enjoyed dynamic growth. However at the same time, poverty and unemployment sharply increased, resulting in labor strikes and demonstrations. The political mood became increasingly radicalized culminating in the May Coup d'État of 1926, carried out by Jozef Pilsudski and considered the most politically significant consequence of the trade war.[2]

In contrast, for Germany, the customs war had a negligible effect, as exports to Poland were only 4 to 5% of German international trade.[30]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Nonreciprocal most favoured nation status for all Allies of World War I (Entente) countries was determined in the Versailles treaty.
  2. ^ Also, Scandinavian markets also opened to Poland because of 1926 United Kingdom general strike.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Wojna celna 29 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine, PWN Biznes
  2. ^ a b c d Michał Minałto, Wojna celna polsko-niemiecka Gazeta Wyborcza, 23 June 2009
  3. ^ Historia Polski, Tom 2, Henryk Samsonowicz, page 45 "Chciano rzucić Polskę na kolana, wymusić na niej ustępstwa terytorialne" Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN 2007
  4. ^ a b Godzina zero, interview with professor Wojciech Roszkowski, Tygodnik Powszechny, 4 Nov 2008
  5. ^ Historia Polski 1795–1918. Andrzej Chwalba. Page 444
  6. ^ a b Germany and Poland: from war to peaceful relations, Władysław Wszebór Kulski, page 24, Syracuse University Press, 1976
  7. ^ Encyklopedia historii Drugiej Rzeczypospolitej Andrzej Garlicki, page 328, Wiedza Powszechna 1999
  8. ^ Stosunki polsko-niemieckie 1919–1932:XVII Konferencja Wspólnej Komisji Podre̦cznikowej PRL-RFN Historyków, 11 -17. VI. 1984 r.,Augsburg, Antoni Czubiński, Zbigniew Kulak, Gemeinsame Deutsch-Polnische Schulbuchkommission, Komisja Podręcznikowa Historyków PRL i RFN, page 19 Instytut Zachodni, 1990 "Po pierwsze, obecność niemieckiej ludności na terenie byłego zaboru pruskiego należało uważać za wynik, a ją samą za narzędzie polityki germanizacyjnej, co w znacznej mierze było zgodne z prawdą.Po drugie, Niemcy otwarcie wykorzystywały tę ludność i jej potencjał gospodarczy do forsowania i uzsadniania swych roszczeń terytorialnych"
  9. ^ a b c Lippelt, Helmut; "Politische Sanierung" – Zur deutschen Politik gegenüber Polen 1925/26; page 331
  10. ^ Stosunki polsko-niemieckie 1919–1932:XVII Konferencja Wspólnej Komisji Podre̦cznikowej PRL-RFN Historyków, 11 -17. VI. 1984 r.,Augsburg, Antoni Czubiński, Zbigniew Kulak, Gemeinsame Deutsch-Polnische Schulbuchkommission, Komisja Podręcznikowa Historyków PRL i RFN, page 44 Instytut Zachodni, 1990
  11. ^ Lippelt, Helmut (1971). "Politische Sanierung" Zur deutschen Politik gegenüber Polen 1925/26 (PDF) (in German). Institut für Zeitgeschichte. pp. 323–373.
  12. ^ a b Lippelt, Helmut; "Politische Sanierung" – Zur deutschen Politik gegenüber Polen 1925/26; page 326
  13. ^ Polska i Niemcy Jerzy Krasuski Dzieje Wzajemnych stosunków politycznych(do 1932 roku), page 378 Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy, 1989
  14. ^ Lippelt, Helmut; "Politische Sanierung" – Zur deutschen Politik gegenüber Polen 1925/26; page 325
  15. ^ a b Lippelt, Helmut; "Politische Sanierung" – Zur deutschen Politik gegenüber Polen 1925/26; page 328
  16. ^ Stresemann in an article for the Hamburger Fremdenblatt, 10 April 1922, quoted after Martin Broszat, 200 Jahre deutsche Polenpolitik, Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1972, p. 220.
  17. ^ Stresemann in a letter to the German ambassador in London, quoted after Broszat, p. 224.
  18. ^ Lippelt, Helmut; "Politische Sanierung" – Zur deutschen Politik gegenüber Polen 1925/26; page 332, Fn. 28
  19. ^ Problem granic i obszaru odrodzonego państwa polskiego, 1918–1990:Antoni Czubiński, page 147,UAM, 1992
  20. ^ "Wielkie mocarstwa wobec Polski 1919–1945: od Wersalu do Jałty" Jan Karski p. 80, Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Marii Curie-Skłodowskiej 1998
  21. ^ "Akten der Reichskanzlei; Handelsvertragsverhandlungen mit Polen" (in German). Bundesarchiv.
  22. ^ a b Elvert, Jürgen (1999). Mitteleuropa!:deutsche Pläne zur europäischen Neuordnung (in German). Franz Steiner Verlag. p. 100. ISBN 3-515-07641-7.
  23. ^ "Akten der Reichskanzlei; deutsch-polnische Handelsvertragsverhandlungen" (in German). Bundesarchiv.
  24. ^ a b c Andrzej Jezierski (2003). Historia gospodarcza Polski. Key Text Wydawnictwo. p. 320. ISBN 978-83-87251-71-0. Retrieved 23 November 2011.
  25. ^ Spaulding, Robert Mark (1997). Osthandel und Ostpolitik; German foreign trade policies in Eastern Europe. Berghahn Books. p. 132. ISBN 1-57181-039-0.
  26. ^ Osmańczyk, Edmund Jan; Mango, Anthony, eds. (2003). "Customs War". Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements: A to F (3 ed.). Taylor & Francis. p. 491.
  27. ^ Antypolskie organizacje w Niemczech (1918–1933).Karol Fiedor, page 37Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich 1973 – 304
  28. ^ "Wielkie mocarstwa wobec Polski 1919–1945: od Wersalu do Jałty Jan Karski Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Marii Curie-Skłodowskiej, page 82, 1998
  29. ^ Spaulding, Robert (1997). Osthandel and Ostpolitik: German foreign trade policies in Eastern Europe from Bismarck to Adenauer. Berghahn. pp. 158. ISBN 978-1-57181-039-7.
  30. ^ Lippelt, Helmut; "Politische Sanierung" – Zur deutschen Politik gegenüber Polen 1925/26; page 332

german, polish, customs, political, economic, conflict, between, second, polish, republic, weimar, republic, which, began, june, 1925, shortly, after, death, german, president, friedrich, ebert, from, ended, officially, march, 1934, conflict, began, when, pola. The German Polish customs war was a political and economic conflict between the Second Polish Republic and the Weimar Republic which began in June 1925 shortly after the death of German president Friedrich Ebert from SPD and ended officially in March 1934 1 The conflict began when Poland s status expired as one of the Entente s most favoured nations in trade with Germany note 1 Berlin then decided to raise customs duty which primarily affected the Polish coal industry Poland s main export to Germany In return Warsaw also raised duty on German goods 2 Germany s purpose in the war was to cause a breakdown of Poland s economy and gain political concessions 1 They included revanchist claims to Polish territories 3 Poland in 1923 showing its interwar borders and neighboring nations Contents 1 Background 2 Polish German relations 3 Customs war between Poland and Germany 4 Aftermath 5 Notes 6 ReferencesBackground editIn 1918 Poland gained independence after 123 years of foreign dominance The economy of the newly created country was bad the result of several wars fought on Polish soil between 1914 and 1921 and of many years of division between three partitioning powers In 1919 industrial production on Polish lands fell by 70 in comparison to 1914 and the government in Warsaw had a difficult task 2 The country was divided into different economic and political systems with several kinds of currency in circulation The Baltic Sea port of the Free City of Danzig was not part of Poland The lands of former Congress Poland which before 1914 had been responsible for 15 of industrial production of the Russian Empire 4 were cut off from eastern markets after the creation of the Soviet Union In addition the collapse of Austria Hungary destroyed the 19th century economic ties of Galicia with Austria and Bohemia Poland s closest ally France was far away and trade with Paris was limited Germany emerged as a main trade partner and market for Polish products In 1925 40 of Polish foreign trade was with Germany and Poland s western most developed provinces the Polish part of Upper Silesia Greater Poland and Pomerelia were even more dependent on Germany their powerful western neighbor Until 1925 Polish Upper Silesia sold half of its coal to Germany in Poland there was little demand for the rest because industrial production in Polish territory was a fraction of what it had been in 1921 it was a mere 35 of its 1913 level 4 Polish German relations editAfter World War I the German Empire lost its eastern Province of Posen and West Prussia to Poland partially after uprisings by the Polish population in Greater Poland and Silesia These areas Greater Poland and Gdansk Pomerania had been taken by Prussia in the Polish Partitions Further territorial claims of Poland were settled in the East Prussian plebiscite and the Upper Silesia plebiscite While Germany controlled the territories more than 154 000 German colonists settled in the region in addition to at least 378 000 German military and officials which were stationed in Polish territories 5 6 nbsp Polish Prime Minister Wladyslaw Sikorski In the early interwar period in Germany the Second Polish Republic was regarded a temporary state Saisonstaat and tensions between the two nations were high The German Polish border was never officially accepted by Germany and from the start of 1919 German foreign policy aimed at revising the Versailles Treaty and acquiring once more Polish territories 7 To pursue its goals of territorial revisionism Germany emphasized the presence of a German minority in Poland 8 In 1924 the situation in Germany improved both internally and internationally On 30 August 1924 in Vienna Convention both governments agreed on the eviction of at least 28 000 Germans living in Poland who had chosen German citizenship Optanten in German and of 5 000 Poles living in Germany who had chosen Polish citizenship Optanci in Polish 9 10 The Weimar Republic which in 1926 became a member of the League of Nations enjoyed a period of relative prosperity which had a positive effect on Poland The population in the territories of Silesia and parts of Poland of the former Prussian partition a significant minority of them ethnic Germans became Polish citizens Ethnic Germans were entitled to opt for German citizenship and leave the country this group was called Optanten 11 The Polish government sought to keep the granting of citizenship in tight limits people who left the area in the post war turmoils the majority of whom were former German military personnel and officials stationed on Polish territory 6 were regarded tacit Optants 12 According to the Minorities Treaty also called the Little Versailles Treaty signed by Poland all former citizens of partitioning powers who rejected Polish citizenship had to leave the country by 10 January 1923 This concerned citizens of Russia Hungary Austria and Germany though in the case of Germans opting for German citizenship there was no precise date established for them to leave 13 Per the treaty of Versailles the victorious countries including Poland were authorized to liquidate the property of German nationals 14 Helmut Lippelt writes that Germany used the existence of the German minority in Poland for political purposes and as part of its revanchist demands prompting Polish countermeasures Polish Prime Minister Wladyslaw Sikorski stated in 1923 that the de Germanization of these territories had to be ended by vigorous and quick liquidation of property and eviction of German Optanten German nationalists were to be convinced that their view of the temporary state of Poland s western border was wrong 15 To Lippelt this was partially a reaction to the German claims and partially nationalism urging to exclude the German element In turn German policy was fueled by anti Polish prejudice 15 nbsp German Foreign minister Gustav Stresemann In 1925 Gustav Stresemann proposed an agreement with France the Locarno Treaties and made it clear that in doing so he intended to gain a free hand to secure a peaceful change of the borders in the East and concentrate on a later incorporation of German territories in the East 16 Stresemann refused to engage in any international cooperation that would have prematurely stabilized the Polish economy In response to a British proposal Stresemann wrote to the German ambassador in London A final and lasting recapitalization of Poland must be delayed until the country is ripe for a settlement of the border according to our wishes and until our own position is sufficiently strong According to Stresemann s letter there was to be no settlement until Poland s economic and financial distress ha d reached an extreme stage and reduced the entire Polish body politic to a state of powerlessness 17 However Stresemann did not intend to provoke a trade war 18 The German press openly praised the trade war hoping it would lead to destruction of the Polish state As the Frankfurter Zeitung wrote on 14 June 1924 Poland must be mortally wounded after the trade war With her blood her strength will flow away as well and finally her independence 19 Customs war between Poland and Germany editIn the immediate post World War I period trade between both nations was regulated by the Treaty of Versailles and by the Geneva Convention on Upper Silesia 1922 The Treaty of Versailles required Germany to give most favoured nation status unilaterally to all Triple Entente countries as well as to its newly created eastern neighbors The export of goods produced in the former territories of the German Empire now in the Second Polish Republic was generally tax free 12 to avoid economic collapse of the territories 20 According to the Geneva Convention Germany was obliged to allow export of specified quantities of coal from the Polish part of Upper Silesia Both documents were valid until 15 June 1925 21 In June 1924 a new customs law was passed in Poland Its aim was to protect the Polish market from foreign competitors and cover increased financial needs It was supposed to serve as a basis for future trade agreements 22 While divergent terms were settled in bilateral treaties between Poland and France Czechoslovakia Hungary and Greece the taxes on other imports were raised 100 22 Poland asked for renewal of the trade privileges but refused to grant most favoured nation status to German goods 23 In the negotiations of early 1925 Germany tried to buy time by raising trade and minority issues such as the Optanten problem liquidation measures and settlement rights on 15 June the relevant clauses of the treaty would expire Germany demanded Poland to give up undisputed rights from the Treaty of Versailles and to revise the Vienna Convention closed six months earlier 9 The Germans hoped that Poland would make concessions and once again German businessmen would follow German trade across the border That was a sensitive issue for Poland having just thrown off German political and economic influence 9 Also when Germany demanded privileges which for the German minority 24 nbsp Polish Prime Minister Wladyslaw Grabski In January 1925 when Germany recovered its trade policy sovereignty 25 all purchases of Polish coal were stopped 26 and customs duties raised on all Polish made products Some Polish exports were subject to a German embargo Warsaw responded by raising tariffs on German goods Negotiations began in Berlin on 3 March 1925 Germany demanded more quantify privileges which for the German minority in Poland as a pre condition for resumption of the coal trade but Warsaw refused 24 The zloty lost value with a reduction of the Polish industrial output The most affected area was Polish Upper Silesia 2 the most developed part of the nation but also the one most dependent on trade with Germany In November 1925 the government of Wladyslaw Grabski collapsed Germany also blocked Polish attempts to get a British loan from as Germany planned to annex Polish territory after the fall of the Polish state 27 When Polish delegations tried to reach a peaceful understanding with Germany on 10 December 1926 Stresemann rejected the talks by saying there would be no normalization of German Polish relations until the border problems were resolved To clarify he identified Upper Silesia Pomerania and Danzig Gdansk as border problems 28 Reichsbank President Hjalmar Schacht agreed and stated that any economic agreements with Poland must be preceded by Poland s relinquishment of Upper Silesia and the Polish Corridor to Germany Robert Spaulding wrote that over time German political demands grew fantastic 29 Officially the customs war lasted until March 1934 1 and was settled after the German Polish declaration of non aggression Poland was aided to some extent by Czechoslovakia Austria and Italy whose governments reduced rail tariffs on Polish exports and transit increasing export of Polish coal to there note 2 24 Aftermath edit nbsp German ambassador Hans Adolf von Moltke Polish leader Jozef Pilsudski German propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels and Jozef Beck Polish Foreign minister meeting in Warsaw on 15 June 1934 three months after the end of the Polish German customs war The Polish government facing a breakdown in international trade was forced to initiate a program of internal investment which resulted in the growth of local production Unemployment was reduced by a mass public works program with two important components the construction of the new Baltic Sea port of Gdynia and the Polish Coal Trunk Line a rail connection between Upper Silesia and Gdynia Since the zloty had lost much of its value export of Polish coal to Scandinavia became profitable Paradoxically the trade war had some positive consequences Poland found new trade partners making their economy less dependent on Germany overall a domestic modernization program was successfully accelerated and the port of Gdynia enjoyed dynamic growth However at the same time poverty and unemployment sharply increased resulting in labor strikes and demonstrations The political mood became increasingly radicalized culminating in the May Coup d Etat of 1926 carried out by Jozef Pilsudski and considered the most politically significant consequence of the trade war 2 In contrast for Germany the customs war had a negligible effect as exports to Poland were only 4 to 5 of German international trade 30 Notes edit Nonreciprocal most favoured nation status for all Allies of World War I Entente countries was determined in the Versailles treaty Also Scandinavian markets also opened to Poland because of 1926 United Kingdom general strike References edit a b c Wojna celna Archived 29 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine PWN Biznes a b c d Michal Minalto Wojna celna polsko niemiecka Gazeta Wyborcza 23 June 2009 Historia Polski Tom 2 Henryk Samsonowicz page 45 Chciano rzucic Polske na kolana wymusic na niej ustepstwa terytorialne Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN 2007 a b Godzina zero interview with professor Wojciech Roszkowski Tygodnik Powszechny 4 Nov 2008 Historia Polski 1795 1918 Andrzej Chwalba Page 444 a b Germany and Poland from war to peaceful relations Wladyslaw Wszebor Kulski page 24 Syracuse University Press 1976 Encyklopedia historii Drugiej Rzeczypospolitej Andrzej Garlicki page 328 Wiedza Powszechna 1999 Stosunki polsko niemieckie 1919 1932 XVII Konferencja Wspolnej Komisji Podre cznikowej PRL RFN Historykow 11 17 VI 1984 r Augsburg Antoni Czubinski Zbigniew Kulak Gemeinsame Deutsch Polnische Schulbuchkommission Komisja Podrecznikowa Historykow PRL i RFN page 19 Instytut Zachodni 1990 Po pierwsze obecnosc niemieckiej ludnosci na terenie bylego zaboru pruskiego nalezalo uwazac za wynik a ja sama za narzedzie polityki germanizacyjnej co w znacznej mierze bylo zgodne z prawda Po drugie Niemcy otwarcie wykorzystywaly te ludnosc i jej potencjal gospodarczy do forsowania i uzsadniania swych roszczen terytorialnych a b c Lippelt Helmut Politische Sanierung Zur deutschen Politik gegenuber Polen 1925 26 page 331 Stosunki polsko niemieckie 1919 1932 XVII Konferencja Wspolnej Komisji Podre cznikowej PRL RFN Historykow 11 17 VI 1984 r Augsburg Antoni Czubinski Zbigniew Kulak Gemeinsame Deutsch Polnische Schulbuchkommission Komisja Podrecznikowa Historykow PRL i RFN page 44 Instytut Zachodni 1990 Lippelt Helmut 1971 Politische Sanierung Zur deutschen Politik gegenuber Polen 1925 26 PDF in German Institut fur Zeitgeschichte pp 323 373 a b Lippelt Helmut Politische Sanierung Zur deutschen Politik gegenuber Polen 1925 26 page 326 Polska i Niemcy Jerzy Krasuski Dzieje Wzajemnych stosunkow politycznych do 1932 roku page 378 Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy 1989 Lippelt Helmut Politische Sanierung Zur deutschen Politik gegenuber Polen 1925 26 page 325 a b Lippelt Helmut Politische Sanierung Zur deutschen Politik gegenuber Polen 1925 26 page 328 Stresemann in an article for the Hamburger Fremdenblatt 10 April 1922 quoted after Martin Broszat 200 Jahre deutsche Polenpolitik Frankfurt am Main Suhrkamp 1972 p 220 Stresemann in a letter to the German ambassador in London quoted after Broszat p 224 Lippelt Helmut Politische Sanierung Zur deutschen Politik gegenuber Polen 1925 26 page 332 Fn 28 Problem granic i obszaru odrodzonego panstwa polskiego 1918 1990 Antoni Czubinski page 147 UAM 1992 Wielkie mocarstwa wobec Polski 1919 1945 od Wersalu do Jalty Jan Karski p 80 Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Marii Curie Sklodowskiej 1998 Akten der Reichskanzlei Handelsvertragsverhandlungen mit Polen in German Bundesarchiv a b Elvert Jurgen 1999 Mitteleuropa deutsche Plane zur europaischen Neuordnung in German Franz Steiner Verlag p 100 ISBN 3 515 07641 7 Akten der Reichskanzlei deutsch polnische Handelsvertragsverhandlungen in German Bundesarchiv a b c Andrzej Jezierski 2003 Historia gospodarcza Polski Key Text Wydawnictwo p 320 ISBN 978 83 87251 71 0 Retrieved 23 November 2011 Spaulding Robert Mark 1997 Osthandel und Ostpolitik German foreign trade policies in Eastern Europe Berghahn Books p 132 ISBN 1 57181 039 0 Osmanczyk Edmund Jan Mango Anthony eds 2003 Customs War Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements A to F 3 ed Taylor amp Francis p 491 Antypolskie organizacje w Niemczech 1918 1933 Karol Fiedor page 37Zaklad Narodowy im Ossolinskich 1973 304 Wielkie mocarstwa wobec Polski 1919 1945 od Wersalu do Jalty Jan Karski Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Marii Curie Sklodowskiej page 82 1998 Spaulding Robert 1997 Osthandel and Ostpolitik German foreign trade policies in Eastern Europe from Bismarck to Adenauer Berghahn pp 158 ISBN 978 1 57181 039 7 Lippelt Helmut Politische Sanierung Zur deutschen Politik gegenuber Polen 1925 26 page 332 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title German Polish customs war amp oldid 1198424568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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