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Military production during World War II

Military production during World War II was the production or mobilization of arms, ammunition, personnel and financing by the belligerents of the war, from the occupation of Austria in early 1938 to the surrender and occupation of Japan in late 1945.

Russian women working in city factory at the height of the Siege of Leningrad
Assembly line of Messerschmitt Bf 109G-6s fighters in a German aircraft factory
Indian workers check new fuel tanks at the Hindustan Aircraft Factory in Bangalore, 1944

The mobilization of funds, people, natural resources and material for the production and supply of military equipment and military forces during World War II was a critical component of the war effort. During the conflict, the Allies outpaced the Axis powers in most production categories. Access to the funding and industrial resources necessary to sustain the war effort was linked to their respective economic and political alliances.

Historical context Edit

During the 1930s, political forces in Germany increased their financial investment in the military to develop the armed forces required to support near and long-term political and territorial goals. Germany's economic, scientific, research, and industrial capabilities were one of the most technically advanced in the world at the time, supporting a rapidly growing, innovative military. However, access to (and control of) the resources and production capacity required to entertain long-term goals (such as European control, German territorial expansion and the destruction of the USSR) were limited. Political demands necessitated the expansion of Germany's control of natural and human resources, industrial capacity and farmland beyond its borders. Germany's military production was tied to resources outside its area of control, a great disadvantage as compared to the Allies.

 
British Empire in 1921

In 1938 Britain was the world's superpower, with political and economic control of a quarter of the world's population, industry and resources, and closely allied with the independent Dominion nations (such as Canada and South Africa). From 1938 to mid-1942, the British coordinated the Allied effort in all global theatres. They fought the German, Italian, Japanese and Vichy armies, air forces and navies across Europe, Africa, Asia, the Middle East, India, the Mediterranean and in the Atlantic, Indian, Pacific and Arctic Oceans. British forces destroyed Italian armies in North and East Africa, and occupied or enlisted overseas colonies of occupied European nations. Following engagements with Axis forces, British Empire troops occupied Libya, Italian Somaliland, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Iran and Iraq. The Empire funded and delivered supplies by Arctic convoys to the USSR, and supported Free French forces to recapture French Equatorial Africa. Britain also established governments in exile in London to rally support in occupied Europe for the Allied effort. The British held back or slowed the Axis powers for three years while mobilising their globally integrated economy and industrial infrastructure to build what became, by 1942, the most extensive military apparatus of the war. This allowed their later allies (such as the United States) to mobilise their economies and develop the military forces required to play a role in the war effort, and for the British to go on the offensive in its theatres of operation.

 
The first atomic bomb

The entry of the United States into the war in late 1941 injected financial, human and industrial resources into Allied operations. The US produced more than its own military forces required and armed itself and its allies for the most industrialized war in history.[1] At the beginning of the war, the British and French placed large orders for aircraft with American manufacturers and the US Congress approved plans to increase its air forces by 3,000 planes. In May 1940, Franklin D. Roosevelt called for the production of 185,000 aeroplanes, 120,000 tanks, 55,000 anti-aircraft guns and 18 million tons of merchant shipping in two years. Adolf Hitler was told by his advisors that this was American propaganda; in 1939, annual aircraft production for the US military was less than 3,000 planes. By the end of the war US factories had produced 300,000 planes,[2][3] and by 1944 had produced two-thirds of the Allied military equipment used in the war[citation needed] — bringing military forces into play in North and South America, the Caribbean, the Atlantic, Western Europe and the Pacific.

The U.S. produced vast quantities of military equipment into late 1945, including nuclear weapons, and became the strongest, most technologically advanced military force in the world. In addition to out-producing the Axis, the Allies produced technological innovations; through the Tizard Mission, British contributions included radar (instrumental in winning the Battle of Britain), sonar (improving their ability to sink U-boats), and the proximity fuze; the Americans led the British-originated Manhattan Project (which eliminated the need to invade Japan). The proximity fuze, for example, was five times as effective as contact or timed fuzes and was devastating in naval use against Japanese aircraft and so effective against German ground troops that General George S. Patton said it "won the Battle of the Bulge for us."[4]

The human and social costs of the war on the population of the USSR were immense, with combat deaths alone in the millions. Recognising the importance of their population and industrial production to the war effort, the USSR evacuated the majority of its European territory—moving 2,500 factories, 17 million people and great quantities of resources to the east.[5] Out of German reach, the USSR produced equipment and forces critical to their victory in Europe. Over one million women served in the Soviet armed forces.

 
Assembly line production of fighter aircraft near Niagara Falls, New York

The statistics below illustrate the extent to which the Allies outproduced the Axis. Production of machine tools tripled, and thousands of ships were built in shipyards which did not exist before the war.[6] According to William S. Knudsen, "We won because we smothered the enemy in an avalanche of production, the like of which he had never seen, nor dreamed possible."[7]

Access to resources and to large, controlled international labour pools, and the ability to build arms in relative peace, were critical to the eventual victory of the Allies. Donald Douglas (founder of the Douglas Aircraft Company) declared, "Here's proof that free men can out-produce slaves."[8]

Production summaries 1939–1945 Edit

Personnel, thousands Edit

Service Allies Axis
Combat 25,000
Auxiliary force 15,000
Merchant Marine 50,000
Irregulars 90,000
Total 180,000 30,000

Major weapons groups Edit

System Allies Axis
Tanks, self-propelled artillery, vehicles 4,358,649 670,288
Artillery, mortars, guns 6,792,696 1,363,491
Aircraft 637,248 300,000
Missiles (only for test) 45,458
Ships 54,931 1,670

Economy Edit

In thousands of international dollars, at 2014 prices.[citation needed]

Service Allies Axis
GDP 97,707,908,723.20 10,268,201,776.37
Expenditure

Vital commerce and raw materials, tons Edit

 
To move raw materials and supply distant forces, large numbers of cargo ships had to be built
Category Allies Axis
Cargo ships 47,169 12,762
Merchant shipping 46,817,172 5,621,967
Coal 4,581,400,000 2,629,900,000
Crude oil 1,043,000,000 66,000,000
Steel 733,006,633 x
Aluminium 5,104,697 1,199,150
Asbestos 3,934,043 x
  • Cargo and resources in metric tonnes

Production overview: service, power and type Edit

Land forces Edit

Power Tanks & SPGs Armoured vehicles Other vehicles Artillery Mortars Machine guns Personnel
British Empire 47,862 47,420[clarification needed] 1,475,521 226,113 239,540 1,090,410 11,192,533
USA and territories 108,410 2,382,311 257,390 105,055 2,679,840 16,000,000[9]
USSR 119,769 1,556,199 516,648 363,012 1,477,400 34,401,807
Other
Allies 270,041 47,420 4,054,932 1,000,151 707,607 5,247,650 61,594,000
Germany and territories 67,429 49,777 159,147 73,484 104,864 1,000,730 14,540,835
Hungary 973 530 5,224 447 2,700 4,583 730,000
Romania 214 251 4,300 1,800 4,300 10,000 1,220,000
Italian Empire 3,368 1,240 83,000 7,200 22,000 140,000 4,300,000
Japanese Empire 4,524 2,200 165,945 13,350 49,000 380,000 8,100,000
Other
Axis 76,385 50,028 413,316 97,281 182,864 1,395,313 28,890,800

Air forces Edit

Power Total Aircraft Fighters Attack Bombers Recon Transport Training Other Personnel
British Empire 177,025 38,786 33,811 38,158 7,014 12,585 46,256 415 1,927,395
USA and territories 295,959[10] 99,465 96,872 4,106 23,900 58,085 13,531 2,403,806[11]
USSR 136,223 22,301 37,549 21,116 17,332 4,061 33,864
Other
Allies 609,207 160,552 71,360 156,146 11,120 53,817 108,402 47,810
Germany and territories 133,387 57,653 8,991 28,577 5,025 8,396 14,311 11,361 3,402,200
Romania 1,113 513 272 128 0 200 0 0
Italian Empire 13,402 9,157 34 3,381 388 2,471 968 3
Japanese Empire 64,484 33,405 9,558 11,943 3,709 1,073 3,420 1,376
Other 9,849 881 4 395 318 1,880 5,145 57
Axis 222,235 98,609 18,859 44,424 11,002 14,020 22,944 12,794

Naval forces Edit

Power Total large ships Carriers

(Escort Carriers)

Battleships Cruisers Destroyers Frigates

& Destroyer Escorts

Other large vessels Corvettes Sloops Patrol boats Submarines

(includes midget submarines)

De/ Mining Landing craft Personnel
British Empire 558[12] 15 (29) 5 35 202 270 2 338 33 4,209 238 1,244 9,538 1,227,415
USA and territories 2020 29 (121) 10 52 396 1014 398 773[13] 234 35,000 4,000,000[14]
USSR 63 0 6 54 3 68
France 9 2 7
Other 8 (2) 2 4 1 9 1
Allies 2658 44(152) 17 95 663 1284 403 338 34 4,982 577 1,245 44,538
Germany & territories 38 0 4 3 31 1,119 540 1,500,000
Italian Empire 82 0 3 3 17 59 83
Japanese Empire 278 14(6) 2 12 63 175 6 867
Romania 8 2 5
Other
Axis 398 14(6) 9 18 111 234 6   2,069

Munitions Edit

Munitions Production in World War II[15]
(Expenditures in billions of dollars, US 1944 munitions prices)
Country/Alliance Year
Average
1935-39
1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 Total
1939–44
U.S.A. 0.3 1.5 4.5 20.0 38.0 42.0 106.3
Britain 0.5 3.5 6.5 9.0 11.0 11.0 41.5
U.S.S.R. 1.6 5.0 8.5 11.5 14.0 16.0 56.6
Allies Total 2.4 10.0 20.0 41.5 64.5 70.5 204.4
Germany 2.4 6.0 6.0 8.5 13.5 17.0 53.4
Japan 0.4 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.5 6.0 16.9
Axis Total 2.8 7.0 8.0 11.5 18.0 23.0 70.3

Commercial forces Edit

British Empire USA USSR Germany Hungary Italy Japan Romania
Harbour craft 1,092
Cargo 1,361
Cargo tonnage 12,823,942[citation needed] 33,993,230 [16] 1,469,606[citation needed] 4,152,361 [17]

Resources Edit

Country Coal Iron ore Crude oil Steel Aluminium Nickel Zinc
!a -9999 -9999 -9999
USA[citation needed] 2,149.7 396.9 833.2
Britain[18] 1,441.2 119.2 90.8 3.700 0.205
Australia[citation needed] 83.1 1.56
India[19] 196.7 6.0 1.12
Canada 101.9 3.6 8.4 16.4 3.500[20]
New Zealand[21] 18 1.0
USSR 590.8 71.3 110.6 0.263[22] 0.069[23] 0.384[23]
Total Allied 4581.4 597 1043
Germany 2,420.3 240.7 33.4[24] 1.9[25] 0.046[25] 2.1[25]
Japan[citation needed] 184.5 21.0 5.2
Italy[citation needed] 16.9 4.4 2.3
Hungary[citation needed] 6.6 14.1 3.1
Romania[citation needed] 1.6 10.8 25.0
Total Axis 2629.9 291
~z 99999999 99999999 99999999

All figures in millions of tonnes

Gross domestic product Edit

 
Ratio of GDP between the major Allied and Axis powers 1938–1945

Gross domestic product (GDP) provides insight into the relative strength of the belligerents in the run up to, and during the conflict.

Gross domestic product[nb 1][26][27]
Country 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945
United Kingdom 284 287 316 344 353 361 346 331
Dominions 115
Colonies 285
British Empire 684 687 716 744 753 761 746 731
France 186 199 82 130 116 110 93 101
Colonies 49
French Empire 235 248 131 179 165 159 142 150
Soviet Union 359 366 417 359 274 305 362 343
Occupied
Soviet Union Total 359 366 417 359 274 305 362 343
United States 800 869 943 1094 1235 1399 1499 1474
Colonies 24
United States Total 824 893 968 1118 1259 1423 1523 1498
Nationalist China 320.5
German Reich 351 384 387 412 417 426 437 310
Occupied 77 430 733 733 430 244
German Reich Total 351 461 817 1145 1150 856 681 310
Italy 141 151 147 144 145 137 117 92
Colonies 3
Occupied 20 20 20 20
Italian Empire 144 154 170 167 168 160 140 115
Japan 169 184 192 196 197 194 189 144
Colonies 63
Occupied
Japanese Empire 232 247 255 259 260 257 252 207
Romania 24
Hungary 24
Bulgaria 10
Albania 1

Romanian, Hungarian, Bulgarian and Albanian GDP calculated by multiplying the GDP per capita of the four countries in 1938 ($1,242 for Romania, $2,655 for Hungary, $1,595 for Bulgaria and over $900 for Albania)[28] by their estimated populations in 1938: 19,750,000 for Romania,[29] 9,082,400 for Hungary,[30] 6,380,000 for Bulgaria[31] and 1,040,400 for Albania.[32]

  1. ^ Billions of international dollars, at 1990 prices. Adjusted annually for changing compositions within each alliance.

Table notes

  1. France to Axis: 1940:50% (light green), 1941–44:100% (brown)
  2. USSR to Allies: 1941:44% (light green), 1942–1945:100%.
  3. US direct support to the Allies begins with Lend Lease in March 1941, though the US made it possible for the Allies to purchase US-produced materiel from 1939[33]
  4. Italy to Allies and Axis: 1938:0%, 1939–1943:100% Axis (brown), 1944-1945:100% Allies
  5. Japanese to Axis begins with Tripartite Pact in 1940
  6. The Allied and Axis totals are not the immediate sum of the table values; see the distribution rules[clarification needed] used above.

United States World War II GDP (compared to other countries) Edit

GDP during World War II Edit

  • Debt and higher taxes led to GDP growth percentages over 17%. This trend continued throughout the war and stopped increasing after the war ended. For the United States, government spending was used as a positive indicator of GDP growth. However the high rates of government only was beneficial for a short period of time, a trend that can be seen in most wars.[34]
  • In 1939, Britain spent 9% of its GDP on defence; this rose drastically after the start of World War II to around 40%. By the year 1945 government spending had peaked at 52% of the national GDP.[35]
  • Before joining World War II US government spending in 1941 represented 30% of GDP, or about $408 billion. In 1944 at the peak of World War II, government spending had risen to over $1.6 trillion about 79% of the GDP. During this three-year period the total GDP represented by government spending rose 394%.

US unemployment during World War II Edit

 
Three African-American workers complete the pilot's compartment of an aircraft, 1942
  • During World War II unemployment by 1945 had fallen to 1.9% from 14.6% in 1940. 20% of the population during the war was employed within the armed forces.[36]
  • The beginning years of World War II shows a spike in employment, but towards the end of the war decreased significantly. The employment spike was in relation to the tremendous amount of production the United States was making. Examples of high numbers of employment could have been seen in at Gulf Shipbuilding which obtained 240 employees at the beginning of 1940 and increased to 11,600 employees in 1943. Alabama Dry dock also was an exemplary business in employment that raised number from 1,000 workers to 30,000 in the most productive years of the war. Demographics of employment consisted of eight million women including African Americans and Latinas, adding to the 24 million that searched for defensive jobs outside of the war.[37][38]

Price of war Edit

Many concerns and political influence come from the price of war. While GDP can easily increase federal expenditures, it also can influence political elections and government decision making. No matter how much percentages of GDP increase or decrease we need higher amounts of GDP in order to pay for more investments, one of those investments being more wars. To pay for these wars, taxes are held at a very high rate. For example, by the end of World War II tax rates went from 1.5% to 15%. Along with tax percentages reaching high amounts, spending on non-defense programs were cut in half during the period of World War II. Tax cuts allow one to see GDP in effect for the average American. Still, almost ten years after World War II, in 1950 and 1951 congress raised taxes close to 4% in order to pay for the Korean War. After the Korean War, in 1968 taxes again were raised 10% to pay for the Vietnam War. This caused GDP to increase 1%. Although research can support positive relationship between production and jobs with GDP, research can also show the negative relationship with tax increases and GDP.[39]

US wartime production Edit

Prior to the Second World War, the United States was cautious with regard to its manufacturing capabilities as the country was still recovering from the Great Depression. However, during the war, President Franklin D. Roosevelt set ambitious production goals to fulfill. The early 1940s were set to have 60,000 aircraft increasing to 125,000 in 1943. In addition, targets for the production of 120,000 tanks and 55,000 aircraft were set during the same time period. The Ford Motor Company in Michigan built one motor car (comprising 15,000 parts) on the assembly lines every 69 seconds. Ford's production contributed to America's total production of vehicles totalling three million in 1941. American production numbers caused the US employed workforce to increase massively. America's yearly production exceeded Japan's production building more planes in 1944 than Japan built in all the war years combined. As a result, half of the world's war production came from America. The government paid for this production using techniques of selling war bonds to financial institutions, rationing household items and creating more tax revenues.

One part of the US wartime manufacturing boom can be ascribed to Alcoa's second major reduction plant in Mobile, Alabama starting in 1937. At first serving mainly the Japanese market, the plant prepared thousands of tons of aluminum for the production of aeroplanes during the war.[1] The United States quickly adjusted to the levels of production required to equip its military with the millions of war products used during World War II.

Personnel – Allied – Britain, dominions and possessions Edit

Including all non-British subjects in British services.[40]

Army Army (female) Navy Navy (female) Marines Air Force Air Force (female) Auxiliary Merchant marine Partisans Total combat Other labour
Aden 1,200
Australia 727,703 24,026 36,976 3,000 124,007 27,000 4,500 942,712
Argentine volunteers[41] 1,700 1,700 600 4,000
Basutoland/Bechuana/Swaziland 10,000 36,000
Free Belgian Forces 42,300 1,200 1,900 45,770 370
Britain 3,300,000 210,309 865,000 74,000 78,500 1,208,000 181,909 1,500,000 185,000 7,602,718
B. Indian Ocean 6,500 6,500
Canada 705,374 25,251 99,822 7,100 222,501 27,123 82,163 18,000 1,187,334
Caribbean / Bermuda 10,000
Ceylon 26,000
Chinese volunteers 10,000 10,000
Cyprus 30,000 30,000
Czech volunteers 4,000 2,000 6,000
East Africa 200,000 228,000
Egypt 100,000 100,000
Falklands 200
Fiji 7,000 1,071 7,000
Free French Forces 3,700 20 3,720
Free Greek 5,000 8,500 250 14,000
Gibraltar 700
Guiana, British 32 10 42 33 48 196 31
Hong Kong 2,200 2,200
India 2,500,000 11,000 45,947 30,000 50,000 2,586,957 14,000,000
Ireland 70,000 70,000
Lesotho 21,000 21,000
Free Luxembourg[42] 80 80
Malaysia 1,500 1,450 3,215 4,800 10,965
Malta 8,200
Mauritius 6,800 3,500
Nepal 250,280 250,280
Free Dutch 4,000 1,000 1000 12.000 6,000
South Africa ?
Total 7,988,669 271,596 1,064,337 84,100 78,500 1,590,311 236,032 1,593,297 267,512 4,800 13,221,232 14,000,401

Note:

  1. Auxiliary units include Home Guard, Reserves, Police regiments, etc.


Personnel – Axis – German Reich Edit

This includes all German and non-German subjects serving within German Reich forces.

Army Army (female) Navy Navy (female) Marines Air force Air force (female) Auxiliary Merchant marine Partisans Total combat Other labour
Albania 9,000 9,000
Arab legion 20,000 20,000
Belgium 22,000 22,000
Bulgaria 30,000 90,000
Croatia[43] 55,500 500 400 32,000 88,400
Czech[44] 6,465 6,465
Denmark 12,000 12,000
Finland vol 2,500 2,500
France & territories 8,000 4,500 5,080 17,580 348,500
Germany & territories 14,793,200 1,500,000 3,400,000 19,693,200
Greece 22,000 22,000
Hungary 40,000 40,000
Italy 18,000 18,000
India 4,500 4,500
Luxembourg 12,035 12,035
Netherlands 45,000 45,000
Norway[45] 5,000 1,500 1,500 4,500
Poland[46] 75,000 45,000 120,000
Portugal 200 200
Romania 55,000 55,000
Serbia 10,000 10,000
Slovakia 45,000 45,000
Slovenia 6,000 6,000
Spain 47,000 47,000
Sweden 300 300
Switzerland 800 800
USSR 1,051,000 300 100,000 1,151,300
Total 16,336,755 1,506,500 3,402,200 204,080 21,582,300 348,000

Note:

  1. Auxiliary units include Home Guard, Wehrmachtsgefolge, Reserves, Police regiments, etc.
  2. USSR includes Armenia 4k SS, 14k Wehr, 7k Aux; Azerbaijan 55k SS, 70k Wehr; Belarus 12k Wehr, 20k Aux; Cossack 200k Wehr; Estonia 20k SS, 50k Wehr, 7k Aux; Georgia 10k SS; 30k Wehr; Kalmyk 5k Wehr; Latvia 55k SS; 87k Wehr, 300 Air, 23k Aux; Lithuania 50k Wehr, 10 Aux; North Caucuses 4k SS; Russia 60k SS, 26k Wehr; Turkestan 16k Wehr; Ukrainian 300k Wehr; 2k Aux; Tatar/Urals 12k Wehr

Aircraft – Allied – British Empire Edit

Within the UK, initially aircraft production was very vulnerable to enemy bombing. To expand and diversify the production base the British set up shadow factories. These brought other manufacturing companies – such as vehicle manufacturers – into aircraft production, or aircraft parts production. These inexperienced companies were set up in groups under the guidance or control of the aircraft manufacturers. New factory buildings were provided with government money.[47]

Fighters Australia Britain Canada India New Zealand South Africa Total
Blackburn Roc (naval) 136 136
Boulton Paul Defiant 1,065 1065
CAC Boomerang 250 250
CAC Mustang 200 200
de Havilland Hornet[note 1] 60 60
de Havilland Vampire 244 244
Fairey Firefly (naval) 872 872
Fairey Fulmar (naval) 600 600
Gloster Gladiator[note 2] 98 98
Gloster Meteor 239 239
Hawker Hurricane 14,231 1,451 15,682
Hawker Tempest 1,702 1,702
Hawker Typhoon 3,330 3,330
Supermarine Seafire (naval)[note 3] 2,334 2,334
Supermarine Spitfire 20,351 20,351[48]
Westland Whirlwind 116 116
Total Fighters 450 50,897 2,077 53,424
Bombers Australia Britain Canada India New Zealand South Africa
Armstrong Whitworth Whitley[note 4] 1,780 1,780
Avro Lancaster 7,307 430 7,377
Avro Lincoln[49] 6 1 6
Avro Manchester 202 202
Fairey Barracuda (naval) 2,607 2,607
Blackburn Skua (naval) 192 192
Bristol Beaufighter 364 5,564 5,928
Bristol Beaufort 700 1,429 2,129
Bristol Blenheim 5,519 626 6,145
Bristol Buckingham[note 5] 119 119
de Havilland Mosquito 212 6,199 1,134 7,545
Fairchild SBF &
CCF SBW Helldiver
1,134 1,134
Fairey Albacore (naval) 800 800
Fairey Swordfish[note 4] (naval) 2,396 2,396
Handley Page Halifax 6,178[note 6] 6,178
Handley Page Hampden 152 160 312
Short Stirling 2,383 2,383
Vickers Wellington[note 4] 11,461 11,461
Total Bombers 1,349 44,391 3,019 54,577
Reconnaissance & patrol Australia Britain Canada India New Zealand South Africa
Bristol Bolingbroke[note 7] 676 626
Bristol Bombay (bomber/transport)[note 4] 51 51
Blackburn Botha 580 580
Blackburn Shark 17 17
Consolidated Canso 721[50] 993
Piper Cub 150 150
Saro Lerwick 21 21
Supermarine Sea Otter 292 292
Short Seaford 10 10
Short Sunderland 767 767
Supermarine Stranraer 39 39
Supermarine Walrus 746 746
Taylorcraft Auster 1,800 1,800
Vickers Warwick 845 845
Total reconnaissance 5,112 882 6,937
Transport Australia Britain Canada India New Zealand South Africa
Airspeed Horsa 5,000 5,000
Armstrong Whitworth Albemarle 602 602
Armstrong Whitworth Whitley 1,814 1,814
Avro Lancastrian 82 6 82
Avro York 259 1 259
CAC Gliders 8 8
De Havilland Australia DHA-G1/G2 8 8
de Havilland Dragon Dominie[note 4] 474 474
de Havilland Flamingo 14 14
General Aircraft Hamilcar
(glider)
412 412
General Aircraft Hotspur
(glider)
1,015 1,015
Miles Messenger 93 93
Miles Monitor 22 22
Noorduyn Norseman 861 861
Northrop/Canadian-Vickers Delta[note 8] 19 19
Percival Petrel 7 7
Short S.26 3 3
Slingsby Hengist
(glider)
18 18
Westland Lysander
(air observation, liaison, target tug)
1,445 225 1,670
total Transports 16 11,260 1,112 12,381
Trainers Australia Britain Canada India New Zealand South Africa
Airspeed Oxford 8,586 8,586
Avions Fairey Tipsy B 15 15
Avro Anson 8,488 3,197 11,685
Bristol Buckmaster 112 112
CAC Wackett 202 202
CAC Wirraway 755 755
de Havilland Don 30 30
de Havilland Moth Minor 100 100
de Havilland Tiger Moth 1,080 5,738 1,748 150 8,716
Fairchild Cornell (PT-19/26) 1,642 1,642
Fairey Battle[note 9] 2,201 2,201
Fleet Finch 606 606
Fleet Fort 101 101
Hawker Henley 200 200
Harlow PC-5 5 50 55
Miles Magister 1,303 1,303
Miles Martinet 1,724 1,724
Miles Master 3,250 3,250
Miles Mentor 45 45
North American Harvard 3,985 3,985
Percival Proctor 1,143 1,143
Total Trainers 2,037 32,935 11,284 50 150 46,456
Other Australia Britain Canada India New Zealand South Africa Empire
Prototypes[note 10] 2 61 1
Other 78 2
Total other 2 139[note 11] 3[note 12] 144
Grand Total 3,854 144,734 18,377 50 150 0 173,759

Aircraft – Allies – France, Poland and minor powers Edit

Production numbers until the time of the German occupation of the respective country. Some types listed were in production before the war, those listed were still in production at the time of or after the Munich crisis.

Allied aircraft production[51]
Fighters Belgium Czechoslovakia Denmark France Netherlands Poland Yugoslavia Total
Avia B.534-IV/Bk.534 274
Caudron CR.714 90
Dewoitine D.520 403
Fokker D.XXI 10 110 120
Koolhoven F.K.58 20[note 13]
Avions Fairey Fox VI/VII 106
Fokker G.I 63
Hawker Hurricane I 15 20
Ikarus IK-2 12
Rogozarski IK-3 12
Bloch MB.151/152 636
Morane-Saulnier MS.406 1,077
Potez 630/631 280
PZL.50 Jastrząb (6)[note 14]
PZL P.24 118[note 15]
Arsenal VG.33/36/39 40[note 16]
Total 121 274 10 2,526 193 119 (+5) 44 3,287[note 17]
Attack Belgium Czechoslovakia Denmark France Netherlands Poland Yugoslavia Total
Breguet Br.690 230
Latécoère 298
(naval torpedo bomber/dive bomber)
121
Loire-Nieuport LN.40 68
Fairey P.4/34 (12)[note 18]
Rogožarski PVT[note 19] 61
Total (12) 419 61 480[note 20]
Bombers Belgium Czechoslovakia Denmark France Netherlands Poland Yugoslavia Total
Aero A.101 64
Aero A.304 19
Amiot 351/354 80
Avia B-71 61
Fairey Battle I 18 [note 21]
Fokker C.X/Fokker C.XI 53
Dornier Do 17K 70
Farman F.222.2/F.223 25
LeO 45 452
LWS-6 Żubr 17
Bloch MB.131 143
Bloch MB.174/175 79
Bloch MB.210 298
Potez 633 55
PZL.37 120
PZL.43 54[note 22]
PZL.46 2[note 23]
Rogožarski SIM-XIV-H 19
Fokker T.V 16
Fokker T.VIII 36
Total 18 144 1,132 105 193 89 1,681

Aircraft - Axis - All Edit

Occupied countries produced weapons for the Axis powers. Figures are for the period of occupation only.

Axis aircraft production[52]
Fighters Belgium Bulgaria Czech Netherlands Finland France Germany Hungary Italy Japan Poland Romania Yugoslavia Total
Mitsubishi A6M Zero 10,939
Nakajima A6M2-N 327
Arado Ar 240 14
Avia B-135 12
Avia B-534 78
Bachem Ba 349 36[note 24]
Messerschmitt Bf 109 33,142 309 33,984
Messerschmitt Bf 110 6,170 6,170
Macchi C.200/Macchi C.202/Macchi C.205 2,766
Fiat CR.25 12
Fiat CR.42 1,782
Dewoitine D.520[note 25] 440
Dornier Do 17Z-7/Z-10 12
Dornier Do 335 37
Caproni Vizzola F.5 14
Koolhoven F.K.52 6
Focke-Wulf Fw 190 20,000
Fiat G.50 Freccia 666
Fiat G.55 Centauro 305
Heinkel He 100[note 26] 25
Heinkel He 112 60
Heinkel He 162 320
Heinkel He 219 300
IAR 80 346
Nakajima J1N 479
Mitsubishi J2M 621
Kawasaki Ki-10 283
Nakajima Ki-27 3,399
Nakajima Ki-43 5,919
Nakajima Ki-44 1,227
Kawasaki Ki-45 1,701
Kawasaki Ki-61 3,159
Nakajima Ki-84 3,514
Kawasaki Ki-100 395
Bloch MB.150[note 25] 35
Messerschmitt Me 163 /Mitsubishi J8M 370 7 377
Messerschmitt Me 262 1,433
Mörkö-Morane[note 27] 41
Morane-Saulnier MS.410[note 28] 74
Kawanishi N1K 1,435
PZL P.24 25 25 50
Reggiane Re.2000, 2001, 2002 & 2005 204 531 735
IMAM Ro.44 35
IMAM Ro.57 75
Ambrosini SAI.207 14
Focke-Wulf Ta 152 & Focke-Wulf Ta 154 200 these are unrelated types.
VL Myrsky 51
VL Pyry 41
Total 90 6 133 549 62,116 513 6,200 33,405 25 371 96,551
Attack Belgium Bulgaria Czech Netherlands Finland France Germany Hungary Italy Japan Poland Romania Yugoslavia
Nakajima B5N 1,149
Nakajima B6N 1,268
Aichi B7A 114
Breda Ba.65 218
Breda Ba.88 149
Aichi D3A 1,486
Yokosuka D4Y 2,038
CANSA FC.12 11
CANSA FC.20 6
Heinkel He 115 138
Heinkel He 118[note 29] 15
Henschel Hs 123[note 30] 250
Henschel Hs 129 865
Junkers Ju 87 Stuka 6,500
Mitsubishi Ki-51 2,385
Kawasaki Ki-102 238
Aichi M6A 28
Messerschmitt Me 210[note 31] 400 272 672
Messerschmitt Me 410[note 32] 1,189
Yokosuka MXY7 852
Fiat RS.14 188
Savoia-Marchetti SM.85 34
Total 9,092 272 606 9,558 30,903
Bombers Belgium Bulgaria Czech Netherlands Finland France Germany Hungary Italy Japan Poland Romania Yugoslavia
Aero A.304 4
Arado Ar 234 210
Bloch MB.174/175[note 33] 38
Fiat BR.20 Cicogna 602
Caproni Ca.135 140
Caproni Ca.309-314 1,516
Dornier Do 22 30
Dornier Do 17E/F 405
Dornier Do 17K 14
Dornier Do 17M/P/R/S/U 448
Dornier Do 17Z 875
Dornier Do 215 105
Dornier Do 217 1,025
Fieseler Fi 167 14
Focke-Wulf Fw 200 276
Mitsubishi G3M 1,048
Mitsubishi G4M 2,435
Heinkel He 111 7,300
Heinkel He 177 1,190
IAR 37 380
Junkers Ju 88/188/388 16,517
Kaproni-Bulgarski KB.6 24
Mitsubishi Ki-21 2,064
Mitsubishi Ki-30 704
Kawasaki Ki-32 854
Kawasaki Ki-48 1,997
Nakajima Ki-49 819
Mitsubishi Ki-67/Mitsubishi Ki-109 767
LeO 45[note 25] 162
Piaggio P.108 35
Yokosuka P1Y 1,102
Kyushu Q1W 153
Letov Š-328 80
Savoia-Marchetti SM.79 1,350 64
Savoia-Marchetti SM.82[note 34] 379
Savoia-Marchetti SM.84 246
Weiss WM-21 128
CANT Z.506B 320
CANT Z.1007 660
CANT Z.1018 15
Total 24 84 200 28,409 128 5,263 11,943 380 44,802

Propaganda posters Edit

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ entered service after the war
  2. ^ wartime production only. Majority of Gladiators were built before the war. 165 additional to export customers. Sea Gladiator conversions and production in Sea Gladiator entry.
  3. ^ Includes some post-war production and conversions of Spitfires
  4. ^ a b c d e Includes pre-war production
  5. ^ Not used as bombers but for other purposes
  6. ^ includes transport and Coastal Command reconnaissance versions
  7. ^ Includes 457 trainers
  8. ^ most built pre-war
  9. ^ Most production was pre-war
  10. ^ Of all types of aircraft not entering service
  11. ^ includes: Folland Fo.108 engine test bed (12), General Aircraft Cygnet (10), General Aircraft GAL-41 (1), Hawker Sea Fury (10), Miles Mercury (6), Percival Vega Gull (~20), Supermarine Spiteful fighter (19)
  12. ^ includes: CCF Maple Leaf Trainer II (2 plus 10 built in Mexico )
  13. ^ Delivered to France.
  14. ^ First prototype incomplete by German occupation.
  15. ^ Only 1 (designated P.11g) used by Poland in 1939. The remaining ones were exported to various Balkan countries.
  16. ^ Around 200 more airframes were in advanced production stage.
  17. ^ not counting uncompleted PZL.50
  18. ^ Production was started in Denmark, but not completed before the German invasion.
  19. ^ Originally an advanced fighter-training aircraft, this type was later used as a light attack plane, in particular by the Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia.
  20. ^ not counting P.4/34
  21. ^ According to some sources license production started in Denmark but not completed before the German invasion.
  22. ^ All but 5 delivered to Bulgaria.
  23. ^ Prototypes that were used in combat.
  24. ^ Never entered service
  25. ^ a b c Number refers to production resumed after German occupation.
  26. ^ Produced shortly before the war and mainly used for testing and propaganda purposes.
  27. ^ Conversion from MS.406/410.
  28. ^ Conversion from MS.406.
  29. ^ Produced before the war and 2 used by Japanese for testing.
  30. ^ All produced before the war, but used until 1944.
  31. ^ Only 90 German-built Me 210 were completed and delivered, about 100 Hungarian-built were supplied to Germany
  32. ^ Also used as a fighter and for reconnaissance
  33. ^ Produced for Germany after German occupation.
  34. ^ Only bomber versions listed here.

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Herman, Arthur. Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II, p. IX, Random House, New York, NY, 2012. ISBN 978-1-4000-6964-4.
  2. ^ Parker, Dana T. Building Victory: Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II, p. 7, Cypress, CA, 2013. ISBN 978-0-9897906-0-4.
  3. ^ Wrynn, V. Dennis. Forge of Freedom: American Aircraft Production in World War II, pp. 4-5, Motorbooks International, Osceola, WI, 1995. ISBN 0-7603-0143-3.
  4. ^ Baldwin, Ralph B. The Deadly Fuze: Secret Weapon of World War II, pp. 4-6, 11, 50, 279, Presidio Press, San Rafael, California, 1980. ISBN 978-0-89141-087-4.
  5. ^ Kumanev, G.A., "War and the evacuation of the USSR: 1941-1942", New Age, 2006
  6. ^ Sawyer, L. A. and Mitchell, W. H. The Liberty Ships: The History of the "Emergency" Type Cargo Ships Constructed in the United States During the Second World War, Second Edition, pp. vii, 1-8, Lloyd's of London Press Ltd., London, England, 1985. ISBN 1-85044-049-2.
  7. ^ Parker, Dana T. Building Victory: Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II, pp. 5, 7, Cypress, CA, 2013. ISBN 978-0-9897906-0-4.
  8. ^ Parker, Dana T. Building Victory: Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II, p. 8, Cypress, California, 2013. ISBN 978-0-9897906-0-4.
  9. ^ "US military numbers". www.dpaa.mil.
  10. ^ Office of Statistical Control. Army Air Force Statistical Digest, World War II. p. 127.
  11. ^ Office of Statistical Control. Army Air Force Statistical Digest. p. 16.
  12. ^ "Royal Navy in 1939 and 1945". www.naval-history.net.
  13. ^ "US PT Boats List: Numerical List of Boats".
  14. ^ "Expanding the Size of the U.S. Military in World War II". warfarehistorynetwork.com. 26 June 2017. Archived from the original on 12 August 2018. Retrieved 13 March 2019.
  15. ^ Goldsmith data in Harrison (1988) p. 172
  16. ^ "Why Japan Really Lost The War". Combined Fleet. Retrieved 2018-06-18.
  17. ^ "Why Japan Really Lost The War". Combined Fleet. Retrieved 2018-06-18.
  18. ^ Mitchell, B.R. British Historical Statistics, 1988[page needed]
  19. ^ , FIRST FIVE YEAR PLAN, Ministry Of Human Resource Development Department Of Education, archived from the original on 14 July 2014
  20. ^ Dialogue on Aluminium 110 years of history in Canada approximation
  21. ^ Baker The New Zealand People at War: War Economy 1965[page needed]
  22. ^ Long, Jason, , The Sinews of War: Economics, Production and Logistics during the Second World War, archived from the original on 7 March 2012
  23. ^ a b , The Sinews of War: Economics, Production and Logistics during the Second World War, archived from the original on 15 April 2012, citing Accounting for War: Soviet Production, Employment and the Defense Burden, 1940-1945 by Mark Harrison, 1996
  24. ^ Including 23.4 synthetic.
  25. ^ a b c Volume 3 -The Effects of Strategic Bombing on the German War Economy 1940-1944 only, retrieved June 8, 2014
  26. ^ , Articles On War, OnWar.com, 2003, archived from the original on August 6, 2014, retrieved June 8, 2014
  27. ^ Harrison, 1998
  28. ^ Stephen Broadberry, Kevin H. O'Rourke, The Cambridge Economic History of Modern Europe: Volume 2, 1870 to the Present, p. 190
  29. ^ "ROMANIA: historical demographical data of the whole country".
  30. ^ "HUNGARY: historical demographical data of the whole country".
  31. ^ "BULGARIA historical demographical data of the whole country".
  32. ^ "ALBANIA: historical demographical data of the whole country".
  33. ^ General Article: Foreign Affairs, pbs.org
  34. ^ "The Economic Consequences of War on US Economy" (PDF). Institute for Economics and Peace. June 2015. Retrieved 6 October 2017.
  35. ^ "Defence Spending since 1900". UK Public Spending. Retrieved 2018-06-18 – via Christopher Chantrill.
  36. ^ "The Economic Consequences of War on US Economy" (PDF). Institute of Economics and Peace. June 2015. Retrieved 6 October 2017.
  37. ^ "THE WAR: At Home – War Production". The War At Home Production. PBS. Retrieved 2017-04-12.
  38. ^ "Graph of U.S. Unemployment Rate, 1930-1945". Bureau Of Labor Statistics. HERB: Resources for Teachers. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  39. ^ Bartlett, Bruce. "The Cost Of War". Forbes. Retrieved 2017-10-26.
  40. ^ Rose, Patrick (2012). The Indian Army, 1939–47: Experience and Development. Routledge.
  41. ^ *The Anglo-Argentine Society in conjunction with the Argentine Embassy (6 April 2005). "Wings of Thunder – Wartime RAF Veterans Flying in From Argentina" (Press release). London: PRNewswire.
  42. ^ , Historique - Lëtzebuerger Arméi, archived from the original on 2014-06-29
  43. ^ Munoz 1996, Tomasevich 2001
  44. ^ , archived from the original on July 14, 2014
  45. ^ "De norske frontkjemperne - Norgeshistorie".
  46. ^ , archived from the original on July 14, 2014
  47. ^ Granatstein, Dr. J. L. (May 27, 2005). "ARMING THE NATION: CANADA'S INDUSTRIAL WAR EFFORT, 1939-1945" (PDF). Canadian Council of Chief Executives. Retrieved April 5, 2016.
  48. ^ Ethell, Jeffrey L. and Steve Pace. Spitfire. St. Paul, Minnesota: Motorbooks International, 1997. ISBN 0-7603-0300-2. p117
  49. ^ 3 prototypes and 3 delivered to RAF
  50. ^ "Consolidated PBY Catalina production in Canada". www.historyofwar.org.
  51. ^ * , , Free Dutch, New Zealand Official History, Barnes 1989, Bishop 2002, Bowyer 1980, Butler 2004, Flint 2006, Green 1967, Jackson 1987, Jane's 1989 , Mason 1994, Morgan ?, Otway 1990, Swanborough 1997, Tapper 1988, The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft, 1985
  52. ^ Comando Supremo: Italy at War, Dressel and Griehl 1994, Encyclopedia of weapons of World War Two, Francillon 1970, The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft, 1985, Jane's 1989, Mondey 1996, Smith and Anthony ?

Table data Edit

Personnel -Allied - British Empire Edit

  • Australia 2]
  • This website is currently unavailable. "Facts & Information"] Canada at War July 4, 2009
  • Colonel C.P. Stacey. "Chapter XIX Conclusion". Repatriation and Demoblization – via hyperwar. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Daniel Owen Spence, Imperial Loyalties, 'Imagined Communities' and 'Britishness': The Royal Navy and the Cayman Islands
  • Sherwood, Marika (30 March 2011), Colonies, Colonials and World War Two, BBC History
  • Gillespie, Oliver A. (1952), "I: New Zealand's Responsibility" The Pacific, The Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939–1945, Wellington: Historical Publications Branch
  • The Royal Indian Navy (Appendix 12) – via HyperWar Foundation
  • "Officers Database FAQ", bharat-rakshak.com
  • http://idsa.in/system/files/IndiaWorldWarII.pdf India 3 idsa.in
  • , defencejournal.com, archived from the original on 2005-09-01
  • "India RIAF", WWII Peoples War, BBC
  • The Battle for Miri and Sarawak, Borneo, WW II (article) by Franz L Kessler on AuthorsDen Malay
  • The Allied Merchant Navy - Their Legacy… Our Freedom
  • [2] Netherlands
  • Verheijke, Emma, ed. (14 July 2014), (PDF), Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Canberra, archived from the original (PDF) on 14 July 2014 Netherlands
  • [3] Newfoundland
  • The Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939–1945, NZETC New Zealand
  • [4] Nigeria
  • Saunders, Hilary St. George (1954), "Volume III The Fight Is Won", Royal Air Force 1939-1945, London: HMSO – via Hyperwar Foundation
  • South African Military History Society - Journal - The South African Corps of Marines South Africa
  • Flying High: The Story of the Women's Auxiliary Air Force 1939-1945 - South African Military History Society - Journal South Africa
  • History, South Africa Navy
  • Martin Plaut (11 March 2014), African troops who fought in World War Two, Martin Plaut
  • "West Africa", fpif.org, 6 June 2012
  • "West Africa", country-data.com
  • "Fact File : Commonwealth and Allied Forces", WWII Peoples War, BBC

Personnel - Axis Edit

  • The Latvian Squadrons in the Luftwaffe, Latvianaviation.com
  • Volunteers, Ailsby 2004

Raw materials Edit

  • The Mineral Industry of the British Empire and Foreign Countries, Statistical Summary 1938–1944, The Imperial Institute, HMSO, 1948
  • The Mineral Industry of the British Empire and Foreign Countries, Statistical Summary 1941–1947, The Imperial Institute, HMSO, 1949

Official histories Edit

  • History of the Second World War (104 volumes), Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London 1949 to 1993
  • Official History of Australia in the War of 1939–1945 (22 volumes), Australian Government Printing Service, 1952 to 1977
  • Official History of the Canadian Army in the Second World War, Vol I Six Years of War, Stacey, C P., Queen's Printer, Ottawa, 1955
  • Official History of the Indian Armed Forces in the Second World War 1939-45 (24 volumes), Combined Inter-Services Historical Section, India & Pakistan, New Delhi, 1956-1966
  • Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939–45, Historical Publications Branch, Wellington, New Zealand, 1965

Bibliography Edit

  • Ailsby, Christopher, Hitler's Renegades: Foreign Nationals in the Service of the Third Reich (Photographic Histories), Potomac Books, 2004
  • Barnett, Correlli, The audit of war : the illusion & reality of Britain as a great nation, Macmillan, 1986
  • Barnes, C.H.; James D.N. Shorts Aircraft since 1900, London, Putnam, 1989
  • Bishop, Chris, The Encyclopaedia of Weapons of World War II, Sterling Publishing, 2002
  • Bowyer, Michael J.F. Aircraft for the Royal Air Force: The "Griffon" Spitfire, The Albemarle Bomber and the Shetland Flying-Boat, London, Faber & Faber, 1980
  • Boyd, David, (2009) "Wartime Production by the Commonwealth during WWII" British Equipment of the Second World War
  • Boyd, David (2009), "British Production of Aircraft By Year During The Second World War", British Equipment of the Second World War
  • Butler, Tony. British Secret Projects: Fighters and Bombers 1935–1950. Hinckley, UK: Midland Publishing, 2004
  • Canada at War, "The Canadian War Industry"
  • Dressel, Joachim and Manfred Griehl. Bombers of the Luftwaffe. London: DAG Publications, 1994
  • Flint, Keith, Airborne Armour: Tetrarch, Locust, Hamilcar and the 6th Airborne Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment 1938-1950. Helion & Company Ltd., 2006
  • Francillon, René J., Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War, London, Putnam, 1970
  • Gregg, W.A ed., Canada’s Fighting Vehicles Europe 1943-1945, Canadian Military Historical Society, 1980
  • Green, William. War Planes of The Second World War:Volume Seven - Bombers and Reconnaissance Aircraft. London: Macdonald, 1967
  • Harrison, Mark, "The Economics of World War II: Six Great Powers in International Comparison", Cambridge University Press, 1998 (Author's overview)
  • Herman, Arthur. Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II, Random House, New York, 2012
  • The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft (Part Work 1982–1985). London: Orbis Publishing, 1985
  • Jackson, A.J., De Havilland Aircraft since 1909 (Third ed.), London, Putnam, 1987
  • Jane's Fighting Aircraft of World War II, London, Studio Editions Ltd, 1989
  • . (in French) Armee.lu. Retrieved 29 June 2013
  • Long, Jason, Lend Lease as a Function of the Soviet war Economy, , Retrieved June 12, 2014
  • Mason, Francis K. The British Bomber since 1914, London: Putnam Aeronautical Books, 1994
  • Milward, Alan S., War, economy, and society, 1939-1945, University of California Press, 1979
  • Morgan, Eric B. "Albemarle" in Twentyfirst Profile, Volume 1, No. 11. New Milton, Hants, UK: 21st Profile Ltd.
  • Munoz, A.J., For Croatia and Christ: The Croatian Army in World War II 1941–1945, Axis Europa Books, NY, 1996
  • Mondey, David. The Concise Guide to Axis Aircraft of World War II. New York: Bounty Books, 1996
  • Ness, Leland, Jane's World War II Tanks and Fighting Vehicles, The Complete Guide, Harper Collins, 2002
  • Otway, Lieutenant-Colonel T.B.H. The Second World War 1939-1945 Army: Airborne Forces. London: Imperial War Museum, 1990
  • Overy, Richard, Why the Allies Won (Paperback), W. W. Norton & Company, 1997
  • Scientia Militaria, South African Journal of Military Studies
  • Smith, J.R. and Anthony L. Kay. German Aircraft of the Second World War. London: Putnam and Company Ltd.,
  • Swanborough, Gordon. British Aircraft at War, 1939-1945. East Sussex, UK: HPC Publishing, 1997
  • Tapper, Oliver. Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft since 1913. London: Putnam, 1988
  • Tomasevich, Jozo, War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration 2. San Francisco: Stanford University Press, 2001
  • Veterans Affairs Canada, "Canadian Production of War Materials"
  • Wilson, Stewart, Aircraft of WWII, 1998
  • Wrynn, V. Dennis. Forge of Freedom: American Aircraft Production in World War II, Motorbooks International, Osceola, WI, 1995
  • Zuljan, Ralph, Articles On War OnWar.com (2003)

External links Edit

  • Allies and Lend-Lease Museum, Russia
  • Australia War Memorial official war history online archive
  • Canada at War
  • National War Museum, United States
  • New Zealand in the Second World War, official war history online
  • South Africa Journal of Military Studies

military, production, during, world, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, technical, most, readers, understand, please, help, improve, make, u. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details July 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article focuses too much on specific examples without explaining their importance to its main subject Please help improve this article by citing reliable secondary sources that evaluate and synthesize these or similar examples within a broader context July 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Military production during World War II was the production or mobilization of arms ammunition personnel and financing by the belligerents of the war from the occupation of Austria in early 1938 to the surrender and occupation of Japan in late 1945 Russian women working in city factory at the height of the Siege of LeningradAssembly line of Messerschmitt Bf 109G 6s fighters in a German aircraft factoryIndian workers check new fuel tanks at the Hindustan Aircraft Factory in Bangalore 1944The mobilization of funds people natural resources and material for the production and supply of military equipment and military forces during World War II was a critical component of the war effort During the conflict the Allies outpaced the Axis powers in most production categories Access to the funding and industrial resources necessary to sustain the war effort was linked to their respective economic and political alliances Contents 1 Historical context 2 Production summaries 1939 1945 2 1 Personnel thousands 2 2 Major weapons groups 2 3 Economy 2 4 Vital commerce and raw materials tons 3 Production overview service power and type 3 1 Land forces 3 2 Air forces 3 3 Naval forces 3 4 Munitions 3 5 Commercial forces 3 6 Resources 4 Gross domestic product 5 United States World War II GDP compared to other countries 5 1 GDP during World War II 5 2 US unemployment during World War II 5 3 Price of war 5 3 1 US wartime production 5 4 Personnel Allied Britain dominions and possessions 5 5 Personnel Axis German Reich 5 6 Aircraft Allied British Empire 5 7 Aircraft Allies France Poland and minor powers 5 8 Aircraft Axis All 6 Propaganda posters 7 See also 8 Notes 8 1 Citations 8 2 Table data 8 2 1 Personnel Allied British Empire 8 2 2 Personnel Axis 8 3 Raw materials 8 4 Official histories 8 5 Bibliography 9 External linksHistorical context EditDuring the 1930s political forces in Germany increased their financial investment in the military to develop the armed forces required to support near and long term political and territorial goals Germany s economic scientific research and industrial capabilities were one of the most technically advanced in the world at the time supporting a rapidly growing innovative military However access to and control of the resources and production capacity required to entertain long term goals such as European control German territorial expansion and the destruction of the USSR were limited Political demands necessitated the expansion of Germany s control of natural and human resources industrial capacity and farmland beyond its borders Germany s military production was tied to resources outside its area of control a great disadvantage as compared to the Allies nbsp British Empire in 1921In 1938 Britain was the world s superpower with political and economic control of a quarter of the world s population industry and resources and closely allied with the independent Dominion nations such as Canada and South Africa From 1938 to mid 1942 the British coordinated the Allied effort in all global theatres They fought the German Italian Japanese and Vichy armies air forces and navies across Europe Africa Asia the Middle East India the Mediterranean and in the Atlantic Indian Pacific and Arctic Oceans British forces destroyed Italian armies in North and East Africa and occupied or enlisted overseas colonies of occupied European nations Following engagements with Axis forces British Empire troops occupied Libya Italian Somaliland Eritrea Ethiopia Iran and Iraq The Empire funded and delivered supplies by Arctic convoys to the USSR and supported Free French forces to recapture French Equatorial Africa Britain also established governments in exile in London to rally support in occupied Europe for the Allied effort The British held back or slowed the Axis powers for three years while mobilising their globally integrated economy and industrial infrastructure to build what became by 1942 the most extensive military apparatus of the war This allowed their later allies such as the United States to mobilise their economies and develop the military forces required to play a role in the war effort and for the British to go on the offensive in its theatres of operation nbsp The first atomic bombThe entry of the United States into the war in late 1941 injected financial human and industrial resources into Allied operations The US produced more than its own military forces required and armed itself and its allies for the most industrialized war in history 1 At the beginning of the war the British and French placed large orders for aircraft with American manufacturers and the US Congress approved plans to increase its air forces by 3 000 planes In May 1940 Franklin D Roosevelt called for the production of 185 000 aeroplanes 120 000 tanks 55 000 anti aircraft guns and 18 million tons of merchant shipping in two years Adolf Hitler was told by his advisors that this was American propaganda in 1939 annual aircraft production for the US military was less than 3 000 planes By the end of the war US factories had produced 300 000 planes 2 3 and by 1944 had produced two thirds of the Allied military equipment used in the war citation needed bringing military forces into play in North and South America the Caribbean the Atlantic Western Europe and the Pacific The U S produced vast quantities of military equipment into late 1945 including nuclear weapons and became the strongest most technologically advanced military force in the world In addition to out producing the Axis the Allies produced technological innovations through the Tizard Mission British contributions included radar instrumental in winning the Battle of Britain sonar improving their ability to sink U boats and the proximity fuze the Americans led the British originated Manhattan Project which eliminated the need to invade Japan The proximity fuze for example was five times as effective as contact or timed fuzes and was devastating in naval use against Japanese aircraft and so effective against German ground troops that General George S Patton said it won the Battle of the Bulge for us 4 The human and social costs of the war on the population of the USSR were immense with combat deaths alone in the millions Recognising the importance of their population and industrial production to the war effort the USSR evacuated the majority of its European territory moving 2 500 factories 17 million people and great quantities of resources to the east 5 Out of German reach the USSR produced equipment and forces critical to their victory in Europe Over one million women served in the Soviet armed forces nbsp Assembly line production of fighter aircraft near Niagara Falls New YorkThe statistics below illustrate the extent to which the Allies outproduced the Axis Production of machine tools tripled and thousands of ships were built in shipyards which did not exist before the war 6 According to William S Knudsen We won because we smothered the enemy in an avalanche of production the like of which he had never seen nor dreamed possible 7 Access to resources and to large controlled international labour pools and the ability to build arms in relative peace were critical to the eventual victory of the Allies Donald Douglas founder of the Douglas Aircraft Company declared Here s proof that free men can out produce slaves 8 Production summaries 1939 1945 EditPersonnel thousands Edit Service Allies AxisCombat 25 000Auxiliary force 15 000Merchant Marine 50 000Irregulars 90 000Total 180 000 30 000Major weapons groups Edit System Allies AxisTanks self propelled artillery vehicles 4 358 649 670 288Artillery mortars guns 6 792 696 1 363 491Aircraft 637 248 300 000Missiles only for test 45 458Ships 54 931 1 670Economy Edit In thousands of international dollars at 2014 prices citation needed Service Allies AxisGDP 97 707 908 723 20 10 268 201 776 37ExpenditureVital commerce and raw materials tons Edit nbsp To move raw materials and supply distant forces large numbers of cargo ships had to be builtCategory Allies AxisCargo ships 47 169 12 762Merchant shipping 46 817 172 5 621 967Coal 4 581 400 000 2 629 900 000Crude oil 1 043 000 000 66 000 000Steel 733 006 633 xAluminium 5 104 697 1 199 150Asbestos 3 934 043 xCargo and resources in metric tonnesProduction overview service power and type EditLand forces Edit See also British armoured fighting vehicle production during World War II French combat vehicle production during World War II American armored fighting vehicle production during World War II Soviet combat vehicle production during World War II German armored fighting vehicle production during World War II and Romanian armored fighting vehicle production during World War II Power Tanks amp SPGs Armoured vehicles Other vehicles Artillery Mortars Machine guns PersonnelBritish Empire 47 862 47 420 clarification needed 1 475 521 226 113 239 540 1 090 410 11 192 533USA and territories 108 410 2 382 311 257 390 105 055 2 679 840 16 000 000 9 USSR 119 769 1 556 199 516 648 363 012 1 477 400 34 401 807OtherAllies 270 041 47 420 4 054 932 1 000 151 707 607 5 247 650 61 594 000Germany and territories 67 429 49 777 159 147 73 484 104 864 1 000 730 14 540 835Hungary 973 530 5 224 447 2 700 4 583 730 000Romania 214 251 4 300 1 800 4 300 10 000 1 220 000Italian Empire 3 368 1 240 83 000 7 200 22 000 140 000 4 300 000Japanese Empire 4 524 2 200 165 945 13 350 49 000 380 000 8 100 000OtherAxis 76 385 50 028 413 316 97 281 182 864 1 395 313 28 890 800Air forces Edit Power Total Aircraft Fighters Attack Bombers Recon Transport Training Other PersonnelBritish Empire 177 025 38 786 33 811 38 158 7 014 12 585 46 256 415 1 927 395USA and territories 295 959 10 99 465 96 872 4 106 23 900 58 085 13 531 2 403 806 11 USSR 136 223 22 301 37 549 21 116 17 332 4 061 33 864OtherAllies 609 207 160 552 71 360 156 146 11 120 53 817 108 402 47 810Germany and territories 133 387 57 653 8 991 28 577 5 025 8 396 14 311 11 361 3 402 200Romania 1 113 513 272 128 0 200 0 0Italian Empire 13 402 9 157 34 3 381 388 2 471 968 3Japanese Empire 64 484 33 405 9 558 11 943 3 709 1 073 3 420 1 376Other 9 849 881 4 395 318 1 880 5 145 57Axis 222 235 98 609 18 859 44 424 11 002 14 020 22 944 12 794Naval forces Edit See also United States Navy in World War II List of classes of British ships of World War II List of Kriegsmarine ships List of Japanese Navy ships and war vessels in World War II and List of Romanian built warships of World War II Power Total large ships Carriers Escort Carriers Battleships Cruisers Destroyers Frigates amp Destroyer Escorts Other large vessels Corvettes Sloops Patrol boats Submarines includes midget submarines De Mining Landing craft PersonnelBritish Empire 558 12 15 29 5 35 202 270 2 338 33 4 209 238 1 244 9 538 1 227 415USA and territories 2020 29 121 10 52 396 1014 398 773 13 234 35 000 4 000 000 14 USSR 63 0 6 54 3 68France 9 2 7Other 8 2 2 4 1 9 1Allies 2658 44 152 17 95 663 1284 403 338 34 4 982 577 1 245 44 538Germany amp territories 38 0 4 3 31 1 119 540 1 500 000Italian Empire 82 0 3 3 17 59 83Japanese Empire 278 14 6 2 12 63 175 6 867Romania 8 2 5OtherAxis 398 14 6 9 18 111 234 6 2 069 Munitions Edit See also Home front during World War II Munitions Production in World War II 15 Expenditures in billions of dollars US 1944 munitions prices Country Alliance YearAverage1935 39 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 Total1939 44U S A 0 3 1 5 4 5 20 0 38 0 42 0 106 3Britain 0 5 3 5 6 5 9 0 11 0 11 0 41 5U S S R 1 6 5 0 8 5 11 5 14 0 16 0 56 6Allies Total 2 4 10 0 20 0 41 5 64 5 70 5 204 4Germany 2 4 6 0 6 0 8 5 13 5 17 0 53 4Japan 0 4 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 5 6 0 16 9Axis Total 2 8 7 0 8 0 11 5 18 0 23 0 70 3Commercial forces Edit British Empire USA USSR Germany Hungary Italy Japan RomaniaHarbour craft 1 092Cargo 1 361Cargo tonnage 12 823 942 citation needed 33 993 230 16 1 469 606 citation needed 4 152 361 17 Resources Edit Country Coal Iron ore Crude oil Steel Aluminium Nickel Zinc a 9999 9999 9999USA citation needed 2 149 7 396 9 833 2Britain 18 1 441 2 119 2 90 8 3 700 0 205Australia citation needed 83 1 1 56India 19 196 7 6 0 1 12Canada 101 9 3 6 8 4 16 4 3 500 20 New Zealand 21 18 1 0USSR 590 8 71 3 110 6 0 263 22 0 069 23 0 384 23 Total Allied 4581 4 597 1043Germany 2 420 3 240 7 33 4 24 1 9 25 0 046 25 2 1 25 Japan citation needed 184 5 21 0 5 2Italy citation needed 16 9 4 4 2 3Hungary citation needed 6 6 14 1 3 1Romania citation needed 1 6 10 8 25 0Total Axis 2629 9 291 z 99999999 99999999 99999999All figures in millions of tonnes See also Swedish iron ore mining during World War IIGross domestic product Edit nbsp Ratio of GDP between the major Allied and Axis powers 1938 1945Gross domestic product GDP provides insight into the relative strength of the belligerents in the run up to and during the conflict Gross domestic product nb 1 26 27 Country 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945United Kingdom 284 287 316 344 353 361 346 331Dominions 115Colonies 285British Empire 684 687 716 744 753 761 746 731France 186 199 82 130 116 110 93 101Colonies 49French Empire 235 248 131 179 165 159 142 150Soviet Union 359 366 417 359 274 305 362 343OccupiedSoviet Union Total 359 366 417 359 274 305 362 343United States 800 869 943 1094 1235 1399 1499 1474Colonies 24United States Total 824 893 968 1118 1259 1423 1523 1498Nationalist China 320 5German Reich 351 384 387 412 417 426 437 310Occupied 77 430 733 733 430 244German Reich Total 351 461 817 1145 1150 856 681 310Italy 141 151 147 144 145 137 117 92Colonies 3Occupied 20 20 20 20Italian Empire 144 154 170 167 168 160 140 115Japan 169 184 192 196 197 194 189 144Colonies 63OccupiedJapanese Empire 232 247 255 259 260 257 252 207Romania 24Hungary 24Bulgaria 10Albania 1Romanian Hungarian Bulgarian and Albanian GDP calculated by multiplying the GDP per capita of the four countries in 1938 1 242 for Romania 2 655 for Hungary 1 595 for Bulgaria and over 900 for Albania 28 by their estimated populations in 1938 19 750 000 for Romania 29 9 082 400 for Hungary 30 6 380 000 for Bulgaria 31 and 1 040 400 for Albania 32 Billions of international dollars at 1990 prices Adjusted annually for changing compositions within each alliance Table notes France to Axis 1940 50 light green 1941 44 100 brown USSR to Allies 1941 44 light green 1942 1945 100 US direct support to the Allies begins with Lend Lease in March 1941 though the US made it possible for the Allies to purchase US produced materiel from 1939 33 Italy to Allies and Axis 1938 0 1939 1943 100 Axis brown 1944 1945 100 Allies Japanese to Axis begins with Tripartite Pact in 1940 The Allied and Axis totals are not the immediate sum of the table values see the distribution rules clarification needed used above United States World War II GDP compared to other countries EditGDP during World War II Edit Debt and higher taxes led to GDP growth percentages over 17 This trend continued throughout the war and stopped increasing after the war ended For the United States government spending was used as a positive indicator of GDP growth However the high rates of government only was beneficial for a short period of time a trend that can be seen in most wars 34 In 1939 Britain spent 9 of its GDP on defence this rose drastically after the start of World War II to around 40 By the year 1945 government spending had peaked at 52 of the national GDP 35 Before joining World War II US government spending in 1941 represented 30 of GDP or about 408 billion In 1944 at the peak of World War II government spending had risen to over 1 6 trillion about 79 of the GDP During this three year period the total GDP represented by government spending rose 394 US unemployment during World War II Edit nbsp Three African American workers complete the pilot s compartment of an aircraft 1942During World War II unemployment by 1945 had fallen to 1 9 from 14 6 in 1940 20 of the population during the war was employed within the armed forces 36 The beginning years of World War II shows a spike in employment but towards the end of the war decreased significantly The employment spike was in relation to the tremendous amount of production the United States was making Examples of high numbers of employment could have been seen in at Gulf Shipbuilding which obtained 240 employees at the beginning of 1940 and increased to 11 600 employees in 1943 Alabama Dry dock also was an exemplary business in employment that raised number from 1 000 workers to 30 000 in the most productive years of the war Demographics of employment consisted of eight million women including African Americans and Latinas adding to the 24 million that searched for defensive jobs outside of the war 37 38 Price of war Edit Many concerns and political influence come from the price of war While GDP can easily increase federal expenditures it also can influence political elections and government decision making No matter how much percentages of GDP increase or decrease we need higher amounts of GDP in order to pay for more investments one of those investments being more wars To pay for these wars taxes are held at a very high rate For example by the end of World War II tax rates went from 1 5 to 15 Along with tax percentages reaching high amounts spending on non defense programs were cut in half during the period of World War II Tax cuts allow one to see GDP in effect for the average American Still almost ten years after World War II in 1950 and 1951 congress raised taxes close to 4 in order to pay for the Korean War After the Korean War in 1968 taxes again were raised 10 to pay for the Vietnam War This caused GDP to increase 1 Although research can support positive relationship between production and jobs with GDP research can also show the negative relationship with tax increases and GDP 39 US wartime production Edit Prior to the Second World War the United States was cautious with regard to its manufacturing capabilities as the country was still recovering from the Great Depression However during the war President Franklin D Roosevelt set ambitious production goals to fulfill The early 1940s were set to have 60 000 aircraft increasing to 125 000 in 1943 In addition targets for the production of 120 000 tanks and 55 000 aircraft were set during the same time period The Ford Motor Company in Michigan built one motor car comprising 15 000 parts on the assembly lines every 69 seconds Ford s production contributed to America s total production of vehicles totalling three million in 1941 American production numbers caused the US employed workforce to increase massively America s yearly production exceeded Japan s production building more planes in 1944 than Japan built in all the war years combined As a result half of the world s war production came from America The government paid for this production using techniques of selling war bonds to financial institutions rationing household items and creating more tax revenues One part of the US wartime manufacturing boom can be ascribed to Alcoa s second major reduction plant in Mobile Alabama starting in 1937 At first serving mainly the Japanese market the plant prepared thousands of tons of aluminum for the production of aeroplanes during the war 1 The United States quickly adjusted to the levels of production required to equip its military with the millions of war products used during World War II Personnel Allied Britain dominions and possessions Edit Including all non British subjects in British services 40 Army Army female Navy Navy female Marines Air Force Air Force female Auxiliary Merchant marine Partisans Total combat Other labourAden 1 200Australia 727 703 24 026 36 976 3 000 124 007 27 000 4 500 942 712Argentine volunteers 41 1 700 1 700 600 4 000Basutoland Bechuana Swaziland 10 000 36 000Free Belgian Forces 42 300 1 200 1 900 45 770 370Britain 3 300 000 210 309 865 000 74 000 78 500 1 208 000 181 909 1 500 000 185 000 7 602 718B Indian Ocean 6 500 6 500Canada 705 374 25 251 99 822 7 100 222 501 27 123 82 163 18 000 1 187 334Caribbean Bermuda 10 000Ceylon 26 000Chinese volunteers 10 000 10 000Cyprus 30 000 30 000Czech volunteers 4 000 2 000 6 000East Africa 200 000 228 000Egypt 100 000 100 000Falklands 200Fiji 7 000 1 071 7 000Free French Forces 3 700 20 3 720Free Greek 5 000 8 500 250 14 000Gibraltar 700Guiana British 32 10 42 33 48 196 31Hong Kong 2 200 2 200India 2 500 000 11 000 45 947 30 000 50 000 2 586 957 14 000 000Ireland 70 000 70 000Lesotho 21 000 21 000Free Luxembourg 42 80 80Malaysia 1 500 1 450 3 215 4 800 10 965Malta 8 200Mauritius 6 800 3 500Nepal 250 280 250 280Free Dutch 4 000 1 000 1000 12 000 6 000South Africa Total 7 988 669 271 596 1 064 337 84 100 78 500 1 590 311 236 032 1 593 297 267 512 4 800 13 221 232 14 000 401Note Auxiliary units include Home Guard Reserves Police regiments etc Personnel Axis German Reich Edit This includes all German and non German subjects serving within German Reich forces Army Army female Navy Navy female Marines Air force Air force female Auxiliary Merchant marine Partisans Total combat Other labourAlbania 9 000 9 000Arab legion 20 000 20 000Belgium 22 000 22 000Bulgaria 30 000 90 000Croatia 43 55 500 500 400 32 000 88 400Czech 44 6 465 6 465Denmark 12 000 12 000Finland vol 2 500 2 500France amp territories 8 000 4 500 5 080 17 580 348 500Germany amp territories 14 793 200 1 500 000 3 400 000 19 693 200Greece 22 000 22 000Hungary 40 000 40 000Italy 18 000 18 000India 4 500 4 500Luxembourg 12 035 12 035Netherlands 45 000 45 000Norway 45 5 000 1 500 1 500 4 500Poland 46 75 000 45 000 120 000Portugal 200 200Romania 55 000 55 000Serbia 10 000 10 000Slovakia 45 000 45 000Slovenia 6 000 6 000Spain 47 000 47 000Sweden 300 300Switzerland 800 800USSR 1 051 000 300 100 000 1 151 300Total 16 336 755 1 506 500 3 402 200 204 080 21 582 300 348 000Note Auxiliary units include Home Guard Wehrmachtsgefolge Reserves Police regiments etc USSR includes Armenia 4k SS 14k Wehr 7k Aux Azerbaijan 55k SS 70k Wehr Belarus 12k Wehr 20k Aux Cossack 200k Wehr Estonia 20k SS 50k Wehr 7k Aux Georgia 10k SS 30k Wehr Kalmyk 5k Wehr Latvia 55k SS 87k Wehr 300 Air 23k Aux Lithuania 50k Wehr 10 Aux North Caucuses 4k SS Russia 60k SS 26k Wehr Turkestan 16k Wehr Ukrainian 300k Wehr 2k Aux Tatar Urals 12k WehrAircraft Allied British Empire Edit See also List of aircraft of the United Kingdom in World War II Within the UK initially aircraft production was very vulnerable to enemy bombing To expand and diversify the production base the British set up shadow factories These brought other manufacturing companies such as vehicle manufacturers into aircraft production or aircraft parts production These inexperienced companies were set up in groups under the guidance or control of the aircraft manufacturers New factory buildings were provided with government money 47 Fighters Australia Britain Canada India New Zealand South Africa TotalBlackburn Roc naval 136 136Boulton Paul Defiant 1 065 1065CAC Boomerang 250 250CAC Mustang 200 200de Havilland Hornet note 1 60 60de Havilland Vampire 244 244Fairey Firefly naval 872 872Fairey Fulmar naval 600 600Gloster Gladiator note 2 98 98Gloster Meteor 239 239Hawker Hurricane 14 231 1 451 15 682Hawker Tempest 1 702 1 702Hawker Typhoon 3 330 3 330Supermarine Seafire naval note 3 2 334 2 334Supermarine Spitfire 20 351 20 351 48 Westland Whirlwind 116 116Total Fighters 450 50 897 2 077 53 424Bombers Australia Britain Canada India New Zealand South AfricaArmstrong Whitworth Whitley note 4 1 780 1 780Avro Lancaster 7 307 430 7 377Avro Lincoln 49 6 1 6Avro Manchester 202 202Fairey Barracuda naval 2 607 2 607Blackburn Skua naval 192 192Bristol Beaufighter 364 5 564 5 928Bristol Beaufort 700 1 429 2 129Bristol Blenheim 5 519 626 6 145Bristol Buckingham note 5 119 119de Havilland Mosquito 212 6 199 1 134 7 545Fairchild SBF amp CCF SBW Helldiver 1 134 1 134Fairey Albacore naval 800 800Fairey Swordfish note 4 naval 2 396 2 396Handley Page Halifax 6 178 note 6 6 178Handley Page Hampden 152 160 312Short Stirling 2 383 2 383Vickers Wellington note 4 11 461 11 461Total Bombers 1 349 44 391 3 019 54 577Reconnaissance amp patrol Australia Britain Canada India New Zealand South AfricaBristol Bolingbroke note 7 676 626Bristol Bombay bomber transport note 4 51 51Blackburn Botha 580 580Blackburn Shark 17 17Consolidated Canso 721 50 993Piper Cub 150 150Saro Lerwick 21 21Supermarine Sea Otter 292 292Short Seaford 10 10Short Sunderland 767 767Supermarine Stranraer 39 39Supermarine Walrus 746 746Taylorcraft Auster 1 800 1 800Vickers Warwick 845 845Total reconnaissance 5 112 882 6 937Transport Australia Britain Canada India New Zealand South AfricaAirspeed Horsa 5 000 5 000Armstrong Whitworth Albemarle 602 602Armstrong Whitworth Whitley 1 814 1 814Avro Lancastrian 82 6 82Avro York 259 1 259CAC Gliders 8 8De Havilland Australia DHA G1 G2 8 8de Havilland Dragon Dominie note 4 474 474de Havilland Flamingo 14 14General Aircraft Hamilcar glider 412 412General Aircraft Hotspur glider 1 015 1 015Miles Messenger 93 93Miles Monitor 22 22Noorduyn Norseman 861 861Northrop Canadian Vickers Delta note 8 19 19Percival Petrel 7 7Short S 26 3 3Slingsby Hengist glider 18 18Westland Lysander air observation liaison target tug 1 445 225 1 670total Transports 16 11 260 1 112 12 381Trainers Australia Britain Canada India New Zealand South AfricaAirspeed Oxford 8 586 8 586Avions Fairey Tipsy B 15 15Avro Anson 8 488 3 197 11 685Bristol Buckmaster 112 112CAC Wackett 202 202CAC Wirraway 755 755de Havilland Don 30 30de Havilland Moth Minor 100 100de Havilland Tiger Moth 1 080 5 738 1 748 150 8 716Fairchild Cornell PT 19 26 1 642 1 642Fairey Battle note 9 2 201 2 201Fleet Finch 606 606Fleet Fort 101 101Hawker Henley 200 200Harlow PC 5 5 50 55Miles Magister 1 303 1 303Miles Martinet 1 724 1 724Miles Master 3 250 3 250Miles Mentor 45 45North American Harvard 3 985 3 985Percival Proctor 1 143 1 143Total Trainers 2 037 32 935 11 284 50 150 46 456Other Australia Britain Canada India New Zealand South Africa EmpirePrototypes note 10 2 61 1Other 78 2Total other 2 139 note 11 3 note 12 144Grand Total 3 854 144 734 18 377 50 150 0 173 759Aircraft Allies France Poland and minor powers Edit Production numbers until the time of the German occupation of the respective country Some types listed were in production before the war those listed were still in production at the time of or after the Munich crisis Allied aircraft production 51 Fighters Belgium Czechoslovakia Denmark France Netherlands Poland Yugoslavia TotalAvia B 534 IV Bk 534 274Caudron CR 714 90Dewoitine D 520 403Fokker D XXI 10 110 120Koolhoven F K 58 20 note 13 Avions Fairey Fox VI VII 106Fokker G I 63Hawker Hurricane I 15 20Ikarus IK 2 12Rogozarski IK 3 12Bloch MB 151 152 636Morane Saulnier MS 406 1 077Potez 630 631 280PZL 50 Jastrzab 6 note 14 PZL P 24 118 note 15 Arsenal VG 33 36 39 40 note 16 Total 121 274 10 2 526 193 119 5 44 3 287 note 17 Attack Belgium Czechoslovakia Denmark France Netherlands Poland Yugoslavia TotalBreguet Br 690 230Latecoere 298 naval torpedo bomber dive bomber 121Loire Nieuport LN 40 68Fairey P 4 34 12 note 18 Rogozarski PVT note 19 61Total 12 419 61 480 note 20 Bombers Belgium Czechoslovakia Denmark France Netherlands Poland Yugoslavia TotalAero A 101 64Aero A 304 19Amiot 351 354 80Avia B 71 61Fairey Battle I 18 note 21 Fokker C X Fokker C XI 53Dornier Do 17K 70Farman F 222 2 F 223 25LeO 45 452LWS 6 Zubr 17Bloch MB 131 143Bloch MB 174 175 79Bloch MB 210 298Potez 633 55PZL 37 120PZL 43 54 note 22 PZL 46 2 note 23 Rogozarski SIM XIV H 19Fokker T V 16Fokker T VIII 36Total 18 144 1 132 105 193 89 1 681Aircraft Axis All Edit Occupied countries produced weapons for the Axis powers Figures are for the period of occupation only Axis aircraft production 52 Fighters Belgium Bulgaria Czech Netherlands Finland France Germany Hungary Italy Japan Poland Romania Yugoslavia TotalMitsubishi A6M Zero 10 939Nakajima A6M2 N 327Arado Ar 240 14Avia B 135 12Avia B 534 78Bachem Ba 349 36 note 24 Messerschmitt Bf 109 33 142 309 33 984Messerschmitt Bf 110 6 170 6 170Macchi C 200 Macchi C 202 Macchi C 205 2 766Fiat CR 25 12Fiat CR 42 1 782Dewoitine D 520 note 25 440Dornier Do 17Z 7 Z 10 12Dornier Do 335 37Caproni Vizzola F 5 14Koolhoven F K 52 6Focke Wulf Fw 190 20 000Fiat G 50 Freccia 666Fiat G 55 Centauro 305Heinkel He 100 note 26 25Heinkel He 112 60Heinkel He 162 320Heinkel He 219 300IAR 80 346Nakajima J1N 479Mitsubishi J2M 621Kawasaki Ki 10 283Nakajima Ki 27 3 399Nakajima Ki 43 5 919Nakajima Ki 44 1 227Kawasaki Ki 45 1 701Kawasaki Ki 61 3 159Nakajima Ki 84 3 514Kawasaki Ki 100 395Bloch MB 150 note 25 35Messerschmitt Me 163 Mitsubishi J8M 370 7 377Messerschmitt Me 262 1 433Morko Morane note 27 41Morane Saulnier MS 410 note 28 74Kawanishi N1K 1 435PZL P 24 25 25 50Reggiane Re 2000 2001 2002 amp 2005 204 531 735IMAM Ro 44 35IMAM Ro 57 75Ambrosini SAI 207 14Focke Wulf Ta 152 amp Focke Wulf Ta 154 200 these are unrelated types VL Myrsky 51VL Pyry 41Total 90 6 133 549 62 116 513 6 200 33 405 25 371 96 551Attack Belgium Bulgaria Czech Netherlands Finland France Germany Hungary Italy Japan Poland Romania YugoslaviaNakajima B5N 1 149Nakajima B6N 1 268Aichi B7A 114Breda Ba 65 218Breda Ba 88 149Aichi D3A 1 486Yokosuka D4Y 2 038CANSA FC 12 11CANSA FC 20 6Heinkel He 115 138Heinkel He 118 note 29 15Henschel Hs 123 note 30 250Henschel Hs 129 865Junkers Ju 87 Stuka 6 500Mitsubishi Ki 51 2 385Kawasaki Ki 102 238Aichi M6A 28Messerschmitt Me 210 note 31 400 272 672Messerschmitt Me 410 note 32 1 189Yokosuka MXY7 852Fiat RS 14 188Savoia Marchetti SM 85 34Total 9 092 272 606 9 558 30 903Bombers Belgium Bulgaria Czech Netherlands Finland France Germany Hungary Italy Japan Poland Romania YugoslaviaAero A 304 4Arado Ar 234 210Bloch MB 174 175 note 33 38Fiat BR 20 Cicogna 602Caproni Ca 135 140Caproni Ca 309 314 1 516Dornier Do 22 30Dornier Do 17E F 405Dornier Do 17K 14Dornier Do 17M P R S U 448Dornier Do 17Z 875Dornier Do 215 105Dornier Do 217 1 025Fieseler Fi 167 14Focke Wulf Fw 200 276Mitsubishi G3M 1 048Mitsubishi G4M 2 435Heinkel He 111 7 300Heinkel He 177 1 190IAR 37 380Junkers Ju 88 188 388 16 517Kaproni Bulgarski KB 6 24Mitsubishi Ki 21 2 064Mitsubishi Ki 30 704Kawasaki Ki 32 854Kawasaki Ki 48 1 997Nakajima Ki 49 819Mitsubishi Ki 67 Mitsubishi Ki 109 767LeO 45 note 25 162Piaggio P 108 35Yokosuka P1Y 1 102Kyushu Q1W 153Letov S 328 80Savoia Marchetti SM 79 1 350 64Savoia Marchetti SM 82 note 34 379Savoia Marchetti SM 84 246Weiss WM 21 128CANT Z 506B 320CANT Z 1007 660CANT Z 1018 15Total 24 84 200 28 409 128 5 263 11 943 380 44 802Propaganda posters Edit nbsp Japanese Organized Labour Service Corps poster nbsp USSR Everything for the Front Everything for Victory nbsp French Canadian poster I m making bombs and buying bonds Buy Victory Bonds nbsp Italy Work and Fight for your Country and Victory nbsp Australia He s coming south it s fight work or perish See also EditAllied technological cooperation during World War II Combined Food Board Combined Munitions Assignments Board Combined Raw Materials Board Combined Shipping Adjustment Board War Production Board American armored fighting vehicle production during World War II British armoured fighting vehicle production during World War II German armored fighting vehicle production during World War II Soviet industry in World War II Soviet armored fighting vehicle production during World War II United States aircraft production during World War II Forced labour under German rule during World War II Technology during World War IINotes Edit entered service after the war wartime production only Majority of Gladiators were built before the war 165 additional to export customers Sea Gladiator conversions and production in Sea Gladiator entry Includes some post war production and conversions of Spitfires a b c d e Includes pre war production Not used as bombers but for other purposes includes transport and Coastal Command reconnaissance versions Includes 457 trainers most built pre war Most production was pre war Of all types of aircraft not entering service includes Folland Fo 108 engine test bed 12 General Aircraft Cygnet 10 General Aircraft GAL 41 1 Hawker Sea Fury 10 Miles Mercury 6 Percival Vega Gull 20 Supermarine Spiteful fighter 19 includes CCF Maple Leaf Trainer II 2 plus 10 built in Mexico Delivered to France First prototype incomplete by German occupation Only 1 designated P 11g used by Poland in 1939 The remaining ones were exported to various Balkan countries Around 200 more airframes were in advanced production stage not counting uncompleted PZL 50 Production was started in Denmark but not completed before the German invasion Originally an advanced fighter training aircraft this type was later used as a light attack plane in particular by the Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia not counting P 4 34 According to some sources license production started in Denmark but not completed before the German invasion All but 5 delivered to Bulgaria Prototypes that were used in combat Never entered service a b c Number refers to production resumed after German occupation Produced shortly before the war and mainly used for testing and propaganda purposes Conversion from MS 406 410 Conversion from MS 406 Produced before the war and 2 used by Japanese for testing All produced before the war but used until 1944 Only 90 German built Me 210 were completed and delivered about 100 Hungarian built were supplied to Germany Also used as a fighter and for reconnaissance Produced for Germany after German occupation Only bomber versions listed here Citations Edit Herman Arthur Freedom s Forge How American Business Produced Victory in World War II p IX Random House New York NY 2012 ISBN 978 1 4000 6964 4 Parker Dana T Building Victory Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II p 7 Cypress CA 2013 ISBN 978 0 9897906 0 4 Wrynn V Dennis Forge of Freedom American Aircraft Production in World War II pp 4 5 Motorbooks International Osceola WI 1995 ISBN 0 7603 0143 3 Baldwin Ralph B The Deadly Fuze Secret Weapon of World War II pp 4 6 11 50 279 Presidio Press San Rafael California 1980 ISBN 978 0 89141 087 4 Kumanev G A War and the evacuation of the USSR 1941 1942 New Age 2006 Sawyer L A and Mitchell W H The Liberty Ships The History of the Emergency Type Cargo Ships Constructed in the United States During the Second World War Second Edition pp vii 1 8 Lloyd s of London Press Ltd London England 1985 ISBN 1 85044 049 2 Parker Dana T Building Victory Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II pp 5 7 Cypress CA 2013 ISBN 978 0 9897906 0 4 Parker Dana T Building Victory Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II p 8 Cypress California 2013 ISBN 978 0 9897906 0 4 US military numbers www dpaa mil Office of Statistical Control Army Air Force Statistical Digest World War II p 127 Office of Statistical Control Army Air Force Statistical Digest p 16 Royal Navy in 1939 and 1945 www naval history net US PT Boats List Numerical List of Boats Expanding the Size of the U S Military in World War II warfarehistorynetwork com 26 June 2017 Archived from the original on 12 August 2018 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Goldsmith data in Harrison 1988 p 172 Why Japan Really Lost The War Combined Fleet Retrieved 2018 06 18 Why Japan Really Lost The War Combined Fleet Retrieved 2018 06 18 Mitchell B R British Historical Statistics 1988 page needed Production of Iron Ore Pig Iron and Steel Government Of India FIRST FIVE YEAR PLAN Ministry Of Human Resource Development Department Of Education archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Dialogue on Aluminium 110 years of history in Canada approximation Baker The New Zealand People at War War Economy 1965 page needed Long Jason Lend Lease as a Function of the Soviet War Economy The Sinews of War Economics Production and Logistics during the Second World War archived from the original on 7 March 2012 a b Soviet Industrial Production 1940 1945 The Sinews of War Economics Production and Logistics during the Second World War archived from the original on 15 April 2012 citing Accounting for War Soviet Production Employment and the Defense Burden 1940 1945 by Mark Harrison 1996 Including 23 4 synthetic a b c Volume 3 The Effects of Strategic Bombing on the German War Economy 1940 1944 only retrieved June 8 2014 Comparison of GDP adjusted for actual yearly shared contribution to war efforts after Zuljan Ralph Allied and Axis GDP Articles On War OnWar com 2003 archived from the original on August 6 2014 retrieved June 8 2014 Harrison 1998 Stephen Broadberry Kevin H O Rourke The Cambridge Economic History of Modern Europe Volume 2 1870 to the Present p 190 ROMANIA historical demographical data of the whole country HUNGARY historical demographical data of the whole country BULGARIA historical demographical data of the whole country ALBANIA historical demographical data of the whole country General Article Foreign Affairs pbs org The Economic Consequences of War on US Economy PDF Institute for Economics and Peace June 2015 Retrieved 6 October 2017 Defence Spending since 1900 UK Public Spending Retrieved 2018 06 18 via Christopher Chantrill The Economic Consequences of War on US Economy PDF Institute of Economics and Peace June 2015 Retrieved 6 October 2017 THE WAR At Home War Production The War At Home Production PBS Retrieved 2017 04 12 Graph of U S Unemployment Rate 1930 1945 Bureau Of Labor Statistics HERB Resources for Teachers Retrieved 30 November 2017 Bartlett Bruce The Cost Of War Forbes Retrieved 2017 10 26 Rose Patrick 2012 The Indian Army 1939 47 Experience and Development Routledge The Anglo Argentine Society in conjunction with the Argentine Embassy 6 April 2005 Wings of Thunder Wartime RAF Veterans Flying in From Argentina Press release London PRNewswire Les luxembourgeois de la Brigade PIRON Historique Letzebuerger Armei archived from the original on 2014 06 29 Munoz 1996 Tomasevich 2001 Czech archived from the original on July 14 2014 De norske frontkjemperne Norgeshistorie Poland archived from the original on July 14 2014 Granatstein Dr J L May 27 2005 ARMING THE NATION CANADA S INDUSTRIAL WAR EFFORT 1939 1945 PDF Canadian Council of Chief Executives Retrieved April 5 2016 Ethell Jeffrey L and Steve Pace Spitfire St Paul Minnesota Motorbooks International 1997 ISBN 0 7603 0300 2 p117 3 prototypes and 3 delivered to RAF Consolidated PBY Catalina production in Canada www historyofwar org Australian War memorial Bristol Brigand Free Dutch New Zealand Official History Barnes 1989 Bishop 2002 Bowyer 1980 Butler 2004 Flint 2006 Green 1967 Jackson 1987 Jane s 1989 Mason 1994 Morgan Otway 1990 Swanborough 1997 Tapper 1988 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft 1985 Comando Supremo Italy at War Dressel and Griehl 1994 Encyclopedia of weapons of World War Two Francillon 1970 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft 1985 Jane s 1989 Mondey 1996 Smith and Anthony Table data Edit Personnel Allied British Empire Edit Wayback Machine Australia 2 This website is currently unavailable Facts amp Information Canada at War July 4 2009 Colonel C P Stacey Chapter XIX Conclusion Repatriation and Demoblization via hyperwar a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Daniel Owen Spence Imperial Loyalties Imagined Communities and Britishness The Royal Navy and the Cayman Islands Sherwood Marika 30 March 2011 Colonies Colonials and World War Two BBC History Gillespie Oliver A 1952 I New Zealand s Responsibility The Pacific The Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939 1945 Wellington Historical Publications Branch The Royal Indian Navy Appendix 12 via HyperWar Foundation Officers Database FAQ bharat rakshak com http idsa in system files IndiaWorldWarII pdf India 3 idsa in India Pioneers defencejournal com archived from the original on 2005 09 01 India RIAF WWII Peoples War BBC The Battle for Miri and Sarawak Borneo WW II article by Franz L Kessler on AuthorsDen Malay The Allied Merchant Navy Their Legacy Our Freedom 2 Netherlands Verheijke Emma ed 14 July 2014 Broome 3 March 1942 3 March 2021 PDF Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands Canberra archived from the original PDF on 14 July 2014 Netherlands 3 Newfoundland The Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939 1945 NZETC New Zealand 4 Nigeria Saunders Hilary St George 1954 Volume III The Fight Is Won Royal Air Force 1939 1945 London HMSO via Hyperwar Foundation South African Military History Society Journal The South African Corps of Marines South Africa Flying High The Story of the Women s Auxiliary Air Force 1939 1945 South African Military History Society Journal South Africa History South Africa Navy Martin Plaut 11 March 2014 African troops who fought in World War Two Martin Plaut West Africa fpif org 6 June 2012 West Africa country data com Fact File Commonwealth and Allied Forces WWII Peoples War BBC Personnel Axis Edit The Latvian Squadrons in the Luftwaffe Latvianaviation com Volunteers Ailsby 2004Raw materials Edit The Mineral Industry of the British Empire and Foreign Countries Statistical Summary 1938 1944 The Imperial Institute HMSO 1948 The Mineral Industry of the British Empire and Foreign Countries Statistical Summary 1941 1947 The Imperial Institute HMSO 1949 Official histories Edit History of the Second World War 104 volumes Her Majesty s Stationery Office London 1949 to 1993 Official History of Australia in the War of 1939 1945 22 volumes Australian Government Printing Service 1952 to 1977 Official History of the Canadian Army in the Second World War Vol I Six Years of War Stacey C P Queen s Printer Ottawa 1955 Official History of the Indian Armed Forces in the Second World War 1939 45 24 volumes Combined Inter Services Historical Section India amp Pakistan New Delhi 1956 1966 Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939 45 Historical Publications Branch Wellington New Zealand 1965 Bibliography Edit Ailsby Christopher Hitler s Renegades Foreign Nationals in the Service of the Third Reich Photographic Histories Potomac Books 2004 Barnett Correlli The audit of war the illusion amp reality of Britain as a great nation Macmillan 1986 Barnes C H James D N Shorts Aircraft since 1900 London Putnam 1989 Bishop Chris The Encyclopaedia of Weapons of World War II Sterling Publishing 2002 Bowyer Michael J F Aircraft for the Royal Air Force The Griffon Spitfire The Albemarle Bomber and the Shetland Flying Boat London Faber amp Faber 1980 Boyd David 2009 Wartime Production by the Commonwealth during WWII British Equipment of the Second World War Boyd David 2009 British Production of Aircraft By Year During The Second World War British Equipment of the Second World War Butler Tony British Secret Projects Fighters and Bombers 1935 1950 Hinckley UK Midland Publishing 2004 Canada at War The Canadian War Industry Dressel Joachim and Manfred Griehl Bombers of the Luftwaffe London DAG Publications 1994 Flint Keith Airborne Armour Tetrarch Locust Hamilcar and the 6th Airborne Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment 1938 1950 Helion amp Company Ltd 2006 Francillon Rene J Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War London Putnam 1970 Gregg W A ed Canada s Fighting Vehicles Europe 1943 1945 Canadian Military Historical Society 1980 Green William War Planes of The Second World War Volume Seven Bombers and Reconnaissance Aircraft London Macdonald 1967 Harrison Mark The Economics of World War II Six Great Powers in International Comparison Cambridge University Press 1998 Author s overview Herman Arthur Freedom s Forge How American Business Produced Victory in World War II Random House New York 2012 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft Part Work 1982 1985 London Orbis Publishing 1985 Jackson A J De Havilland Aircraft since 1909 Third ed London Putnam 1987 Jane s Fighting Aircraft of World War II London Studio Editions Ltd 1989 Les luxembourgeois de la Brigade Piron in French Armee lu Retrieved 29 June 2013 Long Jason Lend Lease as a Function of the Soviet war Economy sturmvogel orbat com Retrieved June 12 2014 Mason Francis K The British Bomber since 1914 London Putnam Aeronautical Books 1994 Milward Alan S War economy and society 1939 1945 University of California Press 1979 Morgan Eric B Albemarle in Twentyfirst Profile Volume 1 No 11 New Milton Hants UK 21st Profile Ltd Munoz A J For Croatia and Christ The Croatian Army in World War II 1941 1945 Axis Europa Books NY 1996 Mondey David The Concise Guide to Axis Aircraft of World War II New York Bounty Books 1996 Ness Leland Jane s World War II Tanks and Fighting Vehicles The Complete Guide Harper Collins 2002 Otway Lieutenant Colonel T B H The Second World War 1939 1945 Army Airborne Forces London Imperial War Museum 1990 Overy Richard Why the Allies Won Paperback W W Norton amp Company 1997 Scientia Militaria South African Journal of Military Studies Smith J R and Anthony L Kay German Aircraft of the Second World War London Putnam and Company Ltd Swanborough Gordon British Aircraft at War 1939 1945 East Sussex UK HPC Publishing 1997 Tapper Oliver Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft since 1913 London Putnam 1988 Tomasevich Jozo War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration 2 San Francisco Stanford University Press 2001 Veterans Affairs Canada Canadian Production of War Materials Wilson Stewart Aircraft of WWII 1998 Wrynn V Dennis Forge of Freedom American Aircraft Production in World War II Motorbooks International Osceola WI 1995 Zuljan Ralph Allied and Axis GDP Articles On War OnWar com 2003 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Military industrial production during World War II Allies and Lend Lease Museum Russia Australia War Memorial official war history online archive Canada at War National War Museum United States New Zealand in the Second World War official war history online South Africa Journal of Military Studies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Military production during World War II amp oldid 1172272074, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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