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Władysław Grabski

Władysław Dominik Grabski (pronounced [vwaˈdɨswaf ˈɡrapskʲi]; 7 July 1874 – 1 March 1938) was a Polish National Democratic politician, economist and historian. He was the main author of the currency reform in the Second Polish Republic and served as Prime Minister of Poland in 1920 and from 1923 to 1925. He was the brother of Stanisław Grabski and Zofia Kirkor-Kiedroniowa.

Władysław Grabski
Władysław Grabski
Prime Minister of Poland
In office
19 December 1923 – 14 November 1925
PresidentStanisław Wojciechowski
DeputyStanisław Thugutt
Preceded byWincenty Witos
Succeeded byAleksander Skrzyński
In office
27 June 1920 – 24 July 1920
Chief of StateJózef Piłsudski
Preceded byLeopold Skulski
Succeeded byWincenty Witos
Minister of Finance of Poland[1]
In office
19 December 1923 – 14 November 1925
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byWładysław Kucharski
Succeeded byJerzy Zdziechowski
In office
13 January 1923 – 1 July 1923
Prime MinisterWładysław Sikorski
Wincenty Witos
Preceded byBolesław Markowski
Succeeded byHubert Linde
In office
13 December 1919 – 25 November 1920
Prime MinisterLeopold Skulski
Himself
Wincenty Witos
Preceded byLeon Biliński
Succeeded byJan Kanty Steczkowski
Personal details
Born
Władysław Dominik Grabski

(1874-07-07)7 July 1874
Borów, Congress Poland, Russian Empire
Died1 March 1938(1938-03-01) (aged 63)
Warsaw, Second Polish Republic
Resting placePowązki Cemetery, Warsaw
Political partyNational-Democratic Party
Popular National Union
SpouseKatarzyna Lewandowska (since 1902)
Children4, including Władysław Jan
RelativesMałgorzata Kidawa-Błońska (great-granddaughter)
OccupationPolitician, economist
Signature

He was responsible for the creation of the Bank of Poland and implementing the zloty. Grabski's cabinet became the longest-standing cabinet in interwar Poland. At the same time, however, Grabski's cabinet was severely criticized. Stanisław Głąbiński, for example, criticized Grabski's inefficiencies in the sphere of international relations, and Wincenty Witos disapproved of Grabski's deficient agricultural reform, as well as his inability to inform the public of the state's real financial situation.

Life edit

Władysław Grabski was born in 1874, in a family manor in Borów (a part of Gmina Bielawy) near Łowicz, Congress Poland, Russian Empire. He studied politics at the École Libre des Sciences Politiques (today: Sciences Po) and history at the University of Sorbonne. While in Paris, Grabski's political views changed. He abandoned the socialist ideas and turned more towards the right.

 
Władysław Grabski as rector of Warsaw University of Life Sciences

The years Władysław Grabski had spent in Paris became an impetus behind Grabski's desire for his involvement in the Polish government. Soon after Grabski's return from Paris, in 1905, he founded the Agricultural Society in Łowicz, in central Poland. The Society quickly won the support of many peasants, which in turn led to the creation of the National Labor Union.

Due to the growing autonomy and strength of Grabski's Agricultural Society and the Union, in 1905, Grabski was arrested by the Russian authorities and imprisoned in Warsaw. Grabski's imprisonment, however, lasted less than a year. In 1905, Grabski was elected on behalf of National Democracy as a member of three successive sessions of the Duma, the legislative assembly of the Russian Empire. He was a deputy in Duma until 1912. It was at that time that he became involved in the work of the budgetary commission with the Russian Ministry of Agriculture. Grabski's involvement in the budgetary Commission became a reason for his later desire to become the finance minister in the Polish parliament.

When World War I broke out, he organized the Central Citizens' Committee, which was responsible for restoring order into the life of a society devastated by the Polish partitions, and to represent the interests of Polish people before the Russian authorities. He also became a member of the Polish National Committee. In 1919, he entered the government of the newly restored Poland as Minister of Agriculture.

Grabski's influence on Polish affairs increased when he became Treasury Minister and Prime Minister in 1920. However, his first cabinet lasted for only one month. In December 1923, he was again appointed Prime Minister and served as Treasury Minister in a specialist cabinet (appointed by but not necessarily composed of elected parliamentary representatives). Grabski managed to implement reforms that alleviated Poland's economic situation and managed to preserve his cabinet for twenty-three months, a relatively long period for a Polish cabinet in interwar Poland. Until the end of 1924, Grabski's government enjoyed great popularity.

Yet Grabski remained a controversial figure for the twenty-three months he remained in office. Stanisław Głąbiński, for example, argued that in the sphere of foreign relations, Grabski did not show the desired assertiveness. At the League of Nations conference, Grabski did not mention the League's unresponsiveness to the Polish-Soviet War of 1919–1921. According to the tenth article of the treaty of Versailles, "The Members of the League undertake to respect and preserve as against external aggression the territorial integrity and existing political independence of all Members of the League". However, the League of Nations remained aloof and impassive in 1920.

Grabski's decision not to raise the issue of the League's lack of action resulted in severe criticism from the Polish parliament. Głąbiński was not the only critic of Grabski's cabinet. Wincenty Witos criticized Grabski for his excessively optimistic attitude regarding the financial reforms and so did others; nevertheless, the reform stopped the hyperinflation in its tracks.[2]

On 13 November 1925 Grabski was forced to resign following a disagreement with the President of the Bank of Poland, who refused to help him with the backing of the industrialist 'Lewiatan' organization.[3]

Currency reform edit

Grabski's (and the ministerial cabinet's) great achievement in those years was the foundation of the Bank of Poland and the creation of the new Polish currency – the gold-based zloty which replaced the Polish mark. The Act of 11 January 1924 on the improvement of the state's treasury and currency reform introduced a new monetary system and established the issuing bank. The Bank of Poland was founded as a joint stock company, which was supposed to guarantee its 'independence' from the government and the state treasury. The Act also abolished the Polish National Savings Union which had acted as an issuing bank. Its functions were taken over by the Bank of Poland. Stanisław Karpiński became the first president of the Bank of Poland. On 14 January, the organizing committee of the Bank of Poland was established, and, on 26 January, the sale of the bank's shares began. Payments could only be made in foreign currencies and in gold. On 15 April, during the first shareholders' meeting, the Bank of Poland Joint Stock Company was established.

Grabski went further than just establishing the Bank of Poland and the currency. He built a network of state banks and founded the Bank for National Economy. He also initiated far-going changes in the structure of Polish exports and industrial output. He also established the Border Defence Corps.

 
Grabski's coffin on a funeral bier, 4 March 1938

Nevertheless, criticism continued over aspects of Grabski's reforms. In 1925, Grabski himself commented that he was too optimistic about his economic reforms and that he should have realized that given the circumstances of depression and the recuperation from World War I, a complete recovery of the Polish economy was virtually impossible. There were enormous price discrepancies between agricultural and manufactured goods. The Bank of Poland was faced with both a commercial deficit and an increasing national debt.

The government made numerous unfavourable investments and in 1925, the Sejm approved a proposal for an excessively high budget, despite frequent warnings from Grabski's cabinet. On 29 July 1925, the value of the Polish złoty declined significantly. A tariff war broke out between Poland and Germany. Grabski resigned from his post in active politics in November of that year. He subsequently devoted himself to pedagogic and academic work at the Warsaw Agricultural University (SGGW). In 1926, he became its rector. In 1936 on his motion the Rural Sociology Institute was established, of which he remained the head until his death in 1938.

Władysław Grabski died from cancer on 1 March 1938 in Warsaw. The Holy Mass was led by Cardinal Aleksander Kakowski in the Saint John's Cathedral. His body was interred in the family grave at the Powązki Cemetery.

Perception among Polish Jews edit

 
1924 Yiddish cartoon depicting "Grabski's Aliyah"

Between 1924 and 1926, mass emigration of Polish Jews to Palestine took place following the economic restrictions placed on Jews in Poland. This wave of Jewish migration became known as "Grabski's Aliyah" (Aliyah being the traditional Hebrew word for immigration to the Land of Israel) owing to the financial reforms conducted by Władysław Grabski at that time.[4][5][6] In American Jewish media sources, Grabski's reforms were described as "an anti-Jewish taxation policy so severe that it resulted in a great immigration movement to Palestine, known as 'the Grasski Aliyah.'"[7]

Scholars assessing the Grabski financial reforms note how the introduction of new finance policies strengthened political institutions. In the case of the 1924-25 reform program, fundamental changes were made to taxation policy and led to the increase of direct taxation that required increased state-citizen interactions. One effect of these reforms was that the state gathered extensive information on business activities and demanded taxation payments. The enactment of these policies was not without consequence as many citizens, especially Jewish merchants, perceived the reform as an unfair reform that demanded undue levels of taxation.[8]

Legacy edit

In 2004, Poland celebrated the 130th anniversary of Władyslaw Grabski's birthday and the 80th anniversary of the public finance reforms he introduced. In September 2003, the Sejm of the Republic of Poland passed a resolution proclaiming 2004 as Władyslaw Grabski's Year.[9]

In 2004, a statue was unveiled in his birthplace village of Borów.[10]

The Warsaw Agricultural University labelled him as a "great Pole, great statesman, social activist and a man of great heart and mind, one of the brightest Poles of the interwar period".[11]

In July 2006, the newly opened Main Library of the Warsaw Agricultural University was named after Grabski, and in front of the library, the statue of Grabski was placed.[12]

His grandson, Andrzej Feliks Grabski (1934–2000), became a historian.

Works edit

  • Historia Towarzystwa Rolniczego 1858–1861 (1904)
  • Bilans Królestwa Polskiego w finansach Rosji (1909)
  • Rocznik Statystyczny Królestwa Polskiego 1914 (ed.) (1915)
  • Cel i zadania polityki agrarnej w Polsce (1918)
  • O własnych siłach (1926)
  • Dwa lata pracy u podstaw państwowości naszej (1927)
  • Historia wsi w Polsce (1929)
  • Kryzys rolniczy (1929)

Decorations and awards edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Ministrowie finansów - Ministerstwo Finansów - Portal Gov.pl".
  2. ^ Wojciech Morawski (2004). Władysław Grabski – polityk, mąż stanu, reformator (PDF). Warszawa: Narodowy Bank Polski. p. 18 – via direct download.
  3. ^ Andrzej Ajnenkiel (1986). Od rządów ludowych do przewrotu majowego. Zarys dziejów politycznych Polski 1918–1926 [From populist rule to May Coup d'état]. Warszawa: Wiedza Powszechna. pp. 380–381. ISBN 8321405819.
  4. ^ Modern Zionist Aliyot to Israel
  5. ^ Sroka, Ł. T. (2017). Relations between Poland and Eretz Yisrael before 1948.
  6. ^ Kossewska, E. (2015). Books and Politics: On Polish-Israeli Commercial and Diplomatic Relations, 1948–1958. The Polish Review, 60(4), 67-80.
  7. ^ Wladyslaw Grabski. Sponsor of Anti-jewish Tax Policy. Dead in Poland. Jewish Telegraphic Agency. March 2 1938.
  8. ^ Mazur, Z. (2022). The Grabski Tax Reform and Jewish Merchants: State Building in Interwar Poland. East European Politics and Societies, 36(2), 626–643.
  9. ^ Uchwała Sejmu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 19 września 2003 r. w sprawie ogłoszenia roku 2004 rokiem Władysława Grabskiego, isap.sejm.gov.pl. Accessed 4 November 2022.
  10. ^ Łódzki Urząd Wojewódzki w Łodzi: W hołdzie twórcy złotówki, 7 July 2004.
  11. ^ Archived from the original on 10 March 2012. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  12. ^ Otwarcie Biblioteki Głównej im. Prof. Władysława Grabskiego 27 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine – 28 September 2009

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Poland
1920
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Poland
1923–1925
Succeeded by

władysław, grabski, władysław, dominik, grabski, pronounced, vwaˈdɨswaf, ˈɡrapskʲi, july, 1874, march, 1938, polish, national, democratic, politician, economist, historian, main, author, currency, reform, second, polish, republic, served, prime, minister, pola. Wladyslaw Dominik Grabski pronounced vwaˈdɨswaf ˈɡrapskʲi 7 July 1874 1 March 1938 was a Polish National Democratic politician economist and historian He was the main author of the currency reform in the Second Polish Republic and served as Prime Minister of Poland in 1920 and from 1923 to 1925 He was the brother of Stanislaw Grabski and Zofia Kirkor Kiedroniowa Wladyslaw GrabskiWladyslaw GrabskiPrime Minister of PolandIn office 19 December 1923 14 November 1925PresidentStanislaw WojciechowskiDeputyStanislaw ThuguttPreceded byWincenty WitosSucceeded byAleksander SkrzynskiIn office 27 June 1920 24 July 1920Chief of StateJozef PilsudskiPreceded byLeopold SkulskiSucceeded byWincenty WitosMinister of Finance of Poland 1 In office 19 December 1923 14 November 1925Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byWladyslaw KucharskiSucceeded byJerzy ZdziechowskiIn office 13 January 1923 1 July 1923Prime MinisterWladyslaw SikorskiWincenty WitosPreceded byBoleslaw MarkowskiSucceeded byHubert LindeIn office 13 December 1919 25 November 1920Prime MinisterLeopold SkulskiHimselfWincenty WitosPreceded byLeon BilinskiSucceeded byJan Kanty SteczkowskiPersonal detailsBornWladyslaw Dominik Grabski 1874 07 07 7 July 1874Borow Congress Poland Russian EmpireDied1 March 1938 1938 03 01 aged 63 Warsaw Second Polish RepublicResting placePowazki Cemetery WarsawPolitical partyNational Democratic PartyPopular National UnionSpouseKatarzyna Lewandowska since 1902 Children4 including Wladyslaw JanRelativesMalgorzata Kidawa Blonska great granddaughter OccupationPolitician economistSignature He was responsible for the creation of the Bank of Poland and implementing the zloty Grabski s cabinet became the longest standing cabinet in interwar Poland At the same time however Grabski s cabinet was severely criticized Stanislaw Glabinski for example criticized Grabski s inefficiencies in the sphere of international relations and Wincenty Witos disapproved of Grabski s deficient agricultural reform as well as his inability to inform the public of the state s real financial situation Contents 1 Life 1 1 Currency reform 2 Perception among Polish Jews 3 Legacy 4 Works 5 Decorations and awards 6 References 7 External linksLife editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Wladyslaw Grabski news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Wladyslaw Grabski was born in 1874 in a family manor in Borow a part of Gmina Bielawy near Lowicz Congress Poland Russian Empire He studied politics at the Ecole Libre des Sciences Politiques today Sciences Po and history at the University of Sorbonne While in Paris Grabski s political views changed He abandoned the socialist ideas and turned more towards the right nbsp Wladyslaw Grabski as rector of Warsaw University of Life Sciences The years Wladyslaw Grabski had spent in Paris became an impetus behind Grabski s desire for his involvement in the Polish government Soon after Grabski s return from Paris in 1905 he founded the Agricultural Society in Lowicz in central Poland The Society quickly won the support of many peasants which in turn led to the creation of the National Labor Union Due to the growing autonomy and strength of Grabski s Agricultural Society and the Union in 1905 Grabski was arrested by the Russian authorities and imprisoned in Warsaw Grabski s imprisonment however lasted less than a year In 1905 Grabski was elected on behalf of National Democracy as a member of three successive sessions of the Duma the legislative assembly of the Russian Empire He was a deputy in Duma until 1912 It was at that time that he became involved in the work of the budgetary commission with the Russian Ministry of Agriculture Grabski s involvement in the budgetary Commission became a reason for his later desire to become the finance minister in the Polish parliament When World War I broke out he organized the Central Citizens Committee which was responsible for restoring order into the life of a society devastated by the Polish partitions and to represent the interests of Polish people before the Russian authorities He also became a member of the Polish National Committee In 1919 he entered the government of the newly restored Poland as Minister of Agriculture Grabski s influence on Polish affairs increased when he became Treasury Minister and Prime Minister in 1920 However his first cabinet lasted for only one month In December 1923 he was again appointed Prime Minister and served as Treasury Minister in a specialist cabinet appointed by but not necessarily composed of elected parliamentary representatives Grabski managed to implement reforms that alleviated Poland s economic situation and managed to preserve his cabinet for twenty three months a relatively long period for a Polish cabinet in interwar Poland Until the end of 1924 Grabski s government enjoyed great popularity Yet Grabski remained a controversial figure for the twenty three months he remained in office Stanislaw Glabinski for example argued that in the sphere of foreign relations Grabski did not show the desired assertiveness At the League of Nations conference Grabski did not mention the League s unresponsiveness to the Polish Soviet War of 1919 1921 According to the tenth article of the treaty of Versailles The Members of the League undertake to respect and preserve as against external aggression the territorial integrity and existing political independence of all Members of the League However the League of Nations remained aloof and impassive in 1920 Grabski s decision not to raise the issue of the League s lack of action resulted in severe criticism from the Polish parliament Glabinski was not the only critic of Grabski s cabinet Wincenty Witos criticized Grabski for his excessively optimistic attitude regarding the financial reforms and so did others nevertheless the reform stopped the hyperinflation in its tracks 2 On 13 November 1925 Grabski was forced to resign following a disagreement with the President of the Bank of Poland who refused to help him with the backing of the industrialist Lewiatan organization 3 Currency reform edit Grabski s and the ministerial cabinet s great achievement in those years was the foundation of the Bank of Poland and the creation of the new Polish currency the gold based zloty which replaced the Polish mark The Act of 11 January 1924 on the improvement of the state s treasury and currency reform introduced a new monetary system and established the issuing bank The Bank of Poland was founded as a joint stock company which was supposed to guarantee its independence from the government and the state treasury The Act also abolished the Polish National Savings Union which had acted as an issuing bank Its functions were taken over by the Bank of Poland Stanislaw Karpinski became the first president of the Bank of Poland On 14 January the organizing committee of the Bank of Poland was established and on 26 January the sale of the bank s shares began Payments could only be made in foreign currencies and in gold On 15 April during the first shareholders meeting the Bank of Poland Joint Stock Company was established Grabski went further than just establishing the Bank of Poland and the currency He built a network of state banks and founded the Bank for National Economy He also initiated far going changes in the structure of Polish exports and industrial output He also established the Border Defence Corps nbsp Grabski s coffin on a funeral bier 4 March 1938 Nevertheless criticism continued over aspects of Grabski s reforms In 1925 Grabski himself commented that he was too optimistic about his economic reforms and that he should have realized that given the circumstances of depression and the recuperation from World War I a complete recovery of the Polish economy was virtually impossible There were enormous price discrepancies between agricultural and manufactured goods The Bank of Poland was faced with both a commercial deficit and an increasing national debt The government made numerous unfavourable investments and in 1925 the Sejm approved a proposal for an excessively high budget despite frequent warnings from Grabski s cabinet On 29 July 1925 the value of the Polish zloty declined significantly A tariff war broke out between Poland and Germany Grabski resigned from his post in active politics in November of that year He subsequently devoted himself to pedagogic and academic work at the Warsaw Agricultural University SGGW In 1926 he became its rector In 1936 on his motion the Rural Sociology Institute was established of which he remained the head until his death in 1938 Wladyslaw Grabski died from cancer on 1 March 1938 in Warsaw The Holy Mass was led by Cardinal Aleksander Kakowski in the Saint John s Cathedral His body was interred in the family grave at the Powazki Cemetery Perception among Polish Jews edit nbsp 1924 Yiddish cartoon depicting Grabski s Aliyah Between 1924 and 1926 mass emigration of Polish Jews to Palestine took place following the economic restrictions placed on Jews in Poland This wave of Jewish migration became known as Grabski s Aliyah Aliyah being the traditional Hebrew word for immigration to the Land of Israel owing to the financial reforms conducted by Wladyslaw Grabski at that time 4 5 6 In American Jewish media sources Grabski s reforms were described as an anti Jewish taxation policy so severe that it resulted in a great immigration movement to Palestine known as the Grasski Aliyah 7 Scholars assessing the Grabski financial reforms note how the introduction of new finance policies strengthened political institutions In the case of the 1924 25 reform program fundamental changes were made to taxation policy and led to the increase of direct taxation that required increased state citizen interactions One effect of these reforms was that the state gathered extensive information on business activities and demanded taxation payments The enactment of these policies was not without consequence as many citizens especially Jewish merchants perceived the reform as an unfair reform that demanded undue levels of taxation 8 Legacy editIn 2004 Poland celebrated the 130th anniversary of Wladyslaw Grabski s birthday and the 80th anniversary of the public finance reforms he introduced In September 2003 the Sejm of the Republic of Poland passed a resolution proclaiming 2004 as Wladyslaw Grabski s Year 9 In 2004 a statue was unveiled in his birthplace village of Borow 10 The Warsaw Agricultural University labelled him as a great Pole great statesman social activist and a man of great heart and mind one of the brightest Poles of the interwar period 11 In July 2006 the newly opened Main Library of the Warsaw Agricultural University was named after Grabski and in front of the library the statue of Grabski was placed 12 His grandson Andrzej Feliks Grabski 1934 2000 became a historian Works editHistoria Towarzystwa Rolniczego 1858 1861 1904 Bilans Krolestwa Polskiego w finansach Rosji 1909 Rocznik Statystyczny Krolestwa Polskiego 1914 ed 1915 Cel i zadania polityki agrarnej w Polsce 1918 O wlasnych silach 1926 Dwa lata pracy u podstaw panstwowosci naszej 1927 Historia wsi w Polsce 1929 Kryzys rolniczy 1929 Decorations and awards editKnight of the Order of the White Eagle 12 April 1924 Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown Romania Order of Orange Nassau Netherlands Knight of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus Italy Order of the White Lion 1st class Czechoslovakia Grand Cross of the Order of Pius IX Vatican City Order of the Cross of Liberty 1st class Civil Estonia References edit Ministrowie finansow Ministerstwo Finansow Portal Gov pl Wojciech Morawski 2004 Wladyslaw Grabski polityk maz stanu reformator PDF Warszawa Narodowy Bank Polski p 18 via direct download Andrzej Ajnenkiel 1986 Od rzadow ludowych do przewrotu majowego Zarys dziejow politycznych Polski 1918 1926 From populist rule to May Coup d etat Warszawa Wiedza Powszechna pp 380 381 ISBN 8321405819 Modern Zionist Aliyot to Israel Sroka L T 2017 Relations between Poland and Eretz Yisrael before 1948 Kossewska E 2015 Books and Politics On Polish Israeli Commercial and Diplomatic Relations 1948 1958 The Polish Review 60 4 67 80 Wladyslaw Grabski Sponsor of Anti jewish Tax Policy Dead in Poland Jewish Telegraphic Agency March 2 1938 Mazur Z 2022 The Grabski Tax Reform and Jewish Merchants State Building in Interwar Poland East European Politics and Societies 36 2 626 643 Uchwala Sejmu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 19 wrzesnia 2003 r w sprawie ogloszenia roku 2004 rokiem Wladyslawa Grabskiego isap sejm gov pl Accessed 4 November 2022 Lodzki Urzad Wojewodzki w Lodzi W holdzie tworcy zlotowki 7 July 2004 Uchwala Nr 19 2002 2003 Senatu Szkoly Glownej Gospodarstwa Wiejskiego w Warszawie z dnia 24 lutego 2003 r Archived from the original on 10 March 2012 Retrieved 24 August 2010 Otwarcie Biblioteki Glownej im Prof Wladyslawa Grabskiego Archived 27 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine 28 September 2009External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wladyslaw Grabski Grabski s bio at the webpage of the National Bank of Poland Wladyslaw Grabski at Find a Grave Political offices Preceded byLeopold Skulski Prime Minister of Poland1920 Succeeded byWincenty Witos Preceded byWincenty Witos Prime Minister of Poland1923 1925 Succeeded byAleksander Skrzynski Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wladyslaw Grabski amp oldid 1217437564, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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