Up to a point, Doctor Schacht’s career duplicated that of
any typical German of his era. During
Hitler’s rise to power, he was an enthusiastic supporter of the future
Chancellor, using his prestige in the business and financial community to
solicit signatures for a petition to have Hitler appointed Chancellor, going to
the length of urging the current Chancellor, Franz von Papen, to resign in Hitler’s
favor.
Personally opposed, professionally in favor. |
At the same time, he was privately having serious qualms about what was happening. Dr. Schacht, like so many modern politicians, considered such questions primarily a matter of personal conscience — meaning he thought it would harm him personally and professionally if he said the wrong things at the wrong time to the wrong people.
Up to a point, Doctor Schacht
was an avid supporter of German rearmament, using his position as head of the
central bank to arrange financing. Although not a Keynesian, he
was a pioneer in figuring out new ways to use the money-creation powers of a
central bank to finance government spending.
He invented the “Mefo Bills,” short-term paper backed only by the
government’s promise to pay, although he insisted that the loans must be repaid, where Keynes simply assumed a large, non-repayable government debt is a positive good. The Mefo Bills
permitted the German government to go directly to the money market to finance
rearmament. This is now standard
practice by most central banks, including the United States Federal Reserve
System, but was used by the Soviets during the Nürnburg War Crimes Trials as
evidence that Dr. Schacht was an enemy of humanity.
In conflict with Göring |
Widespread anger in Germany over the reparations. |
Because of his growing opposition to rearmament and
expansion of war material production facilities, as well as a bitter argument
with Hitler during which Doctor Schacht was accused of “obstructionism” for his
conservative financial methods, he was placed on “leave of absence” from the
Ministry of Economics in September, 1937.
Two months later he resigned as Minister of Economics and
Plenipotentiary General for War Economy.
As head of the central bank, Doctor Schacht still continued
to operate as the financial agent for the German government, but in less than
six months had discontinued the issuance of unbacked short-term paper (the “Mefo
Bills”) to finance rearmament. At the
end of 1938, Doctor Schacht denied an urgent request for special credit to pay
government salaries. On January 2, 1939,
he held a conference with Hitler to persuade Der Führer to allow the Jews to leave Germany and try and persuade him to reduce armament
expenditures, following up a week later with an official Reichsbank report,
signed by all the bank directors. A week
after that Hitler removed him as President of the Reichsbank. American newspapers assumed that Hitler was planning on starting a war, possibly against the Soviet Union (it was Poland), and wanted Schacht out of the way:
"This development may be of the utmost importance. It is right in line with Herr Hitler's way of clearing the deck for action. Before his coups in the Rhineland, in Austria and in Czechoslovakia he purged his General Staff of the conservative officers who objected to such dangerous tactics and put in others more amenable to his orders. The substitution of Herr Funk [Reichs Economics Minister Walthur Funk] for the daring but more orthodox Dr. Schacht may be the forerunner of new economic and financial adventures to come. Dr. Schacht is not a Nazi. Herr Funk is a hundred percenter. Dr. Schacht has pulled many a financial rabbit out of the Nazi hat [the Mefo Bills] but nobody has ever yet accused him of fooling himself. He knew all the time, and was very careful so to warn the Fuehrer, that it was sheer legerdemain and that no government could pay its way forever with such rabbits. Herr Funk may be a believer in bunnies. . . . Judging by the signs, the months ahead are likely to be exceedingly hectic ones for Germany and for Europe. There is talk of war this spring or summer. Herr Hitler is said to be preparing for a push to the East, into the Ukraine, perhaps against the Soviet Union. That at least would explain the firing of the unimaginative Dr. Schacht and the hiring of Herr Funk, believer in whatever financial and economic miracles Herr Hitler may want performed." ("The Schacht Ouster," The Pittsburgh Press, January 22, 1939.)
"This development may be of the utmost importance. It is right in line with Herr Hitler's way of clearing the deck for action. Before his coups in the Rhineland, in Austria and in Czechoslovakia he purged his General Staff of the conservative officers who objected to such dangerous tactics and put in others more amenable to his orders. The substitution of Herr Funk [Reichs Economics Minister Walthur Funk] for the daring but more orthodox Dr. Schacht may be the forerunner of new economic and financial adventures to come. Dr. Schacht is not a Nazi. Herr Funk is a hundred percenter. Dr. Schacht has pulled many a financial rabbit out of the Nazi hat [the Mefo Bills] but nobody has ever yet accused him of fooling himself. He knew all the time, and was very careful so to warn the Fuehrer, that it was sheer legerdemain and that no government could pay its way forever with such rabbits. Herr Funk may be a believer in bunnies. . . . Judging by the signs, the months ahead are likely to be exceedingly hectic ones for Germany and for Europe. There is talk of war this spring or summer. Herr Hitler is said to be preparing for a push to the East, into the Ukraine, perhaps against the Soviet Union. That at least would explain the firing of the unimaginative Dr. Schacht and the hiring of Herr Funk, believer in whatever financial and economic miracles Herr Hitler may want performed." ("The Schacht Ouster," The Pittsburgh Press, January 22, 1939.)
German officials, of course, repeated several times that Schacht's advocacy in favor of the Jews being allowed to emigrate had absolutely nothing to do with his removal. The fact that the proposal was Schacht's own initiative and endorsed by representatives of thirty-two nations, they insisted, was irrelevant; it was purely a coincidence. The general consensus at the time, however, was that die Fraulein was protesting a little too much. ("Nazis Discontinue Emigration Talks; Dr. Schacht Ousted," The Free Lance-Star, January 20, 1939, pp. 1, 2.)
After the dismissal of Werner von Fritsch and Werner von Blomberg, Doctor Schacht participated in plans to get rid of Hitler, first by arranging to have him deposed, and later by assassination. In January 1943, Hitler removed Schacht as Reichminister without Portfolio because of his “whole attitude during the present fateful fight of the German Nation.” On July 23, 1944, inspired by both his implication in the bomb plot and Hitler’s personal animosity, Doctor Schacht was arrested by the Gestapo, and confined to a concentration camp for the rest of the war. He could not safely be “liquidated” because of his still-immense popularity and prestige with the German public.
After being a prisoner of the Third Reich for two years, he
was taken into custody by the Allied War Crimes Commission. At the Nürnburg Trials, he was sentenced to
eight years in prison for being Hitler’s Minister of Finance. He served two years of his sentence, being
transferred thirty-two times during that period, before his conviction was
overturned in 1948.[1] He was released on September 2, 1948. In 1950, he was tried again and cleared of
being a “second or third class Nazi,” although he had never been a member of
the party. Doctor Schacht later wrote in
his memoirs, “I was imprisoned for hating Hitler. After Hitler was dead, I was imprisoned for
helping him.” He died in Munich on June 4,
1970.
Second only to his outstanding success at stabilizing the
currency in 1923 and 1924, Doctor Schacht’s greatest achievement was the
reorganization of the Reichsbank (now the Bundesbank) on sounder principles of
central banking, at least as much as any central bank adheres to them.
#30#
[1]The
Encyclopedia Britannica states —
erroneously — that Dr. Schacht was acquitted in 1946, apparently not aware that
his “acquittal” was retroactive from 1948.