The_consequences_of_ww2_economical and political.ppt
LayzaStorerdosSantos
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Oct 02, 2024
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About This Presentation
The_consequences_of_ww2_economical and political.
Size: 1.37 MB
Language: en
Added: Oct 02, 2024
Slides: 36 pages
Slide Content
THE EFFECTS OF WW2
HUMAN COST
40 millions dead in Europe
Two-third were civilians
One-fifth of Poland’s population died
20 million people displaced
Stalin and Hitler alone were responsible for the
forced removals of some 30 million people
After the war Germans from Hungary, Romania and
Poland were driven from their homes and forced to
move to Germany
HTTP://WWW.FALLEN.IO/WW2/
ECONOMIC COST
WW1 fighting took place mostly on the Western Front
while during WW2 entire Europe was involved.
Aerial bombing destroyed many cities: Millions of
homeless and dead civilians
Transport and communication disrupted
Industry destroyed
Farmland ruined
Food production fell to half
150 million people dependent on relief food
distribution
Britain was bankrupted
Soviet economy badly effected-25 millions homeless
ECONOMIC EFFECTS
Long term effects of WWI and WWII were
different: WWI led to depression in the 1920s due
to dislocation of world trade, decline of heavy
industry and fall in agricultural prices.
World War II – USA’s willingness to remain engaged
with Europe was of vital importance / helped Europe
recover economically
The US distributed large amounts of aid from 1943
onwards, through the UN , and the World Bank, and
the IMF
By 1950, the productivity of W EU exceeded the pre-
1939 average by 25 percent
ECONOMIC EFFECTS -
CREATION OF THE IMF, WTO,
AND WORLD BANK
The Bretton Woods Conference (1944) set up the:
International Monetary Fund to try to prevent another world
economic depression. It keeps track of the flow of goods going to
and from countries and stabilizes the exchange rate
The World Bank was established to provide finance (loans) and
advice to reduce poverty
The International Trade Organization (ITO) was formed to try to
regulate and insure free trade
POLITICAL CONSEQUENCES
Slight changes of boundaries (compared to WWI)
Poland saw its border shifted westwards- lost
179,000 sq.km in the east and gained 104,000
sq.km from German territories
Yalta Conference- decided Poland’s boundaries
Germany to be divided into four occupation zones
– leads to permanent division in 1949
Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria and Czechoslovakia
one party regime under Stalin’s control.
EFFECTS OF WAR ON INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
Change in the balance of power.
USSR and USA emerged as super powers - Why
was this?
Reasons – military:
USA had acquired the largest air force in the world,
12 million men in the armed forces, more naval
vessels and the atomic bomb
USSR had acquired the largest land army in the
world to defeat Germany
France and Britain’s inability to defeat Germany
placed them second in rank
USSR lacked strong military neighbors thus making
it a regional power
REASONS - ECONOMIC
USA’s economy was strengthened by the war. It
was able to out-produce all the other powers
USA was committed to more ‘open’ trade.
Small Eastern European countries needed
support of a stronger neighbour which was
provided by USSR
IMPACT OF THE SUPERPOWERS
The map of Europe after 1945 was determined by the
growing conflict between USSR and USA with a clear
divide between Eastern and Western Europe
USA- end of isolationism, beginning of a dominant role
in world affairs
Cold War
“ The Cold War began where it had left off in 1941, with profound distrust
of Soviet motives, and an ideological divide every bit as deep as that
between liberalism and Nazism. Only two years after the end of the war the
American Air Policy Commission reported to Truman that the essential
“incompatibility of East and West” called for the build-up of a “devastating “
fore of bombers and missiles equipped with nuclear weapons capable of
operation at range of 5.000 miles.
From Richard Overy, Why the Allies Won, 2006
WESTERN EUROPE
Followed democracy
Commitment by USA- the Truman Doctrine, Marshall
Plan– US steps in to provide economic aid - to prevent
weakened governments of Italy and France to fall to
communism
In the 1950s and 1960s, Western European countries
enjoyed two decades of sustained economic growth.
Greater economic cooperation in W. Eu than ever before,
formation of the European Coal and Steel Community and
ultimately the European Economic Community (EEC) in
the 1950s
Establishment of NATO 1949 – North Atlantic Treaty
Organization , and Warsaw Pact in 1951
EASTERN EUROPE
1944-48 Stalin established control over Hungary,
Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Romania and
Poland which involved
i. establishment of one-party rule
ii. Nationalization of private enterprise
Iii. Five- Year Plans- encouraged collective farming
Integration of economy: each satellite state had
to produce what USSR needed- eg. Poland
produced coal
Council fro Mutual Economic Assistance
(Comecon)
EASTERN EUROPE
The economic and political system was backed
by:
Social and ideological controls eg. Cominform, secret
police
Censorship of all media
Suppression of religious freedom
Military presence of soviet troops
Political purges
IMPACT ON ASIA
China lost 12 million people
Japan lost 2 million people
JAPAN
Eliminated as a major power
Occupied by the Americans under General
Douglas MacArthur
Japan was made a democracy
Military and secret police forces were dissolved
The emperor remained to maintain political stability
Anyone who had played a part in Japanese
aggression was purged from political office and
industry
New constitution was introduced
THE TREATY OF SAN FRANCISCO
Signed in 1951- Japan to
1. renounce all claims to Taiwan, Sakhalin and the Kuriles
2. hand over the Pacific Island of Micronesia to UN
3. hand over the Ryuku and Bonin Islands to USA
4. accepted the judgements of the international military Tribunal for
the Far East
Guidelines for reparation and compensation to prisoners of war, renounced
future military aggression, nullified prior treaties
Japan to become allied to the Western powers, and was to become
economically strong and politically stable
Japan became an important military and strategic base for the USA in its
fight against communism in Asia
A separate Treaty between Japan and USA-
USA promised to defend Japan until it could look after its own defense
which meant that it had military bases in Japan
CHINA
Fighting continued between the nationalist forces
of Jiang jieshi and the communist forces of Mao
Zedong
Conflict led to the victory of Mao in 1949 and the
establishment of a communist China
DECOLONIZATION: THE DECLINE
OF EUROPEAN INFLUENCE IN ASIA
Weakness of Britain and France found it
increasingly difficult to hold on to their empires
in Asia and Africa
Nationalist Movements grew
USA and the UN condemned imperialism
Indonesia got independence from Dutch, Vietnam
from the French, India, Burma and Ceylon from
the british
USA and USSR sought to increase their sphere of
influence in this area- Cold War
OTHER EFFECTS
War Tribunals established
Tribunals were set up to try war criminals in both Europe and
Asia; eg. The Nuremberg Tribunal – 21 leading Nazis were
charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity
Japan: General MacArthur carried out trials against war
criminals and 28 of Japan’s leaders (about 1000 executed)
The United Nations
Emergence of an international organization – US initiative
Intended to be more effective in peacekeeping (than the LON)
The Arms Race
Central to the Cold War – main focus on the development and
acquisition of nuclear weapons
SOCIAL CHANGES
Women:
War- the challenge to tradition:
Family Life:
Racism and minority rights:
Ideology:
SOCIAL EFFECTS - WOMEN
Women took on many of the roles that had
traditionally belonged to men
Many people belonging to minority groups
also took on jobs that traditionally they had
not
Women took on jobs in the in the war effort,
including those such as:
Military nurses – working near battles
around the world to save wounded men
Factory workers – building the machines
necessary to fight wars
Journalists – reporting the happenings of
the battle front to news agencies in their
home countries
SOCIAL EFFECTS - WOMEN
The most common job for a
woman to take on during the
World War I or II was that of a
nurse
At first men doubted that the
women would work well in a
battle situation, but those
doubts quickly disappeared
after the nurses proved
themselves
SOCIAL/ECONOMIC
EFFECTS - MINORITIES
Women were not the government's only
target for recruitment
The government also decided to begin
recruiting more minorities for many of
the same reasons it began recruiting
women
In World War II, they recruited nearly
over a million African Americans to be in
the military and work in the factories
However, riots and strikes occurred
protesting their rise in status
SOCIAL EFFECTS - MINORITIES
African Americans served in World War II
Despite the numbers they faced racial
discrimination:
Racially segregated forces
Blacks were often classified as unfit for combat
and were not allowed on the front lines
Blacks were mostly given support duties
No blacks were given the Medal of Honor
during either world war
SOCIAL EFFECTS - MINORITIES
Nonetheless, progress was made:
Black combat units proved they
could fight just as well as whites
The U.S. military was integrated in
1948, but black soldiers were still
kept in separate units during the
Korean War
The Tuskegee Airman, the first
group of black pilots ever trained by
the Air Force gained legendary
status
Double V campaign drew public
support
Truman set up the Committee on
Civil Rights
SOCIAL EFFECTS – WOMEN &
MINORITIES
The first and second World Wars did much to awaken the
women and minority groups
For the first time since the Civil War era, African American
rights became an issue (the issue of segregation in the
military)
It is now commonplace for women to hold jobs, their role in
society has expanded greatly since the era prior to World
War I
WHAT WERE THE SUCCESSES AND
FAILURES OF PEACEMAKING?
No formal peace conference to resolve the issues of war;
peacemaking “Sum total” of the developments
War destroyed fascist/Nazi regimes – victorious powers
occupied their enemies’ territories - Japan and Germany
were occupied until the Allies decided to restore their
independence
Russian controlled areas – no democracy
COLD WAR – one of the most significant consequences of
WWII – US policy of containment
Anti-Imperialism – the logic of war against racist doctrines
and greedy nationalist taking other people’s lands also
made the survival of EU empires difficult to sustain
After British withdrawal from India (1947), it was a matter
of time before the EU empires worldwide collapsed.