1st Edition

Between Coercion and Private Initiative Entrepreneurial Freedom of Action during the ‘Third Reich’

Edited By Ralf Banken, Roman Köster, Ben Wubs Copyright 2023
    124 Pages
    by Routledge

    124 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book explores the extent of private companies’ freedom of action during the Nazi period through six case studies of different economic sectors. Since the mid-1990s, historical research has intensively discussed the role played by private, domestic and foreign enterprises during the ‘Third Reich’. Numerous case studies suggest that even under the extreme ideological circumstances of the ‘Third Reich’, the strategic decisions of private firms followed economic criteria. In fact, the regime was especially able to control the economy successfully in those cases in which it operated with economic incentives and gave companies room for manoeuvre. This scope, however, became increasingly smaller towards the end of the war due to increasing state intervention and government control. The chapters discuss this scope of action and relate it to the National Socialist crimes.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of Business History.

    Introduction: The room for manoeuvre for firms in the Third Reich 
    Ralf Banken 
    1. Sewing for Hitler? The clothing industry during the ‘Third Reich’ 
    Roman Köster and Julia Schnaus 
    2. The Munich Re: an internationally-oriented reinsurer in the Nazi era 
    Christopher Kopper 
    3. A hard-to-untangle business conglomerate: The economic empire of the German labour front 
    Rüdiger Hachtmann 
    4. Between values orientation and economic logic: Bosch in the Third Reich 
    Johannes Bähr 
    5. Commercial expansion in the steel industry of World War II: The case of Henry J. Kaiser and Friedrich Flick 
    Tim Schanetzky 
    6. Property, control and room for manoeuvre: Royal Dutch Shell and Nazi Germany, 1933–1945 
    Marten Boon and Ben Wubs 

    Biography

    Ralf Banken is Assistant Professor in the Department of History at Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main, Germany. His scholarly work addresses the development of economic law in Germany in the twentieth century and specifically the development of economic policies during the Third Reich. He is the author of over a dozen scholarly articles and publications.

    Roman Köster is Economic Historian and currently Senior Lecturer at the Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften in Munich, Germany. His research interests include the history of economic crises and the history of economic thought.

    Ben Wubs is Professor of International Business History at Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication at Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands. He is engaged in various research projects related to multinationals, business systems, transnational economic regions, Dutch-German economic relations, and the transnational fashion industry.