1. F. Thyssen I Paid Hitler (London, 1941), p. 187.
2. H. A. Wessel Thyssen & Co> Mülheim a.d.Ruhr: die Geschichte einer Familie und ihrer Unternehmnung (Stuttgart, 1991), pp. 47–8, 162–3, 171.
3. Wessel, Thyssen & Co, pp. 48. 171; Thyssen, I Paid Hitler, pp. 30–41, 49–50; A. Barkai Nazi Economics: Ideology} Theory, and Policy (Oxford, 1990), pp. 120–21.
4. V. Kravchenko, 1 Chose Freedom: the Personal and Political Life of a Soviet Offi cial (London, 1947), pp. 174–5.
5. Kravchenko, I Chose Freedom, pp. 203–4.
6. Kravchenko, I Chose Freedom, pp. 2–4, 216–22, 226–30, 347–51.
7. K. McKenzie Comintern and World Revolution (New York, 1964), p. 144.
8. F. Pollock ‘Staatskapitalismus’, in H. Dubied and A. Sollner (eds) Wirtschaft, Recht und Staat im Nationalsozialismus: Analysen des Instituts für Sozialforschung (Frankfurt am Main, 1981), pp. 81–106; ‘dysfunctional capitalism’ in A. Sohn-Rethel Economy and Class Structure of German Fascism (London, 1978), pp. 128–31.
9. Bundesarchiv-Berlin, R7/2149 Ohlendorf papers ‘Grundsätze der Volkswirtschafts-politik’ [September 1935], p. 9.
10. See for example P. R. Gregory (ed.) Behind the Façade of Stalin’s Command Economy (Stanford, 2001).
11. In general see T. Balderston Economics and Politics in the Weimar Republic (Cambridge, 2002); H. James The German Slump: Politics and Economics, 1924–1936 (Oxford, 1986); H.-J. Braun The German Economy in the Twentieth Century (London, 1990); R. J. Overy ‘The German Economy, 1919–1945’, in P. Panayi (ed.) Weimar and Nazi Germany: Continuities and Discontinuities (London, 2001), pp. 33–73.
12. See in general R. W. Davies (ed.) From Tsarism to the New Economic Policy (Ithaca, NY, 1991); R. Munting The Economic Development of the USSR (London, 1982); P. Gatrell The Tsarist Economy, 1850–1917 (London, 1986).
13. A. M. Ball Russia’s Last Capitalists: the Nepmen, 1921–1929 (Berkeley, Calif., 1987), pp. 162–5; on small-scale trade A. Baykov The Development of the Soviet Economic System (Cambridge, 1947), p. 107. Out of 165,781 enterprises in the production census in 1923, 147,471 (88.5 per cent) were in private hands. In 1922–3, some 75 per cent of the retail trade was also in private hands (p. 55).
14. Munting, Economic Development, p. 97.
15. R. W. Davies, M. Harrison and S. G. Wheatcroft (eds) The Economic Transformation of the Soviet Union (Cambridge, 1994), pp. 36–7, 292. There is no agreed fi gure on the annual rate of industrial growth. The Soviet offi cial fi gure was 16.8 per cent a year.
16. Davies, Harrison and Wheatcroft, Economic Transformation, p. 296; Statistisches Jahrbuch für das Deutsche Reich, 1933 (Berlin, 1934).
17. On Russia see Davies, Harrison and Wheatcroft, Economic Transformation, p. 269. Soviet GNP was 123.7 bn rbls. in 1928, 212.3 bn in 1937 (1937 prices); German GNP from A. Ritschl and M. Spoerer ‘Die Bruttosozialprodukt in Deutschland nach den amtlichen Volkseinkommens-und Sozialproduktstatistiken 1901–1995’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte,
37 (1997), pp. 51–2. Growth between 1928 and 1938 was 39 per cent in real terms, from 90.8 bn RM in 192.8 to 12.6.2 bn in 1938.
18. J. Stalin Works (13 vols, Moscow, 1952–55), vol. xii, p. 252, political report of the CC to the XVI Congress of the CPSU, 27 June 1930.
19. R. Zitelmann Hitler: the Politics of Seduction (London, 1999), p. 224; H. Rauschning Hitler Speaks (London, 1939), p. 235.
20. Zitelmann, Hitler, p. 215; Stalin, Works, vol. xi, p. 314; Rauschning, Hitler Speaks, p. 34.
21. J. Stalin Problems of Leninism (Moscow, 1947), p. 300, ‘A Year of Great Change’ Pravda, 7 November 1929.
22. Stalin, Works, vol. xii, pp. 314–20, political report to the XVI Congress; J. Stalin Economic Problems of Socialism in the U.S.S.R. (Peking, 1972), p. 5.
23. Stalin, Works, vol. xii, pp. 311–15.
24. Zitelmann, Hitler, pp. 206, 207.
25. Barkai, Nazi Economics, p. 37.
26. NSDAP Parteitag der Arbeit von 6 bis 13 September 1937 (Munich, 1938), p. 38.
27. O. Wagener Das Wirtschaftsplan der NSDAP (Munich, 1932), p. 5.
28. A. Hitler The Secret Book ed. T. Taylor (New York, 1961), pp. 5–6, 13.
29. Hitler, Secret Book, pp. 14, 24.
30. Hitler, Secret Book, pp. 21–3.
31. K.-H. Minuth (ed.) Akten der Reichskanzlei: Regierung Hitler 1933–1938 (Boppard am Rhein, 1983), vol. i, p. 62, committee for work-creation, 9 February 1933.
32. F. Nonnenbruch Die Wirtschaft in derNS Politik (Berlin, 1935), p. 16.
33. Zitelmann, Hitler, p. 226–7, 232; on planning BA-B, R7/2149, Ohlendorf memorandum, ‘Grundsätze der Volkswirtschaftspolitik’,
p. 9; see too A.-I. Berndt (ed.) Gebt mir vier Johre Zeit: Dokumente zum ersten Vier jahresplan des Führers (Munich, 1937), pp. 233–5, Hitler speech 30 January 1937.
34. BA-B R7/2149, Ohlendorf papers, ‘Unsere Wirtschaftsauffassung. Das Program der NSDAP’, p. 9.
35. H. Trevor-Roper (ed.) Hitler’s Table Talk, 1941–1944 (Oxford, 1984), p. 65.
36. See for example D. L. Hoffmann The Great Terror on the Local Level: Purges in Moscow Factories, 1936–1938’, in J. A. Getty and R. Manning (eds) Stalinist Terror: New Perspectives (Cambridge, 1993), pp. 163–8.
37. F. Seurot Le Systeme economique de l’URSS (Paris, 1989), pp. 55–7; J. Schneider and W. Harbrecht (eds) Wirtschaftsordnung und Wirtschaftspolitik in Deutschland (1933–1993) (Stuttgart, 1996), pp. viii – xxii.
38. V. Barnett Kondratiev and the Dynamics of Economic Development: Long Cycles and Industrial Growth in Historical Context (London, 1998), pp. 21–2, 171; N. Jasny Soviet Economists of the Twenties (Cambridge, 1972), pp. 103–5.
39. Barnett, Kondratiev, pp. 190–96; Jasny, Soviet Economists, pp. 119, 127.
40. Jasny, Soviet Economists, p. 141; E. Zaleski Planning for Economic Growth in the Soviet Union, 1918–1932 (Chapel Hill, NC, 1962), p. 58.
41. Baykov, Soviet Economic System, p. 424.
42. Details in E. A. Rees State Control in Soviet Russia: the Rise and Fall of the Workers’ and Peasants’ Inspectorate 1920–1934 (London, 1987), pp. 190–231; O. K. Khlevniuk In Stalin’s Shadow: the Career of’Sergo’ Ordzhonikidze (London, 1995), pp. 41–52, 167; S. Fitzpatrick ‘Ordzhoni-kidze’s Takeover of Vesenkha: a Case Study in Soviet Bureaucratic Polities’, Soviet Studies, 37 (1985), pp. 154–67.
43. C. Bettelheim La planifi cation sovietique (Paris, 1939), pp. 72–3.
44. Rees, State Control in Soviet Russia, p. 231; Baykov, Soviet Economic System, pp. 453–5.
45. J. Millar ‘Soviet Planners 1936–37’, in J. Degras and A. Nove (eds) Soviet Planning: Essays in Honour of Naum Jasny (Oxford, 1964), pp. 127–9.
46. Miller, ‘Soviet Planners’, pp. 120–21; Baykov, Soviet Economic System, pp. 441, 444.
47. Miller, ‘Soviet Planners’, p. 120; see too H. Hunter ‘Priorities and Shortfalls in Prewar Soviet Planning’, in Degras and Nove, Soviet Planning, pp. 3–31.
48. P. Sutela Socialism, Planning and Optimality: a Study of Soviet Economic Thought (Helsinki, 1984), pp. 13–15, 57–8; M. Harrison Soviet Planning in Peace and War, 1938–1945 (Cambridge, 1985), pp. 14–16, 18–19.
49. Bettelheim, planifi cation sovietique, pp. 74–5; Baykov, Soviet Economic System, pp. 455–7.
50. Baykov, Soviet Economic System, pp. 457–60.
51. T. Dunmore The Stalinist Command Economy: the Soviet State Apparatus and Economic Policy 1945–1953 (London, 1980), pp. 6–10.
52. J. A. Tooze Statistics and the German State, 1900–1945: the Making of Modern Economic Knowledge (Cambridge, 2001), p. 186; Gosplan fi gures in E. Zaleski Stalinist Planning for Economic Growth 1933–1952 (Chapel Hill, NC, 1980) pp. 49–50.
53. BA-B R2/540 Schacht speech on ‘Ziele deutscher Wirtschaftspolitik’, 11 December 1934.
54. BA-B R2/540 ‘Die Ansprache Dr Schachts’ 23 January 1937; Rn/318 ‘Ansprache Dr Schachts’, Berlin 10 May 1938, pp. 12–14. Economic management, said Schacht, ‘must only lead to a healthy and life-sustaining economic order, but not to a schematic economic bureaucratism’.
55. R. J. Overy The Nazi Economic Recovery 1932–1938 (Cambridge, 1996); for a critical assessment of growth strategy see C. Buchheim ‘The Nazi Boom: An Economic Cul-de-Sac’, in H. Mommsen (ed.) The Third Reich between Vision and Reality: New Perspectives on German History 1918–1945 (Oxford, 2001), pp. 79–92.
56. G. Corni and H. Giess Brot, Butter, Kanonen: Die Ernährungswirtschaft in Deutschland unter der Diktatur Hitlers (Berlin, 1997), pp. 81–6, 87–98, 133. By 1938 there were 17,300 offi cials running the Food Estate, with 57,400 farmers used as local ‘farm leaders’.
57. R. A. Brady The Spirit and Structure of German Fascism (London, 1937), pp. 266–72.
58. Tooze, Statistics and the German State, pp. 202–3; see BA-B R11/11 for reports from Grünig on national income estimates and economic balances. See too BA-B R43 II/301, Dr Grünig, ‘Probleme der Wirtschaftslenkung’.
59. BA-B R11/77 Reichswirtschaftskammer, economic situation reports. The chamber produced composite quarterly reports, and regular digests of the economic group reports organized into sections on labour, raw materials, industry, wages and prices, trade, etc.
60. On ‘primacy of politics’ F. Marx Government in the Third Reich (New York, 1936), p. 150; telephone tapping in H. B. Gisevius To the Bitter End (London, 1948), pp. 200–201; on Bremen speech H. Heiber (ed.) Reichsführer! Briefe an und von Himmler (Stuttgart, 1968), p. 44, Aktennotiz 1 May 1936.
61. W. Treue ‘Hitlers Denkschrift zum Vier jahresplan 1936’, Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte, 3 (1955), p. 206.
62. Imperial War Museum, London, FO 645, Box 156, Goring interrogation, 17 October 1945, p. 8. 63. Berndt, Gebt mir vier Jahre Zeit, p. 211; P. Schmidt Deutsche Wirtschafts-freheit durch den Vier jahresplan (Breslau, n.d.), pp. 2–8; G. Thomas Geschichte der deutschen Wehr-und Rüstungswirtschaft 1918–1943/5 ed. W. Birkenfeld (Boppard am
Rhein, 1966), p. 111.
64. ‘Niederschrift über die Sitzung des Ministerrats 4 September 1936’, in H. Michaelis and E. Schraepler (eds) Ursachen und Folgung vom deutschen Zusammenbruch 1918 bis 1945 (Berlin, 1968), vol. x, p. 545.
65. M. Domarus Hitler: Speeches and Proclamations (4 vols., Wauconda, Ill., 1990–2004), vol. ii, p. 853.
66. BA-B R26/II Anh/2 W. Rentrop, ‘Materialen zur Geschichte des Reichskommissars für die Preisbildung’, pp. 8–13.
67. Der Vierjahresplan i (1937), p. 277.
68. BA-B R26/II Anh/i H. Dichgans ‘Zur Geschichte des Reichskommissars für Preisbildung’ n.d., pp. 4–6, 9–11.
69. Davies, Harrison and Wheatcroft, Economic Transformation, p. 313; M. Dohan ‘Foreign Trade’, in Davies, Tsarism to the New Economic Policy, pp. 224–33, 326–7; W. Beitel and J. Nötzold Deutsch-sowjetische Wirtschaftsbeziehungen in der Zeit der Weimarer Republik (Baden-Baden, 1979), p. 206.
70. Beitel and Nötzold, Deutsch-sowjetische Wirtschaftsbeziehungen, p. 217.
71. L. Prager Nationalsozialismus gegen Liberalis mus (Munich, 1933), p. 3. On autarky in Germany see D. Petzina Autarkiepolitik im Dritten Reich (Stuttgart, 1968); A. Teichert Autarkie und Grosswirtschaftsraum in Deutschland 1930–1939 (Munich, 1984). For a contemporary analysis H. Kremmler Autarkie in der organischen Wirtschaft (Dresden, 1940).
72. R. W. Davies and O. K. Khlevniuk ‘Gosplan’, in E.A. Rees (ed.) Decision-Making in the Stalinist Command Economy, 1932–37 (London, 1997), p. 34.
73. L. E. Hubbard Soviet Money and Finance (London, 1936), pp. 290–96; Baykov, Soviet Economic System, pp. 264–72. In general on Soviet autarky M. R. Dohan The Economic Origins of Soviet Autarky 1927/28–1934’, Slavic Review, 35 (1976), pp. 603–35.
74. Calculated from Davies, Harrison and Wheatcroft, Economic Transformation, pp. 272, 312.
75. K. E. Bailes The American Connection: Ideology and the Transfer of American Technology to the Soviet Union, 1917–1941’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 23 (1981), pp. 443–8.
76. Beitel and Nötzold, Deutsch-sowjetische Wirtschaftsbeziehungen, pp. 208, 210, 217.
77. E. von Mickwitz (ed.) Aussenhandel unter Zwang (Hamburg, 1938), pp. 5, 41; on Hitler’s conversion to autarky E. Syring Hitler: seine politische Utopie (Frankfurt am Main, 1994), pp. 173–4.
78. See in general S. Lurie Private Investment in a Controlled Economy: Germany 1933–1939 (London, 1947); N. Forbes ‘London Banks, the German Standstill Agreement and Economic Appeasement in the 1930s’, Economic History Review, 40 (1987).
79. On the control offi ces BA-B R3101/8445 Economics Ministry ‘Bekanntmachung über die Reichsstellen zur Überwachung und
Regelung des Warenverkehrs’; on the operation of the system G. R. von Radiis Die deutsche Aussenhandelspolitik unter dem Einfl uss der Devisenbewirtschaftung con 1931 bis 1938 (Vienna, 1939). See too W. A. Boelcke Deutschland als Welthandelsmacht 1930–1945 (Stuttgart, 1994), pp. 13–43.
80. Petzina, Autarkiepolitik, p. 95.
81. L. Zumpe Wirtschaft und Staat in Deutschland 1933 bis 1945 (Berlin, 1979), p. 221; H.-E. Volkmann ‘Die NS-Wirtschaft in Vorbereitung des Krieges’, in W. Deist et ah (eds) Das Deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg: Band I (Stuttgart, 1979), p. 262.; W. Jungermann and H. Krafft Roh stoffreich – turn aus deutscher Erde (Berlin, 1939), p. 69 on oil.
82. Details in R. J. Overy ‘The Four Year Plan’, in T. Gourvish (ed.) European Yearbook of Business History: Number 3 (Aldershot, 2000), pp. 101–2.
83. R. W. Davies and M. Harrison ‘Defence spending and defence industry in the 1930s’, in J. Barber and M. Harrison (eds) The Soviet Defence-Industry Complex from Stalin to Khrushchev (London, 2000), p. 73; German fi gures in National Archives, Microcopy T178, Roll 15, Reich fi nance ministry ‘Statistische Übersichten zu den Reichshaushaltsrechnungen 1938 bis 1943’, November 1944.
84. IWM FD 3056/49 ‘Statistical Material on the German Manpower Position during the war period 1939–1944’, 31 July 1945, table 7.
85. B. H. Klein Germany’s Economic Preparations for War (Cambridge, Mass., 1959), p. 14; Davies and Harrison, ‘Defence spending’, pp. 87–8.
86. J. Sapir Les fl uctuations economiques en URSS 1941–1945 (Paris, 1989), p. 47.
87. N. Simonov ‘The “war scare” of 1927 and the birth of the defence-industry complex’, in Barber and Harrison, Soviet Defence-Industry Complex, p. 44.
88. In May 1939 1 in 8 German workers in the consumer industries worked directly on military orders. See R. J. Overy War and Economy in the Third Reich (Oxford, 1994), pp. 27–9 on the conversion of consumer sectors.
89. United States Strategic Bombing Survey, Report 20 ‘Light Metal Industry in Germany’, Part I Aluminium, p. 2.
90. BA-B Reichsamt für Wirtschaftsausbau, New Production Plan, 12 July 1938, ‘Finanzbedarf der Projekte des Vierjahresplan’.
91. R. J. Overy ‘The Reichs werke Hermann Goring: a Study in German Economic Imperialism’, in Overy, War and Economy, pp. 144–74.
92. This excludes investment in areas such as the railways, whose overhaul in the late 1930s also had a strategic purpose; so too the expansion of basic electric power.
93. This view was formulated in United States Strategic Bombing Survey Overall Report, September 1945, p. 31: The Germans did not plan, nor were they prepared for, a long war’. See too N. Kaldor ‘The German War Economy’, Review of Economic Statistics,
13 (1946); A. S. Milward ‘Hitlers Konzept des Blitzkrieges’, in A. Hillgruber (ed.) Probleme des Zweiten Weltkrieges (Cologne, 1967), pp. 19–40.
94. For a survey of all these preparations see BA-B R26 I/18 ‘Ergebnisse der Vier jahresplan-Arbeit’, spring 1942, pp. 5–95. ‘He [Hitler] gave economic policy the task of making the economy ready for war in the space of four years…’ (p. 1).
95. Akten zur deutschen auswärtigen Politik Ser. D., vol. i (Baden-Baden, 1950), p. 27, ‘Niederschrift über die Besprechung in der Reichskanzlei’, 5 November 1937.
96. Overy, War and Economy, pp. 148–59.
97. BA-B R26IV/4 ‘Besprechung über die Eingliederung Sudetendeutschlands in die reichsdeutsche Wirtschaft’, 3 October 1938.
98. IWM, EDS AL/1571 Thomas minute, 20 June 1940.
99. BA-B R2501/6585, Reichsbank memorandum 24 August 1939, appdx 1.
100. P. Temin ‘Soviet and Nazi economic planning in the 1930s’, Economic History Review, 44 (1991), p. 585.
101. H. von Kotze and H. Krausnick (eds) ‘Es spricht der Führer’: 7 exemplarische Hitler-Reden (Gütersloh, 1966), pp. 176–7, speech of 24 Febuary 1937 to construction workers.
102. IWM Case XI Pros. Doc. Book 112, Neumann lecture The Four Year Plan’, 29 April 1941, p. 294.
103. Temin, ‘Soviet and Nazi planning’, p. 584; J. Chapman Real Wages in Soviet Russia since 1928 (Cambridge, Mass., 1963), p. 166.
104. Chapman, Real Wages, pp. 144, 146–8. R. di Leo Occupazione e salari neirURSS 1950–1977 (Milan, 1980), p. 122 calculates that average monthly wages rose in money terms by a factor of 10.8 from 1928 to 1950, but prices by a factor of 11.8. D. Filtzer ‘The Standard of Living of Soviet Industrial Workers in the Immediate Postwar Period, 1945–1948’, Europe – Asia Studies, 51 (1999), pp. 1015–16. On German wages G. Bry Wages in Germany 1871–1945 (Princeton, NJ, 1960), pp. 264, 362. On wage policy T. Siegel ‘Wage Policy In Germany’, Politics and Society, 14 (1985), pp, 5–37.
105. See BA-B R2501/6581 Reichsbank ‘Zur Entwicklung des deutschen Preis-und Lohnstandes seit 1933’, appdx 6, which shows a range of increased weekly earnings against 1933 of – o.8 per cent (book production) to 26.0 per cent (metalworking).
106. Filtzer, ‘Standard of Living’, p. 1019.
107. J. Hessler ‘Postwar Normalisation and its Limits in the USSR: the Case of Trade’, Europe – Asia Studies, 53 (2001), pp. 445–8.
108. O. Nathan and M. Fried The Nazi Economic System (London, 1944).
109. On textiles League of Nations World Economic Survey 1936/7 (Geneva, 1937)” p. 150; H. Häuser, Hitler against Germany: a Survey of Present-day Germany from the Inside (London, 1940) p. 109.
110. On the legal framework BA-B R3102/3602, A. Jessen ‘Die gesteuerte Wehrwirtschaft 1933–1939’, pp. 61–2. See too J. Stephenson ‘Propaganda, Autarky and the German Housewife’, in D. Welch (ed.) Nazi Propaganda (London, 1983), pp. 117–38; F. Grube and G. Richter Alltag im ‘Dritten Reich’: so lebten die Deutsche 1933–1945 (Berlin, 1992), pp. 169–71; W. Bayles Postmarked Berlin (London, 1992), pp. 40–41. in. Hessler, ‘Postwar Normalisation’, p. 448.
111. Hessler, ‘Postwar Normalisation’, p. 448.
112. A. Sommariva and G. Tullio German Macroeconomic History, 1880–1979 (London, 1987), p. 59; Hubbard, Soviet Money and Finance, pp. 111–13.
113. On noiseless fi nance L. Schwerin von Krosigk Stats bankrott: Finanzpolitik des Deutschen Reiches 1920–1945 (Göttingen, 1974), pp. 297–9; W. A. Boelcke Die Kosten von Hitlers Krieg (Paderborn, 1985), pp. 103–4. On increased saving see BA-B R7 XVI/22 O. Donner ‘Die Grenzen der Staatsverschuldung’.
114. Kravchenko, I Chose Freedom, p. 476; Thyssen, I Paid Hitler, pp. 47–9.
115. See for example J. Heyl ‘The Construction of the Westwall: an Example of National Socialist Policy-making’, Central European History, 14 (1981), pp. 71–4.
116. Kravchenko, I Chose Freedom, pp. 323–5.
117. Zumpe, Wirtschaft und Staat, pp. 341–2.
118. Kravchenko, I Chose Freedom, p. 328.
119. Tooze, Statistics and the German State, pp. 239–44, on problems of data collection; Harrison, Soviet Planning, pp. 26–7.
120. See for example Fitzpatrick, ‘Ordzhonikidze’s Takeover of Vesenkha’, pp. 158–67.
121. R. J. Overy Goering: the cIron Man’ (London, 1984), pp. 53–60, 62–8; on his special powers Reichsgesetzblatt, 1936, Part I, p. 887.
122. Munting, Economic Development, p. 105; Dunmore, Stalinist Command Economy, pp. 19–20; Temin, ‘Soviet and Nazi Planning’, p. 575; S. Fitzpatrick ‘Blat in Stalin’s Time’, in S. Lovell, A. Ledeneva and A. Rogachevskii (eds) Bribery and Blat in Russia: Negotiating Reciprocity from the Middle Ages to the 1990s (London, 2000), pp. 169–76.
123. D. R. Shearer Industry, State, and Society in Stalirfs Russia 1928–1934 (Ithaca, NY, 1996), pp. 235–6.
124. R. W. Davies ‘Making Economic Policy’, in Gregory, Behind the Faqade, p. 75.
125. See for example F. Bajohr Parvenüs und Profi teure. Korruption in der NS-Zeit (Frankfurt am Main, 2001).
126. Overy, War and Economy, pp. 14, 164–6.
127. T. Emessen (ed.) Aus Göring’s Schreibtisch: ein Dokumentenfund (Berlin, 1947), pp. 81–3.
128. Khlevniuk, In Stalin’s Shadow, pp. 51–2.
129. S. N. Frokopovicz Russlands Volkswirtschaft unter den Sowjets (Zurich, 1944), p. 2–57.
130. E. Belova ‘Economic Crime and Punishment’, in Gregory (ed.), Behind the Facade, pp. 145–52.
131. Y. Gorlizki ‘Rules, Incentives and Soviet Campaign Justice after World War IF, Europe – Asia Studies, 51 (1999), pp. 1247–52, 1260.
132. Filtzer, ‘Standard of Living’, p. 1027.
133. Gorlizki, ‘Rules, Incentives and Campaign Justice’, p. 1253.
134. Reichsgesetzblatt, 1936 Part I, p. 1015, ‘Gesetz gegen Wirtschaftssabotage’.
135. BA-B R26/II Anh./i H. Dichgans ‘Zur Geschichte des Reichskommissars für die Preisbildung’, pp. 4–6.
136. BA-B R7/2149, Otto Ohlendorf, ‘Grundsätze der nationalsozialistischen Wirtschaftspolitik’, p. 4. See too D. Majer, Grundlagen des nationalsozialistischen Rechtssystems (Stuttgart, 1987), pp. 152–3; H. Woll Die Wirtschaftslehre des deutschen Faschismus (Munich, 1988), pp. 92–6.
137. J. N. Hazard, I. Shapiro and P. B. Maggs (eds) The Soviet Legal System (New York, 1969), pp. 384–6.
138. A. Nove, An Economic History of the USSR (London, 1992).
139. W. E. Butler Soviet Law (London, 1988), pp. 180–85; J. R. Millar The Soviet Economic Experiment ed. S. Linz (Urbana, 1990), pp. 115–20.
140. Hazard etaL, Soviet Legal System, pp. 402–3; Butler, Soviet Law, p. 189.
141. G. Ambrosius Der Staat als Unternehmer: öffentliche Wirtschaft und Kapitalismus seit dem 19. Jahrhundert (Göttingen, 1984), pp. 64, 79; NA Microcopy T83, Roll 74, Economics Ministry memorandum ‘Der Zuwachs an staatlichen Unternehmungen in Privatrechtsform’.
142. NSDAP, Der Parteitag der Arbeit, pp. 36–8, Hitler’s speech to the party congress, 13 September 1937.
143. Thyssen, I Paid Hitler, p. 49.
144. A. Barkai From Boycott to Annihilation: the Economic Struggle of German Jews, 1933–1943 (Hannover, NJ, 1989); F. Bajohr ‘Arisierung’ in Hamburg: Die Verdrängung der jüdischen Unternehmer 1933–1945 (Hamburg, 1997).
145. A. Müller-Armack Wirtschaftslenkung und Marktwirtschaft (Hamburg, 1947).
146. G. Bordiugov ‘The Bolsheviks and the National Banner’, Russian Studies in History, 39 (2000), pp. 82–3, 89.