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- Ludwig Erhard - Wikipedia
Ludwig Wilhelm Erhard (German: [ˈluːtvɪç ˈʔeːɐ̯haʁt]; 4 February 1897 – 5 May 1977) was a German politician and economist who served as the second chancellor of West Germany from 1963 until 1966
- Ludwig Erhard | Economic Miracle, Social Market Chancellor . . .
Ludwig Erhard (born February 4, 1897, Fürth, Germany—died May 5, 1977, Bonn, West Germany) was an economist and statesman who, as economics minister (1949–63), was the chief architect of West Germany’s post-World War II economic recovery He served as German chancellor from 1963 to 1966
- Ludwig Erhard: The Federal Chancellor of the economic miracle | Federal . . .
Ludwig Erhard (CDU) was Minister of Economics during Konrad Adenauer’s term in office (1949–1963) His name is linked to the introduction of the Deutschmark (D-Mark) in 1948 (called the “currency reform”) Erhard is regarded as the father of the social market economy
- Ludwig Erhard
Minister of Economic Affairs (1949 – 1963) Ludwig Erhard, the man with the cigar, is the “father of the German economic miracle” He sat in the German Bundestag for the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) for a total of 28 years, from 1949 to 1977
- Ludwig Erhard: architect of Germanys economic miracle | Meer
Today, Erhard is considered the main architect behind West Germany’s Wirtschaftswunder (German for “economic miracle”) and the father of the social market economy
- Ludwig Erhard - Geschichte der CDU - Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung
As a founder of the ‘social market economy’, Ludwig Erhard is one of the outstanding liberal-democratic reformers of the twentieth century With the currency and economic reform of 1948, he laid the foundations of the economic and social order of the Federal Republic
- Ludwig Erhard: A Biography | University of North Texas
Erhard liberalized the German economy in 1948 and is generally considered the father of West Germany's "economic miracle"--a period of extraordinary growth in jobs and salaries in the 1950s that helped stabilize Germany's first successful democracy
- Ludwig Erhard, Prosperity for All (1957) | German History in Documents . . .
To achieve “prosperity for all,” Erhard pinned his hopes on economic growth through private initiative and state-controlled competition rather than struggles over a different distribution of the existing wealth
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