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Appendix 16
Estimate of the value of German national property
within the Czechoslovak Republic
A Memorandum concerning the national property left behind by the Sudeten
Germans was submitted to the Bavarian Prime Minister Dr. Ehard by the
Association for the Protection of Sudeten German Interests in 1947. This
Memorandum was assembled by experts at the request of the Bavarian State
Chancellery, of the State Refugee Organization and of the German Office for
Peace Problems in Stuttgart.
This Memorandum is mainly based on Czechoslovak sources (Statistical
Annual Chronicle of the Czechoslovak Republic, Prague, 1938) and on the
statistical data contained in German and Czech economic publications, as well as
on balances and bases for a valuation, calculated by experts from the various
economic branches.
Two different dates have been taken as basis for its elaboration, namely
September 30th, 1938, that is one day before the transfer of Sudeten German
territories to the German Reich, and May 8th, 1945, the day of Germany's
capitulation. The increase in national property value occurring between these two
dates may be traced back in the first place to the higher valuation of landed
property in Germany, in the second place to the intensification of production and
increased output as a result of higher wages.
It was calculated for both dates as follows:
on September 30th, 1938: |
$13.44 billion ($13,440,000,000) |
on May 8th, 1945: |
$19.44 billion ($19,440,000,000) |
(The dollar values are based on the exchange value of the Reichsmark in
1938.)
These figures are rendered all the more significant by the comparison of the
Sudeten German population with the total population of the Czechoslovak
Republic.
According to the census of 1930 there were 3.23 million Sudeten Germans among
the 14,729,586 residents in Czechoslovakia (=22.3%). They were therefore not a
"minority", but an integral part of the population in Czechoslovakia. In the
provinces Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia, which were the only ones of economic
importance, there were 3.08 million Germans to 7.59 million Czechs, the
Germans thus representing more than one third of the entire population of these
provinces. It is also of vital significance that in the Czechoslovak economy the
Sudeten Germans had a higher percentage of persons active in industry. Of every
100 Germans practicing a profession, 54 persons were active in industry and
commerce. This is a higher percentage than in any other country in the world (the
comparative figures are: 49 in Scotland, 48 in England and Wales, 54 in
Switzerland, 48 in Belgium and 40 in Germany proper). According to the figures
given by the Czech economist Hajda, published in the journal
Prítomnost in 1927, the Germans controlled 66% of
the Czechoslovak coal-mining, 80% of
the lignite-mining, 70% of the foundries and steel works, 90% of
the textile-machinery factories, 80% of the cement works, 90% of the industry of
musical instruments, 80% of the artificial silk industry, 100% of the silk factories,
100% of the trimmings industry, 70% of the chemical industry, 90% of the
porcelain factories, 85% of the glass works and 89% of the entire textile
industry.
In land, the losses of the Sudeten Germans amounted to 1,150,000 hectares of
forest (1 hectare = 2.47 acres) and 1,650,000 hectares of farm land. The amount
of the social product for which the Sudeten Germans were responsible may be
deduced from these figures.
A closer examination of the basic figures of Sudeten German national property
gives the following detailed valuations in the various branches of the
economy.
|
Value in millions of dollars |
|
30. 9. 1938 |
8. 5. 1945 |
Agriculture and Forestry |
3,220.73 |
4,822.00 |
Industry |
2,393.38 |
3,824.10 |
Commerce |
308.58 |
308.58 |
Handicrafts |
600.00 |
600.00 |
Hotels, inns, restaurants, health resorts and spas |
642.84 |
734.00 |
Banks |
640.00 |
3,600.00 |
Insurance companies |
297.64 |
3,323.00 |
Cinemas |
16.00 |
16.00 |
Free professions |
6.76 |
8.80 |
Private property (real estate) |
3,956.00 |
3,956.00 |
Property of the public Provincial Government and the State |
3,363.60 |
1,243.20 |
This break-down does not take into consideration the following:
· a considerable part of the German share of the property of the
Czechoslovak Government and the provincial administrations;
· a considerable part of the mineral wealth which, for want of adequate
statistical data, could only be estimated in part;
· collections of works of art, libraries and other cultural assets;
· the paper currency in circulation;
· the value of the metal currency and also the cover of
the bank-notes, consisting of gold and foreign currency;
· the labor output of those Sudeten Germans who had been forced to
work without payment in pits, internment camps, for Czech contractors and
Czech farmers, likely amounting to several billion Czech crowns.
The figures given above therefore represent a minimum and not a maximum
value. They are a mere inventory of the properties available and do not take into
account incalculable values of tradition, of a culture which is hundreds of years
old, of education, of foreign relations, of
the world-wide reputation of firms or business branches (e.g. the spas of
Karlsbad, Franzensbad, Marienbad), of
the so-called "free property" and all those creative powers which set in motion
the production of the goods listed above. They do not take into account the great
loss of those expellees who, unable to practice their professions, will be subjected
to a diminution of their productive capacity.
The Memorandum is of importance for the purposes of Germany's
"Lastenausgleich" (a partial compensation for the German refugees
forcibly expelled from the Eastern countries, as laid down in the Potsdam
Agreement) as well as in relation to the coming negotiations for a peace treaty.
The third law concerning the new order of monetary matters (finances) No. 63,
§ 29 expressly refers to the necessity that the "Lastenausgleich",
carried out by German authorities, should take into consideration "especially
losses which had been caused by Law No. 5 of the Allied Control Commission
and by drawings on behalf of reparations". Undoubtedly this interpretation would
include the national property of those Germans who had been expelled from their
former homeland, and who have paid in advance a considerable part of the
German war reparations by surrendering their entire property.
Documents on the Expulsion of the Sudeten
Germans
Survivors speak out
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