In the first English-language biography of one of the most
important figures in postwar German history, Alfred C. Mierzejewski
examines the life and service of Ludwig Erhard (1897-1977), West
Germany's first minister of economics and second chancellor. Erhard
liberalized the German economy in 1948 and is generally considered
the father of West Germany's "economic miracle--the period of
extraordinary growth in jobs and improvement in the standard of
living in the 1950s that helped stabilize Germany's first
successful democracy.
While recent scholarship has dismissed Erhard's influence on
Germany's economic recovery, Mierzejewski returns to little-cited
German analyses and Erhard's own record and concludes that Allied
currency reform and Erhard's liberalization of the economy were
crucial triggers for Germany's unprecedented economic boom.
Mierzejewski provides insight into Erhard's policies, his ideas,
his character, and his relationships with Konrad Adenauer and
Charles de Gaulle. By offering a fresh account of Erhard's career
as a leader in postwar West Germany, Mierzejewski provides a deeper
understanding of Germany's economy as well as its democracy.