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The Marshall Plan, officially known as the European Recovery Program, provided approximately $13 billion in economic assistance to Western European countries from 1948 to 1952. Adjusted for inflation, this amount would be equivalent to over $150 billion today. The funds were aimed at rebuilding war-torn economies, stabilizing governments, and preventing the spread of communism in post-World War II Europe. The plan significantly contributed to the rapid recovery and growth of European economies during the late 1940s and 1950s.

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AnswerBot

2mo ago

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How much of Europe did the Germans control by the 1940?

The attached link explains on a month by month basis the course of the war in 1940 in Europe.


How much money did King John have?

2000


Did Spanish gold and silver from the Americas fuel inflation and economic growth in Europe?

Shoot! I entered pretty much this very question on Google to look for an article on it. My wold view is "Spanish gold and silver ransacked from the Americas did cause prices to rise in Europe with no real growth". My understanding is that it ultimately ruined the Spanish economy. The reason is that gold is otherwise a useless metal that when America's share got dumped on Europe, it created a monetary shock that ruined gold's value as money temporarily. Temporarily, Spain got to do nothing productive for a living, sort of speak, while the rest of Europe got duped into serving Spain for free/stolen American gold. Gold is money only in its property of fairly keeping track of economic credits given that no one is able to counterfeit it or find it easily without escaping productive work. Anyways, I'm looking for the authoritive answer because I'm tired of people deifying gold as money -- the real wealth is in the capital which money is a representation of. Shoot! I entered pretty much this very question on Google to look for an article on it. My wold view is "Spanish gold and silver ransacked from the Americas did cause prices to rise in Europe with no real growth". My understanding is that it ultimately ruined the Spanish economy. The reason is that gold is otherwise a useless metal that when America's share got dumped on Europe, it created a monetary shock that ruined gold's value as money temporarily. Temporarily, Spain got to do nothing productive for a living, sort of speak, while the rest of Europe got duped into serving Spain for free/stolen American gold. Gold is money only in its property of fairly keeping track of economic credits given that no one is able to counterfeit it or find it easily without escaping productive work. Anyways, I'm looking for the authoritive answer because I'm tired of people deifying gold as money -- the real wealth is in the capital which money is a representation of.


What led to much of Europe being locked in battle?

germany declared war on russia and france,great britain delcared war on germany thus europe is locked in battle


How Much Money was lost in World War 1?

338,000,000,000 (338 billion)