Between 1950 and 1952, several posters are published in order to improve knowledge about the use made in Austria of the US economic aid provided under the Marshall Plan.
Poster published in 1949 in order to inform the Austrian people of how the US economic aid provided under the Marshall Plan is being put to use in Austria.
In 1947, two years after the end of hostilities in Europe, the city centre of Stuttgart is still in ruins. By 1955, however, the town’s reconstruction has been completed, thanks, in large part, to the economic and financial aid given by the United States to Europe under the Marshall Plan.
‘Europa and the 1949 bull.' In 1949, taking inspiration from the myth of the abduction of the nymph Europa by Zeus in the form of a bull, cartoonist Mirko Szewczuk illustrates in his own inimitable fashion the importance of the economic aid supplied by the United States to Europe under the Marshall Plan.
In 1948, the city of West Berlin, severely damaged by the Allied bombings at the end of the Second World War, receives financial aid granted to the Federal Republic of Germany under the Marshall Plan.
‘Europe convalescent home — He’s getting better too quickly …’ On 9 November 1948, in connection with the aid granted by the United States (Dr Uncle Sam) for European economic reconstruction (the Marshall Plan), German cartoonist Ernst Maria Lang illustrates the fears of France (the young Marianne) and the United Kingdom (John Bull) at an overly prompt economic recovery of Germany (Michel). On the right, the Netherlands (a little Meisje) observes the scene.
From 1950, the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) uses the funds granted to it by the United States under the Marshall Plan for economic and financial aid to Europe in order to finance, in particular, the construction of 1 309 houses for German refugees from the Soviet occupation zone.
On 10 November 1949, German weekly Der Spiegel analyses the scope of the Marshall Plan for economic and financial aid to Europe against the backdrop of growing rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union.
On 11 November 1947, in connection with the Marshall Plan, the German daily newspaper Die Welt gives details of the aid granted by the United States to Europe.
In 1953, Franz Blücher, West German Minister for the Marshall Plan, assesses his Government's use of the material aid supplied by the United States in order to revive the economy of the Federal Republic of Germany.