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The European Recovery Program — Phase Two

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2009

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Extract

On June 5,1947, Secretary of State George C. Marshall delivered a brief address at a Harvard University commencement. A few sentences in the address were devoted to the problem of European recovery. These few sentences have had a profound effect, and it is difficult to measure the potentialities of events which they set in motion. Secretary Marshall spoke, as many before him had spoken, of “the visible destruction of cities, factories, mines, and railroads.” This was the story that had been told many times, the tragic story of bombed homes, smashed locomotives, shattered factories, blown bridges, and blocked canals. But he went on to point out that there was an even more serious destruction than this visible and easily understood physical destruction of war. More serious was the “dislocation of the entire fabric of European economy.” The rebuilding of the economic structure of Europe would take “a much longer time and greater effort than had been foreseen.”

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 1948

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References

1 For summary of the Paris meeting, see In-ternational Organization, II, p. 158–60. For text of the conference report, see Department of state Publication 2930, European Series 28.

2 For summaries of the work of these three organizations, see International Organization, I, P.178–81,378—80, 554; II, p.160.

3 Fort text of the Convention for European Economic Cooperation, Signed by teh sixteen countries on April 16,1948, see International Organtzation, II, p.420–6.

4 United States legislation authorizing the Enjopean Recovery Program is contaimed in the Ecominic Cooperation Act of 1948, Public Law 472, 80th Congress,2ndsession.