Textile Law

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The Textile Stock Act of December 6, 1935 made it possible to influence the domestic German trade in textile materials, and subsequently served u. a. to hinder and ultimately exclude Jewish producers and traders in economic life.

implementation

The instrument used was the fixing of prices to March 1934 for products of the same quality, quantity and properties. In order to enable comparison, calculation methods were specified.

This made the import of raw materials considerably more difficult in order to promote the replacement of rayon staple within the framework of the four-year plan and to keep imports to a minimum.

literature

  • Christian Stöhr: The “stop regulation”. Ordinance on the prohibition of price increases of November 26, 1936 together with the implementing ordinance and explanations / The Textile Stock Act of December 6, 1935 with implementing ordinances and declarations / The ordinance on prices for foreign goods of September 22, 1934 with explanations / The other applicable price regulations for German Textile industry / designation regulations etc. Completed on May 21, 1937. (Legislation for the textile industry). Textil-Verlag, Berlin, 1937., 315 pages
  • Eberhard Weller: The stretching of work in the textile industry according to the textile law of December 6, 1935, taking into account the first and second implementing ordinances. Inaugural dissertation …, Buchdruckerei K. Bölzle, 1936, 55 pages

Individual evidence

  1. "Labor Battle", "Aryanization", "Work Slaves". Aspects of economic life in Mainz during the National Socialist era, page 7 , Hedwig Brüchert (PDF; 145 kB), accessed on December 28, 2011
  2. Internet Archive , accessed December 28, 2011
  3. Robert Strötgen: Work and industrial relations in Leipzig textile factories between 1925 and 1945 (PDF; 1.1 MB), Master's thesis , page 120, (Robert Strötgen is wrong, since the law has existed since December 6, 1935), accessed again on 3 . November 2012