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  2. While $19.4 billion was allocated for capital costs in the Marshall Plan, the Technical Assistance Program only required $300 million. Only one-third of that $300 million cost was paid by the United States.

    • Europe After World War II
    • Truman Approves The Marshall Plan
    • Cold War
    • Impact of The Marshall Plan
    • Political Legacy of The Marshall Plan
    • Sources

    Post-war Europe was in dire straits: Millions of its citizens had been killed or seriously wounded in World War II, and in related atrocities such as the Holocaust. Many cities—including the industrial and cultural centers of London, Dresden, Berlin, Cologne, Liverpool, Birmingham and Hamburg—had been partly or wholly destroyed. Reports provided to...

    President Harry Trumansigned the Marshall Plan on April 3, 1948, and aid was distributed to 16 European nations, including Britain, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, West Germany and Norway. To highlight the significance of America’s largesse, the billions committed in aid effectively amounted to a generous 5 percent of U.S. gross domestic product ...

    In addition to economic redevelopment, one of the stated goals of the Marshall Plan was to halt the spread of communism on the European continent. Implementation of the Marshall Plan has been cited as the beginning of the Cold Warbetween the United States, its European allies and the Soviet Union, which had effectively taken control of much of cent...

    Interestingly, in the decades since its implementation, the true economic benefit of the Marshall Plan has been the subject of much debate. Indeed, reports at the time suggest that, by the time the plan took effect, Western Europe was already well on the road to recovery. And, despite the significant investment on the part of the United States, the...

    Politically, however, the legacy of the Marshall Plan arguably tells a different story. Given the refusal to participate on the part of the so-called Eastern Bloc of Soviet states, the initiative certainly reinforced divisions that were already beginning to take root on the continent. It’s worth noting, too, that the Central Intelligence Agency (CI...

    Department of State. Office of the Historian. Marshall Plan, 1948. History.state.gov. The Marshall Plan. The George C. Marshall Foundation. Truman and the Marshall Plan. Harry S. Truman Library and Museum.

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  3. The Marshall Plan would run for four years and cost more than $US13 billion. This aid not only facilitated the recovery of Europe’s national economies, it had obvious advantages for the United States.

  4. From July 1945 through December of 1947, the $400 million dedicated to supporting anti-communist forces under the Truman Doctrine was part of approximately $11 billion in aid to Europe, much of which was intended for more immediate humanitarian relief from social, economic, and political challenges to Europe, rather than longterm plans for stabi...

    • Marshallv
  5. Marshall Plan, (1948–51)U.S.-sponsored program to provide economic aid to European countries after World War II. The idea of a European self-help plan financed by the U.S. was proposed by George Marshall in 1947 and was authorized by Congress as the European Recovery Program. It provided almost $13 billion in grants and loans to 17 countries ...

  6. Oct 30, 1997 · The Marshall Plan and other forms of foreign assistance between them cost the United States $17.6 billion (or $120 billion in current value for the Marshall Plan alone)--as we said, the largest voluntary transfer of resources in history.

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