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Marshall Plan
The 1948–1952 program of American aid to postwar Europe — administered in part by Kindleberger as a State Department official — that became the <em>paradigmatic case</em> of hegemonic stability theory in practice.
The European Recovery Program, announced by Secretary of State George Marshall in June 1947 and implemented from 1948 through 1952, transferred approximately $13 billion (roughly $150 billion in current dollars) from the United States to Western European economies devastated by the war. Charles Kindleberger served as a State Department official responsible for German and Austrian economic affairs during the program's development. The experience shaped his subsequent academic work on international economic cooperation and became the paradigmatic case of his hegemonic stability theory — a demonstration that international stability could be produced by a dominant power willing to absorb disproportionate costs.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The Marshall Plan's success, in Kindleberger's analysis, was not primarily the magnitude of the transfers but their institutional character. The program required recipient nations to coordinate among themselves through the Organisation for European Economic Co-operation, which became the OECD. It required matching contributions and economic policy reforms. It built institutional infrastructure — the European Payments Union, the foundations