Episode details

Available for over a year
The story of World War Two is usually told in terms of heroism on the battlefield, but perhaps the most important struggle was the economic battle. Across the world countries were fighting to feed their populations, maximise production from their factories and fund their armies. To mark the 80th anniversary of the start of World War Two, economist Duncan Weldon examines how the economies of the European powers, the United Kingdom, Germany, France and the Soviet Union, set the scene for the conduct of the war in 1939 and 1940 and how the economies of Japan and China made war in Asia inevitable. In interviews with renowned historians including Patricia Clavin, Naoko Shimazu, David Edgerton, Rana Mitter and Adam Tooze, Weldon discovers how the powers produced the weapons and mobilised the soldiers that fought, how they secured the oil for tanks and planes, how they fed their populations, created a workforce and how a lack of resources dictated the path of war.
Programme Website