As we’ve seen an increase in labor and labor productivity played a factor in the rebound of German fighter production in 1944. Labor would be a crucial constraint for the Third Reich throughout the war.
The table above is a summary of German labor and armed forces mobilization from the USSBS. The total civilian labor force was 39 million in 1939, with German males making up 62% of the civilian labor force at 24.4 million. As the war intensified the Wehrmact continued to mobilize men for the armed forces. The drain on labor for the war economy was dramatic. By Sep 1944 German males had dropped to 13.5 million making up only 37% of the total civilian labor for force.
The German war economy was already highly mobilized by 1939. From the early 1936 onward Germany dramatically ramped up for war. The Reich’s effort to rearm had stretched the labor pool thin. By 1938 the Labor Ministry reported an incredible unemployment rate of barely more than 1% of the total workforce. Of the 292,327 reported only 28,000 were deemed fully fit to work.
As the armed forces continued to mobilize men for war additional labor was needed to replace the outflow of men from the economy. Germany had already mobilized women for the workforce. In 1939 women made up 37% of the workforce. Comparatively Britain which was known to effectively mobilize women into the labor market during the same time period, women made up 25% of the total British labor pool. The total amount of women mobilized in the German economy was stable throughout the war.
Foreign Laborers in the ReichTo make up the increasing deficit of men in the labor force the Reich used foreign workers. Foreign laborers rose from 301,000 in 1939 to 7.5 million in 1944. Foreign laborers increased from <1% of the total German labor force to over 20% in just 4 years. Who were these foreign laborers? They consisted of voluntary and forced civilian workers from countries under the Reich’s occupation, prisoners of war and concentration camp laborers. Civilian labor exported from territories under German occupation was supplied by one of the largest coercive labor programs in history under Fritz Saukel and the GBA. Himmler and the SS provided laborers from concentration camps.
The numbers in USSBS table above for foreign laborers only represents the stock of laborers recorded available. It is only an accounting of inventory at a point in time. They don’t give an indication of the total number of foreign laborers mobilized and supplied to the German war economy. Recent studies shed light on this. The numbers mobilized are staggering.
The total foreign-labor force mobilized over 4 years is estimated to be 13.5 million made up of civilian laborers, POWs and concentration camp inmates. Of that total the German war economy consumed the lives of 2.5 million people, many of these literally worked to death producing aircraft and armaments for the Reich. Concentration camp laborers suffered the highest attrition of all foreign laborers with a survival rate of only 31%. The numbers are brutal but they also ignore a gap in the statistics for those unaccounted for between people exported from Eastern territories and those registered for work in Germany with rough estimates in the hundreds of thousands not accounted for.