asl3d
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Britain's financial resources. Britain's financial, industrial and human resources became much more rapidly depleted than her major allies (and some enemies) and her capabilities in fighting the three major Axis powers simultaneously were dangerously over-stretched. Britain failed to keep up with her emerging overseas economic rivals, investing money abroad (especially in the Americas) rather than in her own increasingly outclassed industries. Whereas Britain had been the world's lead creditor in 1939, in the post-war period it took almost 40 years for the UK economy to recover. For example, , whereas the production of the Rolls Royce Meteor tank engine needed 300 machine tools, the US Ford V8 tank engine derived from it needed just 18. Despite frantic rearmament after the Munich crisis, the war found Britain unprepared. Not surprisingly, Britain was slowly bled dry industrially as well as financially; as an example, even railway lines in India were torn up for re-use in North Africa to enhance logistical capabilities there, because they could not be supplied from the UK, or the British paratroops carried no second, reserve, parachute until 1950 or, in Normandy, the American GI needed 30 lbs of supplies per day, while 'Tommy' managed on 20 lbs, and the German quota sometimes fell to as little as 4 lbs. Up to the Great War, this underlying weak-ness did not surface for the Empire paid for all wars and also propped up the British economy, but the spiralling cost of twentieth century additional warfare finally caught Britain out. Small wonder then that she was financially bankrupt long before Pearl Harbour. The conflict cost Britain 25% of her national wealth. The Empire produced 80% of its weapons requirements—including supplies to the USA. The British Empire mobilised about 9 million men, a figure never reached by the USA, and to equal the Australian contribution alone on a per capita basis the USA would have need to mobilise 16 million men. In the Pacific 80% of the allied land forces were actually Australian. In Burma, the British and Commonwealth proportion of the ground troops (roughly 16.98% African, 64.15% Indian and 18.86% British) was 91.2% in April 1944 compared to 7.8% Chinese and 0.9% US, and in April 1945 was still 87.72%, compared to 10.52% Chinese and 1.75% US.
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