Herbert Gross

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Person.png Herbert Gross WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(propagandist, economist)
Herbert Gross.png
Gross in 1967 (left) and 1957 (right)
Born1907
Died1976 (Age 69)
NationalityGerman
Writer for the Nazi magazine Das Reich who in 1946 founded the Handelsblatt. One of the first to fundamentally deal with public relations on a programmatic level in post-war West Germany. Attended the 3rd and 4th Bilderbergs.

Herbert Gross was a German economist and PR-expert who attended the 1955 September and 1956 Bilderberg. His 1951 Moderne Meinungspflege (Modern Opinion Management) was one of the first books to fundamentally deal with public relations on a programmatic level in Germany after the Second World War. He also gave instructions for business practice, including partnerships between management and unions.[1][2]

Handelsblatt

The first issue of the business newspaper Handelsblatt was published in Düsseldorf on May 16, 1946. In the beginning, however, the business newspaper had to struggle with problems: its editor, the journalist Herbert Groß, lost his license, which had been granted by the British military authorities, after just a few months.[3]

At the beginning of 1947, the 44-year-old Friedrich Vogel took over the license for the Handelsblatt from Gross, a journalist and interpreter with the British military government. It is unclear whether Gross had to give up his license because of allegations that he had engaged in industrial espionage during his time as a correspondent in the USA or because it became known that he had written for years for the Nazi magazine Das Reich.[4]

Ideas

Gross published books also during the war, like this 1942 edition of America's Economy

Gross can be characterized as an expert in economics. PR was just one topic among many for him.[1]

Gross was impressed by the stability of US society and the loyalty of its population to entrepreneurship across social classes. He saw an important reason for this in many years of successful public relations. Gross developed his ideal of communication by orienting himself to the American understanding of public relations - albeit in a supposed original or pure form and not as a fashionable "varnish". He was critical of European-German traditions of conflicting interests and in particular of the role of the (social)state and corporative structures. However, he emphasized that American conditions could not be transferred 1:1 to post-war West Germany.[1]

Gross himself saw the economic and social model of the USA as a model for the new West Germany after the Second World War. His positioning between a market liberal economy and social market economy remained vague.


The Occident took a dangerous path when it left the social to non-entrepreneurial authorities. In the course of its transformation into a welfare state, the state has significantly weakened the ability of the corporate economy to identify all interests with their ability to function. The company is the cell of performance and thus also bears the social expenses, just as the farm bears the cost of supporting its old.[5]


 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Bilderberg/1955 September23 September 195525 September 1955Germany
Bavaria
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
The third Bilderberg, in West Germany. The subject of a report by Der Spiegel which inspired a heavy blackout of subsequent meetings.
Bilderberg/195611 May 195613 May 1956Denmark
Fredensborg
The 4th Bilderberg meeting, with 147 guests, in contrast to the generally smaller meetings of the 1950s. Has two Bilderberg meetings in the years before and after
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References