Would Demobilization destroy the Nazi post-war economy

With the war over in a '41 - '42 Operation Barbarossa victory scenario (Stalin and the Politburo all die of food poisoning before DOW on USA),
how would the over heated and extremely overextended Germany economy fair with demobilization?

If im not mistaken, by 1939, armaments spending made up close to 50% of GDP. With that industries effectively cut down due to lack of need, as well as new competition provided by Generalplan Ost's Slavic slave force, it seems to me the German economy could summerilly implode.

Thoughts?
 

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With the war over in a '41 - '42 Operation Barbarossa victory scenario (Stalin and the Politburo all die of food poisoning before DOW on USA),
how would the over heated and extremely overextended Germany economy fair with demobilization?

If im not mistaken, by 1939, armaments spending made up close to 50% of GDP. With that industries effectively cut down due to lack of need, as well as new competition provided by Generalplan Ost's Slavic slave force, it seems to me the German economy could summerilly implode.

Thoughts?
A lot of military related equipment could be still used to for rebuilding/integrating conquered territories, so there would be continuing contracts. Likely the war would continue past 1941 though so that wouldn't be a point where demobilization would come. But assuming hypothetically the war was totally over by 1942 there would be major economic dislocation from converting industry over to civilian use, though continuing contracts for some wartime production would continue, so it wouldn't be as if the entire economy would cease all at once. Just as in the US after WW2 it took years to reorient the economy (my grandparents have a lot of stories about how hard it was to find work, housing, and consumer goods even as late as 1948 in the US) it would take time, but without US 1945 levels of mobilization by 1942 the demilitarization of the economy would likely less drastic and quicker. Likely a non-blockaded, German dominated Europe would use conquered nations to help bridge the economy gap to keep up civilian supplies in Germany as the economy reorients. There would not be an economic collapse, but there would be some months of lowered profits and limited work that the government and industry will just have to eat. Part of that though would be limited by the 'firing' of slave labor in industry, while the German army would take time to demobilize, so the pain for workers would be somewhat limited; likely the first people let off the hook would be foreign contract labor (there were still foreign workers voluntarily working in Germany even in 1941-42 due to the level of pay, work conditions, and food supplies compared to their home countries), enemy PoWs working in force conditions, and occupied civilians forced into labor in Germany. As industry switches over and is able to absorb more labor, then German men being demobilized would get the first jobs. Likely the situation wouldn't be nearly as bad as demobilization pre-war, as Germany has occupied Europe to help offset the cost and economic dislocation.
 
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