The RMVP grew steadily. It began in 1933 with five departments and 350 employees. A first plan for the distribution of responsibilities dated 1 October 1933 listed seven departments: Administration and Law (I), Propaganda (II), Broadcasting (III), Press (IV), Film (V), Theater, Music and Art (VI) and Security (VII, subtitled "security against lies at home and abroad"). By 1939, 2,000 employees worked in 17 departments. From 1933 to 1941 the RMVP's budget increased from 14 to 187 million Reichsmarks. Reich Minister Goebbels was ultimately in charge of three state secretaries and the departments they headed: • State Secretary I –
Walther Funk (1933–1937),
Otto Dietrich (1937–1945): German press, foreign press, periodical press. • State Secretary II –
Karl Hanke (1937–1940),
Leopold Gutterer (1941–1944),
Werner Naumann (1944–1945): Budget, Law, Propaganda, Broadcasting, Film, Personnel, National Defense, Foreign Affairs, Theater, Music, Literature, Visual Arts • State Secretary III –
Hermann Esser (1935–1945): Tourism
Film department With the establishment of Department V (Film), the Propaganda Ministry became the most important body for the German film industry alongside the
Reich Chamber of Culture and the
Reich Film Chamber. Initially little changed in the formal structure of German film censorship after the founding of the RMVP. The inspection and review offices that had existed since 1920 (notably the central film inspection office) were incorporated into the RMVP's Film Department, which was headed by state secretary () Ernst Seeger, who had headed the Weimar Republic's
Reich Film Office in the Ministry of the Interior since 1919.
Fritz Hippler, director of the 1940 antisemitic Nazi propaganda film
The Eternal Jew, followed him in 1939 and then Hans Hinkel in April 1944. The department had five divisions: film and cinema law, film industry, film abroad, film newsreels, and film dramaturgy. In 1938 the German Film Academy at
Babelsberg, the first state-run German training center for film artists, was added as an additional department. The head of the film department also assumed responsibility for the production of certain feature-length documentaries and was in charge of the newsreel
Deutsche Wochenschau (
German Weekly Review). He supervised the completion of the newsreels and saw to it that they were favorably placed in cinema programs. ==Influence on the press, film and broadcasting==