Germany Divided
The shocking fall of communism in Eastern
and Central Europe in the late
eighties was remarkable for both its rapidity
and its scope. None more than for
East and West Germany. "The unification
of Germany has been one of the most
significant and moving events of the 20th
century. Yet the euphoria of those
heady days in autumn 1989, when the world
watched in rapt attention as the
Berlin Wall came tumbling down, has
since fizzled. The process has proven to be
far more painful than (then)
Chancellor Helmut Kohl had promised Germans in 1990
on the eve of the first
all-German elections since the Nazi’s rise to
power."(Ireland, 541) This
resulted from the underestimation that was placed
on integrating the
democratic system of government and free-market economy of
West Germany
with the communist foundation of East Germany. The shift from
communism took
a whole new context in Germany. The peoples involved were not
looking to
affect a narrow set of policy reforms; indeed, what was at stake was
a
hyper-radical shift from the long-held communist ideology to a
western
blueprint for governmental and economic policy development. According
to
theories of modernization, higher levels of socioeconomic
achievement
facilitates an increase in open competition and, ultimately,
assists in the
establishment of democracy. The problem inherent in this type
of monumental
change is that, according to Helga A. Welsh, " the collapse of
authoritarian
rule has released national, ethnic, religious, and cultural
conflicts which
cannot be solved by purely economic policies"(27). Generally
it has been
theorized that the most effective fashion in which to remedy
these many
difficulties is by drafting a constitution. But, what seems to be
clear in
Germany is the unsatisfactory ability of a constitution to
resolve the problems
of nationalism and ethnic differences. Germany’s current
situation gives
validity to the statement that " what works in theory doesn’t
necessarily
work in practice." This is because the economic advancements that
were
anticipated to bring prosperity to East Germany didn’t occur as planned.
It
was assumed that the integration of the economies would be a difficult
but
attainable goal because West Germany was one of the world’s most
productive
and prosperous economies. The last ten years have shown that this
was not the
case. Due to East Germany’s longtime adherence to communist
policies, it faced
great complexity in making the transition to a pluralist
system as well as a
market economy. As Preuss posits these problems were
threefold: The genuine
economic devastations wrought by the communist
regimes, the transformation of
the social and economic classes of the command
economy and , finally the
creation of a constitutional structure for
political entities that lack the
undisputed integrity of a nation state (48).
The failure of the economic
integration is at the root of the ills that have
plagued the two countries since
unification. In regards to the economic
aspects of unification, some major
problems exist in the transition to a
free-market economy. First, and probably
the most significant factor is the
epidemic of unemployment that has infected
East Germany. Prior to
unification slightly over half of East Germany’s 16
million people were
employed and this figure has been steadily declining since
1989.
Currently, "the east’s unemployment rate of more than 17% is double
that of
the west’s (Aaland, r12). In a market economy these grim statistics
breed
frustration and discontent among the populace. Another dilemma
presenting
itself to Germany is the enormous expense of upgrading the
dilapidated
infrastructure in the east. The east is decades behind
technologically and
hundreds of millions of dollars have been required to
improve the roads,
railroads, telecommunications, public services, postal
service, and most
importantly educational system. Along with this is the
deplorable environmental
conditions that were left by the old communist
regime. These necessary
conditions must be renovated before funding can
stimulate the economy and is an
important factor in the east’s current
economic nightmare. One other important
issue that has contributed to the
east’s depression is the economic policy of
the privatizing of state
property. This is a sensitive subject in any
country’s transition from a
command economy. For one, a system of procedures
must be adopted simply to
transfer such large amounts of property to private
citizens. Also, there must
be mechanisms put in place to both protect new owners
form claims of previous
owners and to satisfy former owner without alienating
possible future
investors. The problem arises in that private property laws do
not always
coincide with the fair concept of restitution. As Petra Bauer-Kaase
states,
"East Germans still have difficulties in adjusting to a political
system
where individuals have a great deal of responsibility for there own
life"
(307). The former East Germans look upon this issue with contempt,
because it
is the Westerners who have control over the rules, as well as the
enforcement
of those rules. This is merely one of a multitude of instances where
this
mistrust between the sides manifests itself. The failure in the economic
and
political integration has been the catalyst for numerous other social
ills.
The main being a backlash of violence against ethnic groups and a
rise in right
wing political groups that support this behavior. Many believe
that the economic
effects of unification, particularly the increase in
unemployment, is causing
Germans and foreigners to compete for jobs,
housing, and other scarce
commodities, and in turn generating resentment
among the German citizens. As,
Patrick Ireland adds," high unemployment
and uncertainty about job prospects
during the transformation of a command
economy into a market economy are seen as
having produced disorientation and
rootless ness among vulnerable people in the
east...Grievances become
politicized, with right-wing extremists mobilizing
support and winning
sympathy from the public. Existing social divisions widen,
and those groups
blamed for the perceived problems become favored targets...Thus
East
Germans, some of whom believed that they were competing with foreign
contract
laborers for consumer goods and other resources before unification,
began to
feel seriously deprived compared to their wealthy western neighbors
after
1989. It became easier to make scapegoats of foreigners"(544). This rise
in
racism and ethnic violence can be directly attributed to the ongoing
economic
saga that the east is experiencing. They envy their western
neighbors but feel
turn their cheek because of the strong traditional sense
of nationalism. So
their disappointment is taken out on any one who is not
German. As Patrick
Ireland writes the east Germans," insecure and unsure
of their role in a
multicultural society, fear becoming permanent
second-class citizens in united
Germany. Foreigners have become the
"whipping boy", the scapegoat for all
the frustrations of the past, the
disillusionment of the present, and the fears
of the future"(545). It seems
that much more than the economies are diverging
between the opposite sides of
Germany. Although there are no really significant
conflicts between Germans,
the attitudes of the two sides are going in opposite
directions. The Wall
Street Journal reported that a German study showed that
within the next five
years westerners believed that their lives would improve
while easterners
fear it worsening. Also westerners were more satisfied with
their careers,
finances, and health while the easterner’s were happier than
their
counterparts when it came to their families, marriages, and
children.
Also, Dagmar Aaland reports that a majority of the easterner’s
disappointments
and pessimistic attitudes stem "from joblessness and
‘unrealistic
expectations’ of the time needed to catch up with the
west"(r12). While
unification had occurred theoretically, in reality the
Germany today is one of a
de facto separate-but-equal citizenship. There is
no denying that there have
been many problems associated with the unification
of East and West Germany.
From the miserable failure of the
implementation of a free-market to the social
tribulations that evolved; .the
transition from a communist state to a liberal
democracy is a very
challenging one, and there is no real way to predict how the
German
experience will turn out. As Preuss writes, " The transition from
an
authoritarian political regime and its concomitant command economy to a
liberal
democracy and a capitalist economy is as unprecedented as the
short-term
integration of two extremely different societies into one
state"(57). In other
words, the unification of Germany is one of the most
complex and unparalleled
historical events, on a social and economic level,
since the unification of
Germany.
Bibliography
"A Nation
Still Divided", The Wall Street Journal. 27 Sept. 1999. p.r12
& r18.
Bauer-Kaase, Petra. "Germany in Transition: the Challenge of Coping
with
Unification.". German Unification: Processes and Outcomes. M.
Donald
Hancock and Helga A. Welsch, eds. Boulder: Westview, 1994. 285-311
Ireland,
Patrick. "Socialism, Unification Policy and the Rise of Racism
In Eastern
Germany". International Migration Review. Fall 1997. p. 541-68
Preuss, Ulrich
K. "German Unification: Political and Constitutional
Aspects." United
Germany and the New Europe. Heinz D. Kurz, ed.
Brookfield: Elgar, 1993 p.47-58
Welsh, Helga A. "The Collapse of
Communism in Eastern Europe and the GDR:
Evolution, Revolution, and
Diffusion." German Unification: Processes and
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and Helga A Welsh, eds. Boulder: Westview, 1994.
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