Germany, 20 Years On: Goals Reached?
Editor's Note: The following is excerpted from RGE premium content. The full analysis, "Germany, 20 Years On: Goals Reached?," is available to paid clients.
When the Berlin Wall fell twenty
years ago, it began a process, which culminated in the reunification of Germany.
The merger between East and West Germany ended a four-decade division imposed
by the Soviet Union and its East German communist allies, a split literally
cemented into history during the 28-year life of the notorious Berlin Wall. The
Wall’s destruction led to an eruption of euphoria and optimism. With discredited
communists unable to put up resistance, West Germany’s Chancellor Helmut Kohl
and his democratic allies in the east promised a swift convergence between the
two regions. Expectations skyrocketed, yet the task was not a minor one. Differences
between the two Germanys were fundamental at the time, extending beyond
psychology or politics to basic economic realities. The post-war West German
state pursued social market democracy – the “Soziale Marktwirtschaft” -- engendering the famous
“Wirtschaftswunder” which catapulted Germany’s capitalist half into the league
of the richest countries in world. East Germany, however, suffered heavily
under Soviet occupation as entire factories were dismantled and transported to
the USSR, and even after the occupation period Soviet inspired central planning
quickly led to problems. By the early 1980s, the DDR’s economy had become an
economic laggard, depending heavily on subsidies from Moscow and the largesse
of its rival in the West, which during the 1970s had opened economic ties as
part of Chancellor Willy Brandt’s conciliatory Ostpolitik initiative.