OFFICIAL NAME:
Federal Republic of Germany
Geography
Area: 357,000 sq. km. (137,821 sq. mi.); about the size of
Montana.
Cities: Capital--Berlin (population about 3.4
million). Other cities--Hamburg (1.7 million), Munich
(1.2 million), Cologne (964,000), Frankfurt (644,000), Essen
(603,000), Dortmund (592,000), Stuttgart (582,000),
Dusseldorf (568,000), Bremen (543,000), Hanover (516,000).
Terrain: Low plain in the north; high plains, hills, and
basins in the center and east; mountainous alpine region in
the south.
Climate: Temperate; cooler and rainier than much of the
United States.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--German(s).
Population (2001 est.): 83 million.
Ethnic groups: Primarily German; Danish minority in the
north, Sorbian (Slavic) minority in the east; 7.3 million
foreign residents.
Religions: Protestants (27.9 million) slightly outnumber
Roman Catholics (27.3 million); approximately 3.2 million
Muslims.
Language: German.
Education: Years compulsory--10; attendance--100%;
literacy--99%.
Health: Infant mortality rate (1998 est.)--5.0/1,000;
life expectancy (1999 est.)--women 80 years, men 74
years.
Persons employed (2001 avg.): 38.8 million; unemployed (2001
avg.): 3.9 million--9.1% of labor force.
Government
Type: Federal republic.
Founded: 1949 (Basic Law, i.e., Constitution, promulgated on
May 23, 1949). On October 3, 1990, the Federal Republic of
Germany and the German Democratic Republic unified in
accordance with Article 23 of the F.R.G. Basic Law.
Branches: Executive--president (titular chief of
state), chancellor (executive head of government);
legislative--bicameral parliament; judicial--independent,
Federal Constitutional Court.
Administrative divisions: 16 Laender (states).
Major political parties: Social Democratic Party (SPD);
Christian Democratic Union (CDU); Christian Social Union (CSU);
Alliance 90/Greens; Free Democratic Party (FDP); Party of
Democratic Socialism (PDS).
Suffrage: Universal at 18.
Economy
GDP (2001): $1.8 trillion.
Annual growth rate (2001): 0.6%; (2003 est.): 0.5%.
Per capita income: $22,900.
Inflation rate (consumer prices, 2001): 2.5%.
Natural resources: Iron, hard coal, lignite, potash, natural
gas.
Agriculture (accounts for 1% of GDP): Products--corn,
wheat, potatoes, sugar, beets, barley, hops, viticulture,
forestry, fisheries.
Industry (34% of GDP): Types--iron and steel, coal,
chemicals, electrical products, ships, vehicles,
construction.
Trade (2001): Exports--$628 billion: chemicals, motor
vehicles, iron and steel products, manufactured goods,
electrical products. Major markets--France, U.S., and
U.K. Imports--$594 billion: food, petroleum products,
manufactured goods, electrical products, motor vehicles,
apparel. Major suppliers--France, U.S., Netherlands.
PEOPLE
Most inhabitants of Germany are ethnic German. There are,
however, more than 7 million foreign residents, including
asylees, guest workers, and their dependents. Germany is a
prime destination for political and economic refugees from
many developing countries. An ethnic Danish minority lives
in the north, and a small Slavic minority known as the Sorbs
lives in eastern Germany.
Germany has one of the world's
highest levels of education, technological development, and
economic productivity. Since the end of World War II, the
number of youths entering universities has more than
tripled, and the trade and technical schools of the Federal
Republic of Germany (F.R.G.) are among the world's best.
With a per capita income level of more than $22,900, Germany
is a broadly middle class society. A generous social welfare
system provides for universal medical care, unemployment
compensation, and other social needs. Millions of Germans
travel abroad each year.
With unification on October 3,
1990, Germany began the major task of bringing the standard
of living of Germans in the former German Democratic
Republic (G.D.R.) up to that of western Germany. This has
been a lengthy and difficult process due to the relative
inefficiency of industrial enterprises in the former G.D.R.,
difficulties in resolving property ownership in eastern
Germany, and the inadequate infrastructure and environmental
damage that resulted from years of mismanagement under
communist rule.
Economic uncertainty in eastern
Germany is often cited as one factor contributing to
extremist violence, primarily from the political right.
Confusion about the causes of the current hardships and a
need to place blame has found expression in harassment and
violence by some Germans directed toward foreigners,
particularly non-Europeans. The vast majority of Germans
condemn such violence.
HISTORY
The rise of Prussian power in the 19th century, supported by
growing German nationalism, eventually ended in the
formation of the German empire in 1871 under the
chancellorship of Otto von Bismarck. Political parties
developed during the empire, and Bismarck was credited with
passing the most advanced social welfare legislation of the
age.
However, Emperor William II's
dynamic expansion of military power contributed to tensions
on the continent. The fragile European balance of power,
which Bismarck had helped to create, broke down in 1914.
World War I and its aftermath, including the Treaty of
Versailles, ended the German Empire.
Fascism's Rise and Defeat
The postwar Weimar Republic (1919-33) was a peaceful,
liberal democratic regime. This government was severely
handicapped and eventually doomed by economic problems and
the rise of the political extremes. The hyperinflation of
1923, the world depression that began in 1929, and the
social unrest stemming from resentment toward the conditions
of the Versailles Treaty worked to destroy the Weimar
government.
The National Socialist (Nazi)
Party, led by Adolf Hitler, stressed nationalist and racist
themes while promising to put the unemployed back to work.
The party blamed many of Germany's ills on the alleged
influence of Jewish and non-German ethnic groups. The party
also gained support in response to fears of growing
communist strength. In the 1932 elections, the Nazis won a
third of the vote. In a fragmented party structure, this
gave the Nazis a powerful parliamentary caucus, and Hitler
was asked to form a government. He quickly declined. The
Republic eroded and Hitler had himself nominated as Reich
Chancellor January 1933. After President Paul von Hindenburg
died in 1934, Hitler assumed that office as well. Once in
power, Hitler and his party first undermined and then
abolished democratic institutions and opposition parties.
The Nazi leadership immediately jailed Jewish opposition and
other figures and withdrew their political rights. The Nazis
implemented a program of genocide, at first through
incarceration and forced labor and then by establishing
death camps. Nazi revanchism and expansionism led to World
War II, which resulted in the destruction of Germany's
political and economic infrastructures and led to its
division.
After Germany's unconditional
surrender on May 8, 1945, the United States, the United
Kingdom, the U.S.S.R. and, later, France occupied the
country and assumed responsibility for its administration.
The commanders in chief exercised supreme authority in their
respective zones and acted in concert on questions affecting
the whole country.
The United States, the United
Kingdom, and the Soviet Union agreed at Potsdam in August
1945 to treat Germany as a single economic unit with some
central administrative departments in a decentralized
framework. However, Soviet policy turned increasingly toward
dominating that part of Europe where their armies were
present, including eastern Germany. In 1948, the Soviets, in
an attempt to abrogate agreements for Four-Power control of
the city, blockaded Berlin. Until May 1949, the
Allied-occupied part of Berlin was kept supplied only by an
Allied airlift. The "Berlin airlift" succeeded in forcing
the Soviets to accept, for the time being, the Allied role
and the continuation of freedom in a portion of the city,
West Berlin.
Political Developments in West
Germany
The United States and the United Kingdom moved to establish
a nucleus for a future German government by creating a
central Economic Council for their two zones. The program
later provided for a constituent assembly, an occupation
statute governing relations between the Allies and the
German authorities, and the political and economic merger of
the French with the British and American zones. The western
portion of the country became the Federal Republic of
Germany.
On May 23, 1949, the Basic Law,
which came to be known as the constitution of the Federal
Republic of Germany, was promulgated. Conrad Adenauer became
the first federal Chancellor on September 20, 1949. The next
day, the occupation statute came into force, granting powers
of self-government with certain exceptions.
The F.R.G. quickly progressed
toward fuller sovereignty and association with its European
neighbors and the Atlantic community. The London and Paris
agreements of 1954 restored full sovereignty (with some
exceptions) to the F.R.G. in May 1955 and opened the way for
German membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) and the Western European Union (WEU).
The three Western Allies retained
occupation powers in Berlin and certain responsibilities for
Germany as a whole, including responsibility for the
determination of Germany's eastern borders. Under the new
arrangements, the Allies stationed troops within the F.R.G.
for NATO defense, pursuant to stationing and
status-of-forces agreements. With the exception of 45,000
French troops, Allied forces were under NATO's joint defense
command. (France withdrew from NATO's military command
structure in 1966.)
Political life in the F.R.G. was
remarkably stable and orderly. After Adenauer's
chancellorship (1949-63), Ludwig Erhard (1963-66) and Kurt
Georg Kiesinger (1966-69) served as Chancellor. Between 1949
and 1966 the united caucus of the Christian Democratic Union
(CDU) and Christian Social Union (CSU), either alone or with
the smaller Free Democratic Party (FDP), formed the
government. Kiesinger's 1966-69 "Grand Coalition" included
the F.R.G.'s two largest parties, CDU/CSU and the Social
Democratic Party (SPD). After the 1969 election, the SPD,
headed by Willy Brandt, formed a coalition government with
the FDP. Brandt resigned in May 1974, after a senior member
of his staff was uncovered as an East German spy.
Helmut Schmidt (SPD) succeeded
Brandt, serving as Chancellor from 1974 to 1982.
Hans-Dietrich Genscher, a leading FDP official, became Vice
Chancellor and Foreign Minister, a position he would hold
until 1992.
In October 1982, the FDP joined
forces with the CDU/CSU to make CDU Chairman Helmut Kohl the
Chancellor. Following national elections in March 1983, Kohl
emerged in firm control of both the government and the CDU.
He served until the CDU's election defeat in 1997. In 1983,
a new political party, the Greens, entered the Bundestag for
the first time.
Political Developments in East
Germany
In the Soviet zone, the Communist Party forced the Social
Democratic Party to merge in 1946 to form the Socialist
Unity Party (SED). Under Soviet direction, a constitution
was drafted on May 30, 1949, and adopted on October 7 when
the German Democratic Republic was proclaimed. On October
11, 1949, a SED government under Wilhelm Pieck was
established. The Soviet Union and its East European allies
immediately recognized the G.D.R. The United States and most
other countries did not recognize the G.D.R. until a series
of agreements in 1972-73.
The G.D.R. established the
structures of a single-party, centralized, communist state.
On July 23, 1952, the G.D.R. abolished the traditional
Laender and established 14 Bezirke (districts). Formally,
there existed a "National Front"--an umbrella organization
nominally consisting of the SED, four other political
parties controlled and directed by the SED, and the four
principal mass organizations (youth, trade unions, women,
and culture). However, control was clearly and solely in the
hands of the SED. Balloting in G.D.R. elections was not
secret. On July 17, 1953, East Germans revolted against
totalitarian rule. The F.R.G. marked the bloody revolt by
making the date the West German National Day, which remained
until reunification.
Inter-German Relations
During the 1950s, East Germans fled to the West by the
millions. The Soviets made the inner German border
increasingly tight, but Berlin's Four-Power status countered
such restrictions. Berlin thus became an escape point for
even greater numbers of East Germans. On August 13, 1961,
the G.D.R. began building a wall through the center of
Berlin, slowing down the flood of refugees and dividing the
city. The Berlin Wall became the symbol of the East's
political debility and the division of Europe.
In 1969, Chancellor Brandt
announced that the F.R.G. would remain firmly rooted in the
Atlantic Alliance but would intensify efforts to improve
relations with Eastern Europe and the G.D.R. The F.R.G.
commenced this "Ostpolitik" by negotiating nonaggression
treaties with the Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslovakia,
Bulgaria, and Hungary. Based upon Brandt's policies, in 1971
the Four Powers concluded a Quadripartite Agreement on
Berlin to address practical questions the division posed,
without prejudice to each party's view of the city's Four
Power status.
The F.R.G.'s relations with the
G.D.R. posed particularly difficult questions. Though
anxious to relieve serious hardships for divided families
and to reduce friction, the F.R.G. under Brandt was intent
on holding to its concept of "two German states in one
German nation." Relations improved, however, and in
September 1973, the F.R.G. and the G.D.R. were admitted to
the United Nations. The two Germanys exchanged permanent
representatives in 1974, and, in 1987, G.D.R. head of state
Erich Honecker paid an official visit to the F.R.G.
German Unification
During the summer of 1989, rapid changes took place in the
G.D.R. Pressures for political opening throughout Eastern
Europe had not seemed to affect the G.D.R. regime. However,
Hungary ended its border restrictions with Austria, and a
growing flood of East Germans began to take advantage of
this route to West Germany. Thousands of East Germans also
tried to reach the West by staging sit-ins at F.R.G.
diplomatic facilities in other East European capitals. The
exodus generated demands within the G.D.R. for political
change, and mass demonstrations in several
cities--particularly in Leipzig--continued to grow. On
October 7, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev visited Berlin to
celebrate the 40th anniversary of the establishment of the
G.D.R. and urged the East German leadership to pursue
reform.
On October 18, Erich Honecker
resigned and was replaced by Egon Krenz. The exodus
continued unabated, and pressure for political reform
mounted. Finally, on November 9, the G.D.R. allowed East
Germans to travel freely. Thousands poured through the
Berlin Wall into the western sectors of Berlin. The Wall was
opened.
On November 28, F.R.G .Chancellor
Kohl outlined a 10-point plan for the peaceful unification
of the two Germanys. In December, the G.D.R. Volkskammer
eliminated the SED's monopoly on power. The SED changed its
name to the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), and
numerous political groups and parties formed. The communist
system had been eliminated. A new Prime Minister, Hans
Modrow, headed a caretaker government that shared power with
the new, democratically oriented parties.
In early February 1990, Chancellor
Kohl rejected the Modrow government's proposal for a
unified, neutral Germany. Kohl affirmed that a unified
Germany must be a member of NATO. Finally, on March 18, the
first free elections were held in the G.D.R., and Lothar de
Maiziere (CDU) formed a government under a policy of
expeditious unification with the F.R.G. The freely elected
representatives of the Volkskammer held their first session
on April 5, and the G.D.R. peacefully evolved from a
communist to a democratically elected government.
Four Power Control Ends
In 1990, as a necessary step for German unification and in
parallel with internal German developments, the two German
states and the Four Powers--the United States, U.K., France,
and the Soviet Union--negotiated to end Four Power reserved
rights for Berlin and Germany as a whole. These
"Two-plus-Four" negotiations were mandated at the Ottawa
Open Skies conference on February 13, 1990. The six foreign
ministers met four times in the ensuing months in Bonn (May
5), Berlin (June 22), Paris (July 17), and Moscow (September
12). The Polish Foreign Minister participated in the part of
the Paris meeting that dealt with the Polish-German borders.
Of key importance was overcoming
Soviet objections to a united Germany's membership in NATO.
The Alliance was already responding to the changing
circumstances, and, in NATO, issued the London Declaration
on a transformed NATO. On July 16, after a bilateral
meeting, Gorbachev and Kohl announced an agreement in
principle to permit a united Germany in NATO. This cleared
the way for the signing of the "Treaty on the Final
Settlement With Respect to Germany" in Moscow on September
12. In addition to terminating Four Power rights, the treaty
mandated the withdrawal of all Soviet forces from Germany by
the end of 1994. This made it clear that the current borders
were final and definitive, and specified the right of a
united Germany to belong to NATO. It also provided for the
continued presence of British, French, and American troops
in Berlin during the interim period of the Soviet
withdrawal. In the treaty, the Germans renounced nuclear,
biological, and chemical weapons and stated their intention
to reduce German armed forces to 370,000 within 3 to 4 years
after the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE) Treaty,
signed in Paris on November 19, 1990, entered into force.
German unification could then
proceed. In accordance with Article 23 of the F.R.G.'s Basic
Law, the five Laender (which had been reestablished in the
G.D.R.) acceded to the F.R.G. on October 3, 1990. The F.R.G.
proclaimed October 3 as its new national day. On December 2,
1990, all-German elections were held for the first time
since 1933.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL
CONDITIONS
The government is parliamentary, and a democratic
constitution emphasizes the protection of individual liberty
and division of powers in a federal structure. The
chancellor (prime minister) heads the executive branch of
the federal government. The duties of the president (chief
of state) are largely ceremonial; the chancellor exercises
executive power. The Bundestag (lower, principal chamber of
the parliament) elects the chancellor and cannot remove the
chancellor from office during a 4-year term unless it has
agreed on a successor. The president is elected every 5
years on May 23 by the Federal Assembly, a body convoked
only for this purpose, comprising the entire Bundestag and
an equal number of state delegates.
The Bundestag, which serves a
4-year term, consists of at least twice the number of
electoral districts in the country (299). When parties'
directly elected seats exceed their proportional
representation, they may receive more seats. The number of
seats in the Bundestag was reduced to 598 for the 2002
elections. The Bundesrat (upper chamber or Federal Council)
consists of 69 members who are delegates of the 16 Laender
(states). The legislature has powers of exclusive
jurisdiction and concurrent jurisdiction with the Laender in
areas specified in the Basic Law. The Bundestag has primary
legislative authority. The Bundesrat must concur on
legislation concerning revenue shared by federal and state
governments and those imposing responsibilities on the
states.
Germany has an independent federal
judiciary consisting of a constitutional court, a high court
of justice, and courts with jurisdiction in administrative,
financial, labor, and social matters. The highest court is
the Bundesverfassungsgericht (Federal Constitutional
Court), which ensures a uniform interpretation of
constitutional provisions and protects the fundamental
rights of the individual citizen as defined in the Basic
Law.
Recent Election Issues
The 2002 federal election was a neck-and-neck race. There
was a combination of voter discontent with Chancellor
Schroeder's first 4 years in office, based on economic
grounds, and widespread support for the Chancellor's
hard-line stance against potential military intervention in
Iraq. The CDU/CSU, out in front in the early and mid-stages
of the campaign, was outmaneuvered by Schroeder on Iraq and
could not hold on in the end. Schroeder rode the anti-war
wave to another 4 years in office. The FDP, embroiled in a
scandal surrounding its controversial Vice Chairman Juergen
Moellemann, did not win enough of the popular vote to unseat
the SPD-Greens government by forming a coalition with the
CDU/CSU. The end result was a margin of victory that
produced a tight nine-seat SPD-Greens majority in the
Bundestag.
Political Parties
Social Democratic Party (SPD). The SPD, one of the
oldest organized political parties in the world, emerged as
the winner in the September 2002 elections with 38.5% of the
votes cast. It originally advocated Marxist principles. In
1959, in the Godesberg Program, the SPD abandoned the
concept of a class party while continuing to stress social
welfare programs. Although the SPD originally opposed West
Germany's 1955 entry into NATO, it now strongly supports
German ties with the Alliance. Gerhard Schroeder led the
party to victory in 2002 on a platform strongly opposing the
war in Iraq. The SPD has a powerful base in the bigger
cities and industrialized Laender. Schroeder became party
chairman in March 1999.
Christian Democratic
Union/Christian Social Union (CDU/CSU). An important
aspect of postwar German politics was the emergence of a
moderate Christian party--the Christian Democratic Union (CDU)--operating
in alliance with a related Bavarian party, the Christian
Social Union (CSU). Although each party maintains its own
structure, the two form a common caucus in the Bundestag and
do not run opposing campaigns. The CDU/CSU has adherents
among Catholics, Protestants, rural interests, and members
of all economic classes. It is generally conservative on
economic and social policy and more identified with the
Roman Catholic and Protestant churches. Helmut Kohl served
as chairman of the CDU from 1973 until the party's electoral
defeat in 1998, when he was succeeded by Wolfgang Schaeuble.
Schaeuble resigned in early 2000 as a result of a party
financing scandal. Angela Merkel is now party leader. Edmund
Stoiber took over the CSU chairmanship early in 1999.
Stoiber, currently Minister-President of Bavaria, was the
CDU/CSU Chancellor candidate for the September 2002
elections.
Alliance 90/Greens. In the
late 1970s, environmentalists organized politically as the
Greens. Opposition to nuclear power, military power, and
certain aspects of highly industrialized society were
principal campaign issues. In the December 1990 all-German
elections, the Greens merged with the Eastern German
Alliance 90, a loose grouping of civil rights activists with
diverse political views. The Greens joined a federal
government for the first time in 1998, forming a coalition
with the SPD. Joschka Fischer became Vice Chancellor and
Foreign Minister in the new government, retaining those
positions after the 2002 elections.
Free Democratic Party (FDP).
The FDP has traditionally been composed mainly of middle and
upper class Protestants, who consider themselves heirs to
the European liberal tradition. The party has participated
in all but three postwar federal governments and has spent
only 8 years out of government in the 50-year history of the
Federal Republic. In 2001, Guido Westerwelle replaced
Wolfgang Gerhardt as party chairman.
Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS).
The PDS was established in December 1989 as the successor
party to the SED (the communist party of the G.D.R.). It has
renounced most of the extreme aspects of SED policy but
retained much of its Marxist leanings. In the 2002
elections, the PDS only obtained 4.0% of the popular vote
and thus failed to repeat its 1998 successful establishment
of a caucus within the Bundestag (at least 5.0% of the
popular vote is needed to do this). The PDS did win two
directly mandated seats but is generally ineffective in the
Bundestag and no longer considered a serious party in German
politics. The PDS' decline is blamed on a lack of political
orientation and a continuing series of disputes among party
leaders.
Other parties. In addition
to those parties that won representation in the Bundestag in
2002, a variety of minor parties won a cumulative 3.0% of
the vote, down from 5.9% in 1998. Several other parties were
on the ballot in one or more states but were not qualified
for representation in the Bundestag. The right-wing parties
remained fragmented and failed to win Bundestag
representation.
Principal Government Officials
President--Horst Köhler (CDU)
President of the Bundestag--Wolfgang Thierse (SPD)
Chancellor--Gerhard Schroeder (SPD)
Vice Chancellor and Minister of Foreign Affairs--Joschka
Fischer (Greens)
Head of the Federal Chancellery--Dr. Frank-Walter Steinmeier
(SPD)
Minister of Defense--Peter Struck (SPD)
Minister of Finance--Hans Eichel (SPD)
Ambassador to the U.S.--Wolfgang Ischinger
Ambassador to the UN--Dr. Gunter Pleuger
Germany maintains an
embassy in the United States at
4645 Reservoir Road NW, Washington, DC 20007 (tel.
202-298-4000). Consulates general are located in Atlanta,
Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New
York, San Francisco, and Seattle. Germany has honorary
consuls in more than 30 U.S. cities.
ECONOMY
Germany is the world's third-largest economy and the largest
in Europe. Recent performance has not been dynamic, however,
and the German economy is vulnerable to external shocks,
domestic structural problems, and continued difficulties in
integrating the formerly communist east.
From the 1948 currency reform until
the early 1970s, West Germany experienced almost continuous
economic expansion. Real gross domestic product (GDP) growth
slowed down, and even declined, from the mid-1970s through
the recession of the early 1980s. The economy then
experienced 8 consecutive years of growth that ended with a
downturn beginning in late 1992. Since unification, Germany
has seen annual average real growth of only about 1.5% and
stubbornly high unemployment. The best performance since
unification was in 2000, when real growth reached 3.0%.
Although final figures are not yet available, most
forecasters expected growth of about 0.5% for 2003, with
unemployment rising to 10.4%.
Germans often describe their
economic system as a "social market economy." The German
Government provides an extensive array of social services.
The state intervenes in the economy by providing subsidies
to selected sectors and by owning some segments of the
economy, while promoting competition and free enterprise.
The government has restructured the railroad system on a
corporate basis, privatized the national airline, and is
privatizing telecommunications and postal services.
The German economy is heavily
export-oriented, with exports accounting for more than
one-third of national output. As a result, exports
traditionally have been a key element in German
macroeconomic expansion. Germany is a strong advocate of
closer European economic integration, and its economic and
commercial policies are increasingly determined within the
European Union (EU). Germany uses the common European
currency, the euro, and the European Central Bank sets
monetary policy.
Despite this external
vulnerability, most foreign and German experts consider
domestic structural problems to be the main cause of recent
sluggish performance. An inflexible labor market is the main
cause of persistently high unemployment. Heavy bureaucratic
regulations burden many businesses and the process of
starting new businesses. German employers, even during
periods of relatively fast growth, say they often prefer to
invest overseas or install more machinery, rather than make
job-creating investments at their domestic facilities.
More than 13 years after
reunification (October 3, 1990), Germany has made great
progress in raising the standard of living in eastern
Germany, introducing a market economy and improving its
infrastructure. At the same time, the process of convergence
between east and west is taking longer than originally
expected and, on some measures, has stagnated since the
mid-1990s. Eastern economic growth rates have been lower
than in the west in recent years, unemployment is twice as
high, prompting many skilled easterners to seek work in the
west, and productivity continues to lag. Eastern consumption
levels are dependent on public net financial transfers from
west to east totaling about $11.5 billion per year. In
addition to social assistance payments, the government will
extend funds to promote eastern economic development through
2019.
The United States is Germany's
second-largest trading partner, and U.S.-German trade has
continued to grow strongly. Two-way trade in goods totaled
$89.1 billion in 2002. U.S. exports to Germany were $26.6
billion while U.S. imports from Germany were more than $62.5
billion. At $35.8 billion, the U.S.'s fifth-largest trade
deficit is with Germany. Major U.S. export categories
include aircraft, electrical equipment, telecommunications
equipment, data processing equipment, and motor vehicles and
parts. German export sales are concentrated in motor
vehicles, machinery, chemicals, and heavy electrical
equipment. Much bilateral trade is intra-industry or
intra-firm.
Germany has a liberal foreign
investment policy. From 1998 to 2001, annual average flows
of U.S. direct investment in Germany were $5.4 billion,
while those of German investors in the United States reached
$27.2 billion. U.S. firms employ about 800,000 people in
Germany; German firms likewise employ about 800,000 people
in the United States.
Despite persistence of structural
rigidities in the labor market and extensive government
regulation, the economy remains strong and internationally
competitive. Although production costs are very high,
Germany is still an export powerhouse. Additionally, Germany
is strategically placed to take advantage of the rapidly
growing central European countries. The current government
has addressed some of the country's structural problems,
with important tax, social security, and financial sector
reforms.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Germany continues to emphasize close ties with the United
States, membership in NATO, and the "deepening" of
integration among current members of the EU. The Federal
Republic of Germany took part in all of the joint postwar
efforts aimed at closer political, economic, and defense
cooperation among the countries of western Europe. Germany
has been a large net contributor to the EU budget. Germany
also is a strong supporter of the United Nations and of the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).
During the postwar era, the Federal
Republic of Germany also sought to improve its relationship
with the countries of eastern Europe, first establishing
trade agreements and, subsequently, diplomatic relations.
With unification, German relations with the new democracies
in central and eastern Europe intensified. On November 14,
1990, Germany and Poland signed a treaty confirming the
Oder-Neisse border. They also concluded a cooperation treaty
on June 17, 1991. Germany concluded four treaties with the
Soviet Union covering the overall bilateral relationship,
economic relations, the withdrawal of Soviet troops from the
territory of the former G.D.R., and German support for those
troops. Russia accepted obligations under these treaties as
successor to the Soviet Union. Germany continues to be
active economically in the states of central and eastern
Europe and to actively support the development of democratic
institutions, bilaterally and through the EU.
Berlin
Shortly after World War II, Berlin became the seat of the
Allied Control Council, which was to have governed Germany
as a whole until the conclusion of a peace settlement. In
1948, however, the Soviets refused to participate any longer
in the quadripartite administration of Germany. They also
refused to continue the joint administration of Berlin and
drove the government elected by the people of Berlin out of
its seat in the Soviet sector and installed a communist
regime in its place. From then until unification, the
Western Allies continued to exercise supreme
authority--effective only in their sectors--through the
Allied Kommandatura. To the degree compatible with the
city's special status, however, they turned over control and
management of city affairs to the Berlin Senat (executive)
and House of Representatives, governing bodies established
by constitutional process and chosen by free elections. The
Allies and German authorities in the F.R.G. and West Berlin
never recognized the communist city regime in East Berlin or
G.D.R. authority there.
During the years of Berlin's
isolation--176 kilometers (110 mi.) inside the former G.D.R.--the
Western Allies encouraged a close relationship between the
Government of West Berlin and that of the F.R.G.
Representatives of the city participated as nonvoting
members in the F.R.G. parliament; appropriate West German
agencies, such as the supreme administrative court, had
their permanent seats in the city; and the governing mayor
of Berlin took his turn as President of the Bundesrat. In
addition, the Allies carefully consulted with the F.R.G. and
Berlin Governments on foreign policy questions involving
unification and the status of Berlin.
Between 1948 and 1990, major events
such as fairs and festivals took place in West Berlin, and
the F.R.G. encouraged investment in commerce by special
concessionary tax legislation. The results of such efforts,
combined with effective city administration and the
Berliners' energy and spirit, were encouraging. Berlin's
morale remained high, and its industrial production
considerably surpassed its prewar level.
The Final Settlement Treaty ended
Berlin's special status as a separate area under Four Power
control. Under the terms of the treaty between the F.R.G.
and the G.D.R., Berlin became the capital of a unified
Germany. The Bundestag voted in June 1991 to make Berlin the
seat of government. The Government of Germany asked the
Allies to maintain a military presence in Berlin until the
complete withdrawal of the Western Group of Forces
(ex-Soviet) from the territory of the former G.D.R. The
Russian withdrawal was completed August 31, 1994. On
September 8, 1994, ceremonies marked the final departure of
Western Allied troops from Berlin.
In 1999, the formal seat of the
federal government moved from Bonn to Berlin. Berlin also is
one of the Federal Republic's 16 Laender.
U.S.-GERMAN RELATIONS
U.S.-German relations have been a focal point of American
involvement in Europe since the end of World War II. Germany
stands at the center of European affairs and is a key
partner in U.S. relations with Europeans in NATO and the
European Union.
German-American ties extend back to
the colonial era. More than 7 million Germans have
immigrated over the last three centuries, and today nearly a
quarter of U.S. citizens claim German ancestry. In
recognition of this heritage and the importance of
modern-day U.S.-German ties, the U.S. President annually has
proclaimed October 6, the date the first German immigrants
arrived in 1623, to be "German-American Day."
U.S. policy toward Germany remains
the preservation and consolidation of a close and vital
relationship with Germany, not only as friends and trading
partners, but also as allies sharing common institutions.
During the 45 years in which Germany was divided, the U.S.
role in Berlin and the large American military presence in
West Germany served as symbols of the U.S. commitment to the
preservation of peace and security in Europe. Since German
unification, the U.S. commitment to these goals has not
changed. The U.S. made significant reductions in its troop
levels in Germany after the Cold War ended, and, on July 12,
1994, President Clinton "cased the colors" at the Berlin
Brigade's deactivation ceremony. The U.S., however,
continues to recognize that the security and prosperity of
the United States and Germany significantly depend on each
other. More than 91,000 U.S. military personnel remain in
Germany to protect these common interests.
As allies in NATO, the United
States and Germany work side by side to maintain peace and
freedom. This unity and resolve made possible the successful
conclusion of the 1987 U.S.-U.S.S.R. Intermediate-Range
Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF), the Two-plus-Four
process--which led to the Final Settlement Treaty--and the
November 1990 Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE)
Treaty. More recently, the two allies have cooperated
closely in peacekeeping efforts in the Balkans and have
worked together to encourage the evolution of open and
democratic states throughout central and eastern Europe.
Following the September 11, 2001
attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City and the
Pentagon in Washington, DC, Germany has been a reliable U.S.
ally in the campaign against terrorism. As two of the
world's leading trading nations, the United States and
Germany share a common, deep-seated commitment to an open
and expanding world economy. Personal ties between the
United States and Germany extend beyond immigration to
include intensive foreign exchange programs, booming tourism
in both directions, and the presence in Germany of large
numbers of American military personnel and their dependents.
The United States and Germany have
built a solid foundation of bilateral cooperation in a
relationship that has changed significantly over nearly six
decades. The historic unification of Germany and the role
the United States played in that process have served to
strengthen ties between the two countries.
German-American political,
economic, and security relationships continue to be based on
close consultation and coordination at the most senior
levels. High-level visits take place frequently, and the
United States and Germany cooperate actively in
international forums.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Daniel
Coats
Deputy Chief of Mission--John A. Cloud
Minister-Counselor for Commercial
Affairs--John Fogarasi
Minister-Counselor for Consular Affairs--Stephen R. Pattison
Minister-Counselor for Economic Affairs--Robert Cekuta
Minister-Counselor for Management--Raymond A. Boneski
Minister-Counselor for Political Affairs--John K. Bauman
Minister-Counselor for Public Affairs--Anne Chermak
Chief, Office of Defense Cooperation--Col. Robert McAdams
Defense Attaché--Col. Donald H. Zedler
Consuls General
Consulate General,
Dusseldorf --George W. Knowles
Consulate General, Frankfurt--Peter W. Bodde
Consulate General, Hamburg--Duane C. Butcher
Consulate General, Leipzig--Fletcher M. Burton
Consulate General, Munich--Matthew M. Rooney
The
U.S.
Embassy in Germany is located at
Neustaedtische Kirchstrasse 4-5 10117 Berlin.
To call the Embassy, the country
code for Germany is 49, the city code for Berlin is 30 (030
within Germany): tel: (49 30) 238-5174; fax (49 30)
238-6290. Consulates General are located in Dusseldorf,
Frankfurt, Hamburg, Leipzig, and Munich. Mission Germany
maintains an informative web site at:
http://www.usembassy.de.