Get this... with GDR's central planning, you had this system where say a municipality would be tasked with building housing units, and the central government would provide funding support. This was not a "loan" in any sense of the word. It's just how central planning works. State enterprises and co-ops were a part of this too.

So the West German government came in just said "these are loans now" and told the various enterprises and municipalities they owed that money back. The skeleton GDR government at the time agreed if the interest rate was kept at 0.5%. The West German government agreed but then promptly jacked up the interest rate to 10%, all while the new "debtors" had no ability to pay.

Reading about the annexation of the GDR is fascinating. Growing up, I had heard propaganda about how "rotten" the GDR economy was and it was just so bad and inefficient that unification has been difficult - that it was communism to blame for the economic woes of the former East Germans. So surprise, turns out it was bullshit. Despite some problems (what economy doesn't have some problems), the GDR economy was actually pretty good, but it was murdered by the West.

Another unrelated fact about the former GDR... there were so many academic and research institutions closed down and educators purged (illegally I might add) that over one million people in the former GDR with a college degree were left unemployed in the wake of unification - about HALF of the entire population with a degree!

  • duderium [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    When I was phonebanking for Bernie (cringe) I spent like an hour talking with this lady from the South who had grown up in communist Ukraine. Initially she said "communism bad blabla," but eventually we established that she had left after communism collapsed and that she had actually kind of liked it when the communists were in charge. I remember she described life there as "quiet."

    In The Lives of Others, an anti-communist film about the GDR, they still manage to make East Germany look pretty quiet in comparison to West Germany. In Deep Under Cover, a memoir about a GDR spy who came to America and eventually defected, he kind of unintentionally describes the GDR as a pretty amazing place which, among many other things, cared deeply about single moms and gave the author himself a pretty incredible free education which he was later able to use as an opportunistic social climber in 1980s Manhattan.

    The only communist country I've really been to is Laos, and honestly I would describe it as kind of quiet in comparison to nearby Thailand and Cambodia. (Unfortunately I didn't make it to Vietnam but it honestly looks pretty loud there.)

    Just a bunch of random uninvited thoughts on this subject.

    • SoyViking [he/him]
      ·
      3 years ago

      My parents went to East Germany on holiday in the late 1970's and quiet also matches their description of the place. The lack of advertising and billboards made a huge difference in the cityscapes there and have the place a calmer feel.