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- <text id=90TT0857>
- <title>
- Apr. 09, 1990: The Germanys:A Westerner For The East
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 09, 1990 America's Changing Colors
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 50
- THE GERMANYS
- A Westerner for the East
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>De Maiziere picks a can-do capitalist from across the border
- for the daunting task of rejuvenating his country's flaccid
- economy
- </p>
- <p> Question: In a country that for more than four decades has
- known nothing but central planning and its attendant
- inefficiencies and sluggishness, where do you find a manager
- who can transform the economy into a free market, bustling and
- lean?
- </p>
- <p> Answer: You don't. You look abroad.
- </p>
- <p> That is the conclusion reached by Lothar de Maiziere, the
- leader of the Christian Democratic Union, who is likely to
- become East Germany's Prime Minister when a newly convened
- parliament forms a government next week. For the post of
- Economics Minister, De Maiziere has designated Elmar Pieroth,
- a prominent economist in West Germany and stalwart of that
- country's CDU. "De Maiziere told me he sought an experienced
- market economist and couldn't find one in a planned economy--would I give it a try?" says Pieroth. "I said yes."
- </p>
- <p> It was an answer characteristic of the affable Pieroth, 55.
- A scion of West Germany's pre-eminent family of wine merchants,
- Pieroth is a model of can-do spirit. Despite the immensity of
- the task before him, he is confident that, once unshackled, the
- East Germans will build for themselves a vibrant new economy
- just as surely as their West German counterparts did after the
- devastation of World War II. "In the coming years, we can
- harness the idea of keeping up with the Joneses," he says. "The
- East Germans want to show the West Germans that they can do
- just as well."
- </p>
- <p> Pieroth's first priority will be to eliminate the
- absurdities that now infect the system. Some 85% of East
- Germany's economy is controlled by 220 unwieldy state Kombinate
- (conglomerates), whose production has been dictated by
- ill-conceived five-year plans rather than by supply and demand.
- Heavy-industry manufacturers, for instance, have had to
- shoehorn consumer goods into their production lines, so that
- TuR, East Germany's largest producer of electrical transformers,
- also makes appliances for melting cheese at home.
- </p>
- <p> To reduce the role of the Kombinate, Pieroth aims to spawn
- a healthy Mittelstand, the sector of small and medium-size
- businesses that is the backbone of West Germany's economy.
- There is a great need for such firms in the East, which suffers
- a dearth of everything from corner restaurants to car
- dealerships. In the past two months, some 40,000 East Germans
- have applied for a share of the $3.5 billion that Bonn will
- make available to them over the next three years for loans to
- start small enterprises.
- </p>
- <p> Obviously, the move from big and bungling to small and
- snappy will not be painless. Even those Kombinate most likely
- to survive the rigors of a free market, such as optics
- manufacturer Zeiss-Ikon Jena, will have to cut their bloated
- payrolls. Officials in Bonn have estimated that the ranks of
- the East German jobless will grow from 26,000 today to an
- estimated 2 million (out of a work force of 8 million) by next
- year.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Pieroth insists that unemployment can be kept to a
- manageable 500,000, or 5.5%. Part of his strategy is to
- encourage Westerners involved in joint ventures to retrain
- workers whose skills are made obsolete. Pieroth also plans to
- generate new jobs by pumping up to $12 billion in public and
- private funds annually for several years into rebuilding East
- Germany's decrepit infrastructure.
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, the transition to a sleeker economy will be
- eased further by the estimated 1 million East German workers
- who will be occupied over the next two years filling orders
- placed by the Soviet Union. Bonn has pledged that a unified
- Germany will honor those contracts. "The Soviets cannot
- generate economic success on their own," says Pieroth, "and it
- is in no one's interest for them to fail."
- </p>
- <p> Private investments from West Germany will fund most of East
- Germany's make over, but the Bonn government will bear the huge
- costs of swapping the East's nonconvertible currency for
- deutsche marks and establishing social benefits, like
- unemployment insurance, in the East. But Pieroth insists that
- those expenditures will be offset by an additional one to two
- percentage points of economic growth he reckons will be created
- in West Germany by new business opportunities in the East.
- </p>
- <p> To many East Germans, Pieroth is a trenchant symbol of an
- unwanted West German economic anschluss with East Germany. "The
- process of developing our own character won't be advanced by
- flying in experts with their own agendas," says Wolfgang
- Templin, a member of the parliament from the leftist,
- ecology-minded Initiative for Peace and Human Rights. To
- develop a free-market economy, Templin and other critics
- maintain, East Germany does not have to ape the economy of West
- Germany. But that is precisely what East Germans voted for
- overwhelmingly last month, Pieroth responds. Says he: "We can't
- dictate to the East things that we think should be different
- if what they want is what we have." In Pieroth's view, the
- mandate is anything but ambiguous.
- </p>
- <p>By Lisa Beyer. Reported by James L. Graff/Berlin.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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