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- The shocking fall of communism in Eastern and Central Europe in the late eighties was
- remarkable for both its rapidity and its scope. The specifics of communism's demise varied
- among nations, but similarities in both the causes and the effects of these revolutions
- were quite similar. As well, all of the nations involved shared the common goals of
- implementing democratic systems of government and moving to market economies.
- In each of these nations, the communist regimes in power were forced to transfer that power
- to radically different institutions than they were accustomed to. Democracy had been
- spreading throughout the world for the preceding two decades, but with a very important
- difference. While previous political transitions had seen similar circumstances, the actual
- events in question had generally occurred individually. In Europe, on the other hand, the
- shift from communism was taking place in a different context altogether. 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. The problem inherent in this type of
- monumental change is that, according to Ulrich K. Preuss, "In almost all the East and
- Central European countries, the collapse of authoritarian communist rule has released
- national, ethnic, religious and cultural conflicts which cannot be solved by purely economic
- policies" (47). While tremendous changes are evident in both the governmental and economic
- arenas in Europe, these changes cannot be assumed to always be "mutually reinforcing"
- (Preuss 47). Generally it has been theorized that the most successful manner of addressing
- these many difficulties is the drafting of a constitution. But what is clear is the
- unsatisfactory ability of a constitution to remedy the problems of nationalism and ethnic
- differences. Preuss notes that when the constitutional state gained favor in North America,
- it was founded on the principle of the unitary state; it was not designed to address the
- lack of national identity which is found throughout Europe - and which is counter to the
- concept of the constitutional state (48).
- "Measured in terms of socioeconomic modernization," writes Helga A. Welsh, "Central and
- Eastern European countries had reached a level that was considered conducive to the
- emergence of pluralistic policies" (19). It seemed that the sole reason the downfall of
- communism, as it were, took so long was the veto power of the Soviet Union. According to
- theories of modernization, the higher the levels of socioeconomic achievement, the greater
- the pressure for open competition and, ultimately, democracy. As such, the nations in
- Eastern and Central Europe were seen as "anomalies in socioeconomically highly-developed
- countries where particularly intellectual power resources have become widespread" (Welsh
- 19). Due to their longtime adherence to communist policies, these nations faced great
- difficulty in making the transition to a pluralist system as well as a market economy.
- According to Preuss, 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 into the social and economic classes
- of a capitalist economy and, finally, the creation of a constitutional structure for
- political entities that lack the undisputed integrity of a nation state (48).
-
- With such problems as these to contend with in re-engineering their entire economic and
- political systems, the people of East Germany seemed to be in a particularly enviable
- position. Economically, they were poised to unite with one of the richest countries, having
- one of the strongest economies, in the entire world. In the competition for foreign
- investment, such an alliance gave the late German Democratic Republic a seemingly
- insurmountable lead over other nations. In regards to the political aspects of unification,
- it effectively left a Germany with no national or ethnic minorities, as well as having
- undisputed boundaries. As well, there was no need to create a constitution (although many
- of the pitfalls of constitution-building would have been easily-avoided due to the
- advantages Germany had), because the leaders of the GDR had joined the Federal Republic by
- accession and, accordingly, allowed its Basic Law to be extended over their territory.
- For all the good that seemed to be imminent as a result of unification, many problems also
- arose regarding the political transformation that Germany was undergoing. Among these
- problems were the following: the tensions between the Basic Law's simultaneous commitments
- to supranational integration and to the German nation state, the relationship between the
- nation and the constitution as two different modes of political integration and the issue
- of so-called "backward justice" (Preuss 48). The Federal Republic of Germany's Basic Law
- has been the longest-lived constitution in Germany's history. Intended to be a
- short-lived, temporary document, the Basic Law gained legitimacy as West Germany continued
- to march towards becoming a major economic power and effective democratic society. There
- seemed to be, at first, a tension between the Basic Law's explicit support of
- re-unification and its promise to transfer sovereignty to a supranational institution that
- would be created. The conflict between West Germany's goals of national unity and
- international integration remained the main issue in the country's politics for many years.
- As Preuss notes, "It will be extremely difficult to escape the economic and, in the long
- run also political, implications of this double-bind situation of Germany, one that remains
- a legacy of the postwar order" (51). Since the unification of Germany was accomplished
- through accession, it meant, strangely enough, that neither West nor East Germany had a say
- in the other's decision on whether to form a unified state or what conditions such a
- unification would be contingent upon, respectively. Put simply, the net effect of the
- extension of the Basic Law to all of Germany did not guarantee the implementation of a new
- joint governing policy or a new constitution for the country. It seemed, as a result of
- some esoteric articles of the Basic Law, that the GDR would cease to exist legally and the
- FRG would survive. It was impossible to draw the conclusion that both would die out and be
- replaced by a new political identity. Many of the Federal Republic's laws immediately
- applied in the GDR (Gloebner 153). Article 146 of the Basic Law, put simply, allowed for
- the annulment of the Basic Law, to be replaced with another governing system, without
- previously binding the people to any specific rules. Seemingly, it sanctions revolution,
- and, "as proved to be the case in 1990, this is not a purely theoretical conclusion"
- (Preuss 52). Some suggest that, by unifying through accession, Germany has made problems
- which could end up overshadowing the benefits of unification. The suggestion is that the
- implementation of a constitution by a society without experience in utilizing it, without
- the necessary institutions and without the corresponding value system will bring about more
- harm than good (politically). The imposition of the Basic Law was the root for much of the
- mistrust between East and West Germans following unification. In regards to the East
- Germans, the Law was effectively self-imposed, and "neither submission nor voluntary
- self-submission is likely to engender the social and political coherence which is a
- necessary condition for a stable democracy" (Preuss 54). In regards to the economic aspects
- of unification, some major problems exist in the transition to democracy and market
- economics. According to Preuss, the two main issues included in the realm of "backward
- justice" are the privatization of large pieces of state property, and the punishment of the
- elites of the previous regimes and their comrades under the headings of "self-purification"
- and "collective amnesia." The privatization issue is among the thorniest involved in any
- country's transition from communism. For one, a system of procedures must be developed
- simply to transfer such large amounts of property to private citizens. Also, there must be
- mechanisms put in place to both protect new owners from claims of previous owners and to
- satisfy former owners without alienating possible future investors. The problem boils down
- to the fact that private property laws do not always coincide with the "fair" concept of
- restitution. As Petra Bauer-Kaase writes, "East Germans still have difficulties in
- adjusting to a political system where individuals have a great deal of responsibility for
- their 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 manifests
- itself.
- There are also the issues of self-purification and collective amnesia. Due to the pervasive
- nature of the communist regime's surveillance programs and so forth, there is very little
- room for anyone to claim pure hands. While West Germans can claim that they are innocent by
- virtue of geography, East Germans are never able to escape the suspicions that they may have
- been part of the machine. Government jobs are denied to those who were affiliated with the
- Stasi, and private businesses also may deny employment to these citizens. While unification
- has occurred theoretically, in reality the Germany today is one of 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. The transition from communist state to liberal democracy is a very
- difficult 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 - one
- liberal-capitalist, one authoritarian-socialist - into one nation state" (57). In other
- words, the unification of Germany is one of the most complicated and unprecedented
- historical events since the unification of Germany.
-
- Jeremy Waldroop
- Works Cited
- Bauer-Kaase, Petra. "Germany in Transition: The Challenge of Coping with Unification."
- German Unification: Processes and Outcomes. M. Donald Hancock and Helga A. Welsh, eds.
- Boulder: Westview, 1994. 285-311. Gloebner, Gert-Joachim. "Parties and Problems of
- Governance During Unification." German Unification: Processes and Outcomes. M. Donald
- Hancock and Helga A. Welsh, eds. Boulder: Westview, 1994. 139-61. Preuss, Ulrich K.
- "German Unification: Political and Constitutional Aspects." United Germany and the New
- Europe. Heinz D. Kurz, ed. Brookfield: Elgar, 1993. 47-58. Welsh, Helga A. "The Collapse
- of Communism in Eastern Europe and the GDR: Evolution, Revolution, and Diffusion." German
- Unification: Processes and Outcomes. M. Donald Hancock and Helga A. Welsh, eds. Boulder:
- Westview, 1994. 17-34.
-