From DW:
“33 years later: German unity 'completed, but not perfect'”
(The report on the state of German unity aims to assess how
people in eastern and western Germany perceive their living conditions.)
The commissioner for eastern Germany, Carsten Schneider, has
praised the economic upswing in the former East in a DW interview. But a new
report on reunification has highlighted divisions that still remain. Over three
decades after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Germany is politically unified, but
dividing lines remain, the Minister of State for East Germany told DW. "Reunification
is completed, even if it is not perfect," said Carsten Schneider, adding
that reunification needed to be fully realized in people's minds. The
government's commissioner for eastern Germany spoke to DW on the release day of
the annual report on the state of German unity, just before the country
celebrates its 33rd Reunification Day on October 3.
Is there a wealth gap between western and eastern Germany? Schneider highlighted that pension
levels were adjusted to be equal across Germany in 2023 as one of the main
successes of the last year. Pension inequalities had been a long-standing
grievance for many people in the former communist German Democratic Republic
(GDR). While increasing the federal minimum wage also benefited employees in
the German states that used to make up East Germany, "there are still
differences in wages and wealth," Schneider admitted. In 2022, the
average annual salary in western Germany was more than €12,000 ($12,670) higher
than in eastern Germany. Net savings figures reveal an even starker inequality
— in 2021, median savings in western states were nearly three times as high
(€127,900 ) as in eastern ones, according to the German Federal Bank.
The economic transition of the former East Schneider said he expected
significant economic growth across eastern Germany, which he sees as a hub for
investments in the semiconductor industry. US technology company Intel
is planning a €30 billion chip factory in Magdeburg, the capital of
Saxony-Anhalt. It's one of the biggest foreign direct investments in the
history of Germany. "Eastern Germany is a region that is catching
up, in terms of industry, in terms of jobs over the next decades,"
Schneider said, adding: "The energy transition can only work with eastern
Germany because we are the main production site for renewable energies."
However, the number of people of working age in East Germany
is expected to decrease signicantly in decades to come, according to figures
published by the Federal Statistical Office, Destatis. At the end of 2022, the
agency said there were some 51.4 million people between the ages of 18 and 64
across Germany, of whom 7.2 million lived in eastern German states, not
including Berlin. The next two decades would see the number in the eastern part
of Germany in that age group fall by between 560,000 and 1.2 million, while it
would drop by as much as 2.1 million by the year 2070. The number was also
expected to fall in western German states although, because of higher
immigration there, the fall was expected to be less significant.
Diversity and far-right populism in the former East Asked by DW about the increasing
support for the far-right Alternative for Germany(AfD) among people in eastern
Germany, Schneider was quick to stress: "In eastern Germany, there are
always majorities for democratic parties in all elections." While
he admitted to the problem, he said it was important not to reduce people in
eastern Germany to their support of the AfD. A recent study conducted by
the University of Leipzig showed that around a third of people in eastern
Germany think there is a need for a "strong leader" to rule the
country, and about 60% think the number of foreigners in the country is too
high. Schneider was keen to stress that inclusion and diversity in
eastern Germany had increased. He pointed to the fact the proportion of
foreign-born nationals living in his home city of Erfurt had grown from 2% of
the population 10 years ago to 18% now. "If you get to know someone
from a different culture ... and increase your cultural awareness, then
prejudices vanish very quickly," he said.
So how unified are east and west? In the state that made up East
Germany, the AfD is particularly strong in rural regions, which more often
struggle with shrinking populations and lower levels of public services,
according to the report. Schneider said the differences between urban
and rural areas across Germany were often more stark than the differences
between eastern and western regions. Nonetheless, he acknowledged that
people on opposite geographic sides of the country had different perceptions of
the situation the country was in. A recent survey showed 57% of Germans think
the former East and West had not "grown together."
But Schneider told DW that political measures alone could not
solve all disparities. "That has to come out of society itself, the
interest in it and also dealing with each other, and I think that many eastern
Germans often feel a bit deceived and
treated with condescension, and there is no reason for that," Schneider
said. "I would like to see more exchange, more interest for each
other."
^ It shouldn’t take 33 years or longer to unite the former
West Germany with the former East Germany politically or economically, but they
still have a lot of work to do. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/33-years-later-german-unity-completed-but-not-perfect/a-66953700
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