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Germany Economy 1996
Five years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, progress towards economic
integration between eastern and western Germany is clearly visible, yet the
eastern region almost certainly will remain dependent on subsidies funded by
western Germany until well into the next century. The staggering $390
billion in western German assistance that the eastern states have received
since 1990 - 40 times the amount in real terms of US Marshall Fund aid sent
to West Germany after World War II - is just beginning to have an impact on
the eastern German standard of living, which plummeted after unification.
Assistance to the east continues to run at roughly $100 billion annually.
Although the growth rate in the east was much greater than in the west in
1993-94, eastern GDP per capita nonetheless remains well below
preunification levels; it will take 10-15 years for the eastern states to
match western Germany's living standards. The economic recovery in the east
is led by the construction industries which account for one-third of
industrial output, with growth increasingly supported by the service sectors
and light manufacturing industries. Eastern Germany's economy is changing
from one anchored on manufacturing to a more service-oriented economy.
Western Germany, with three times the per capita output of the eastern
states, has an advanced market economy and is a world leader in exports. The
strong recovery in 1994 from recession began in the export sector and spread
to the investment and consumption sectors in response to falling interest
rates. Western Germany has a highly urbanized and skilled population that
enjoys excellent living standards, abundant leisure time, and comprehensive
social welfare benefits. It is relatively poor in natural resources, coal
being the most important mineral. Western Germany's world-class companies
manufacture technologically advanced goods. The region's economy is mature:
services and manufacturing account for the dominant share of economic
activities, and raw materials and semimanufactured goods constitute a large
portion of imports.
GDP - purchasing power parity - $1.3446 trillion (1994 est.)
GDP - purchasing power parity - $1.2363 trillion (1994 est.)
GDP - purchasing power parity - $108.3 billion (1994 est.)
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National product real growth rate:
-
National product per capita:
-
Inflation rate (consumer prices):
$780 billion, including capital expenditures of $96.5 billion (1994)
$437 billion (f.o.b., 1994)
manufactures 89.3% (including machines and machine tools, chemicals, motor
vehicles, iron and steel products), agricultural products 5.5%, raw
materials 2.7%, fuels 1.3% (1993)
EC 47.9% (France 11.7%, Netherlands 7.4%, Italy 7.5%, UK 7.7%,
Belgium-Luxembourg 6.6%), EFTA 15.5%, US 7.7%, Eastern Europe 5.2%, OPEC
3.0% (1993)
$362 billion (f.o.b., 1994)
manufactures 75.1%, agricultural products 10.0%, fuels 8.3%, raw materials
5.0% (1993)
EC 46.4% (France 11.3%, Netherlands 8.4%, Italy 8.1%, UK 6.0%,
Belgium-Luxembourg 5.7%), EFTA 14.3%, US 7.3%, Japan 6.3%, Eastern Europe
5.1%, OPEC 2.6% (1993)
among world's largest and technologically advanced producers of iron, steel,
coal, cement, chemicals, machinery, vehicles, machine tools, electronics;
food and beverages
metal fabrication, chemicals, brown coal, shipbuilding, machine building,
food and beverages, textiles, petroleum refining
accounts for about 1% of GDP (including fishing and forestry); diversified
crop and livestock farming; principal crops and livestock include potatoes,
wheat, barley, sugar beets, fruit, cabbage, cattle, pigs, poultry; net
importer of food
accounts for about 10% of GDP (including fishing and forestry); principal
crops - wheat, rye, barley, potatoes, sugar beets, fruit; livestock products
include pork, beef, chicken, milk, hides and skins; net importer of food
source of precursor chemicals for South American cocaine processors;
transshipment point for Southwest Asian heroin and Latin American cocaine
for West European markets
ODA and OOF commitments (1970-89), $75.5 billion
bilateral to non-Communist less developed countries (1956-89) $4 billion
1 deutsche mark (DM) = 100 pfennige
deutsche marks (DM) per US$1 - 1.5313 (January 1995), 1.6228 (1994), 1.6533
(1993), 1.5617 (1992), 1.6595 (1991), 1.6157 (1990)
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