Germany Years Before President Reagan Term Paper

The two main problems that Germany faces during its current reunification process can be generalized and applied to other historical and contemporary situations. Nearly any nation attempting to piece itself back together after deep divisions would experience some economic, social, and political conflict. For example, after the Civil War, the United States dealt with heady economic, political and social problems that remain problems well over a century later. As in Germany, a lack of frank ethical discussions may have contributed to the lingering social problems in the United States. Under the GDR government, big state-controlled industry prevailed and small independently-owned businesses were anathema. Free enterprise was suppressed for decades and stimulating small business growth after reunification has proven difficult in Eastern Germany. Similarly, the American government did little to invest in the stimulation of African-American entrepreneurship and the endemic poverty amongst black communities remains a poignant problem in the United States.

History may also have a bearing on how a nation deals with reunification and may affect the social, political, economic realities in the reunified country. Like the United States, Germany is a relatively new nation. Original German unification occurred as recently as 1871, when the Prussian Deutsche Reich extended its southern boundaries. The Weinmar Republic lasted from 1919 to 1933, before the outbreak of World War Two. Under Hitler's rule, the Third Reich and National Socialism pervaded German consciousness until the division of the German territories into the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) and the German Democratic Republic (GDR). Thus, many Germans were contending with the idea of being "unified" just a century before they confronted "reunification." The official reunification of Germany in 1990 may have seemed like the birth of a new nation for many citizens.

Germany, the most populous nation in Europe has also become one of its wealthiest; following World War Two, the FRG thrived even without its industry-heavy Eastern counterpart. However, reunification has resulted in Germany's accruing a considerable amount of...

...

Donations of tax monies to alleviate unemployment, improve infrastructure, and stimulate growth have left many Germans feeling resentful over otherwise robust social welfare programs. Reunification with the territories that had been lost after the war meant assuming all of the GDR's preexisting problems, which were not caused by the citizens of the FRG but rather by mismanagement under Socialist Unity Party rule and Soviet influence.
The economic and social problems evident in Germany's reunification process would haunt any attempt to unify a nation or region. Germany in fact did not face some of the problems that it might have if its population was more ethnically heterogeneous, too. The nations that have attempted to remain intact in spite of sharp distinctions between its indigenous ethnic populations add yet another problem to preexisting economic and social ones. After Gorbachev agreed to tear down that wall, former Soviet republics have become embroiled in civil wars that Germany, thankfully, avoided.

Sources Used in Documents:

References

Blacksell, Mark. State and Nation: Germany Since Reunification. Europa. Number 3 Article 5-1997. Retrieved July 17, 2006 at http://www.intellectbooks.com/europa/number3/blacksel.htm

Delaney, Bill. "Germany Still Dealing with Remnants of Cold War." CNN World News. 1995. Retrieved July 17, 2006 at http://www-cgi.cnn.com/WORLD/9510/germany/index.html

East Germany." Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2006. Retrieved July 17, 2006 at http://encarta.msn.com

Manus, Susan. "Perspectives on German Reunification." Library of Congress Information Bulletin. Nov. 1997. Retrieved July 17, 2006 at http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9711/sommer.html
Schirrmacher, Thomas. "Four Problems with Germany's Re-unification." Contra Mundum. Retrieved July 17, 2006 at http://www.contra-mundum.org/schirrmacher/probreun.html
Schirrmacher, Thomas. "Problems with German Reunification." Antithesis. 1991. Retrieved July 17, 2006 at http://www.reformed.org/webfiles/antithesis/v2n3/ant_v2n3_curr3.html
West Germany." Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2006. Retrieved July 17, 2006 at http://encarta.msn.com


Cite this Document:

"Germany Years Before President Reagan" (2006, July 19) Retrieved April 26, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/germany-years-before-president-reagan-71055

"Germany Years Before President Reagan" 19 July 2006. Web.26 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/germany-years-before-president-reagan-71055>

"Germany Years Before President Reagan", 19 July 2006, Accessed.26 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/germany-years-before-president-reagan-71055

Related Documents
Reagan & the 80s Movies
PAGES 17 WORDS 4752

Many young people voted for Reagan as he represented rebellion against the authority figures in society but was a rebellion characterized by valiance and effectuated through skillful communication. The approval rating of Reagan was approximately 42% when 1982 began but dropped to the record low 35% later that same year. The U.S. entered a recession. If one is to set their focus upon obtaining a chance at being the

When the wall fell, the United States could somewhat smugly say, "I told you so" to the former Soviet sympathizers. Political and ideological victory was a key advantage of reunification for the United States. The Socialist Unity Party (Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands), headed by Ulbrecht for decades, laid the foundations for the state-controlled industrial economy that would characterize East Germany and which might have crippled the Eastern provinces' potential to thrive

President, the Pope, and the Prime Minister Describe the international political environment of the 1980s -- the "stage" on which these individuals were to play a critical role. In the 1980s, the United States and Russia were still in the middle of the Cold War. President Ronald Reagan made it clear that although things had cooled some between the United States and the U.S.S.R. thanks to efforts by the Nixon administration

S. attacked. The U.S. was victorious, and withdrew after about two months of occupation, and the world knew the United States would not tolerate communism's advance of any sort during the Reagan administration. Probably the most notorious aspect of Reagan's foreign policy was the Iran-Contra Affair, which came to light in 1986 during Reagan's second term in office. However, the affair had been going on almost as long as Reagan had

Ronald Reagan: "Tear Down This Wall" For many months, East Germany's beleaguered rulership tried desperately to quiet an increasingly oppositional movement and stem the tide of the people that were leaving the country (Ratnesar web). There were, by 1989, literal and metaphorical cracks in the communist bloc and the Berlin Wall; however, many thought that the wall would still remain. However, then president Ronald Reagan is quoted as saying, "I didn't

Neo-Aristotelian Analysis of Ronald Reagan's "Evil Empire" Speech When President Ronald Reagan delivered his historic "evil empire" speech in 1982, America's enemies were well-known as consisted most especially of the former Soviet Union. Children born since the turn of the 21st century have never known as world that had a Berlin Wall or an East and West Germany, and even observers at the time of the Soviet Union's collapse in