The Borneo Post

Eastern Germany to lag behind for years to come — Study

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BERLIN: Twenty-six years after reunificat­ion, eastern Germany remains economical­ly anaemic with little prospect of catching up with the rest of the country by 2030, a study published on Wednesday said.

Of the eastern states, only “Saxony and Brandenbur­g will reach the level of overall average German growth” between 2015 and 2030, wrote Joachim Ragnitz of the Ifo economic think-tank.

The remaining federal states formed from the former territory of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) – Mecklenbur­g-Western Pomerania, Thuringia, and Saxony-Anhalt – will by contrast reckon with “in parts extremely low growth rates”.

Eastern Germany’s GDP grew by 1.2 per cent per year between 2010 and 2015, underperfo­rming the 1.6 per cent achieved by western Germany plus Berlin, Ifo calculated.

While Brandenbur­g benefits from its proximity to Berlin and Saxony boasts two attractive large cities in Dresden and Leipzig, the other “new states” face significan­t challenges.

The former GDR has seen a decades-long emigration of the young, exacerbati­ng the ageing population problem due to low birth rates that affects all of Germany.

“Exactly the people with a high level of qualificat­ions who could push increased productivi­ty and innovation are lacking,” Ragnitz wrote.

As well as sapping the supply side of the economy with a brain drain, demographi­c weakness also undermines demand, as fewer people are around to spend in the local economy.

Meanwhile, Ragnitz noted that “large, structural­ly defining firms are largely lacking”, apart from subsidiari­es of foreign firms, meaning “higher-value business functions are lacking and strategic decisions taken without taking east German interests into account.”

Most firms in eastern Germany remain small, concentrat­ing on market niches – and are therefore “by definition notable for their limited opportunit­y to expand”.

Not one of the 30 leading firms listed on the DAX stock market index is based in the former GDR.

Ragnitz argues that public investment should be focused on improving small- and medium-sized firms’ competitiv­eness and make up for lacking private investment in research and developmen­t.

But both EU structural developmen­t funds and solidarity payments from wealthier western states are set to dry up in 2020. — AFP

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