Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The GDR - A workers'
paradise?
- STATE SOCIALISM
- The entire population was
given basic security in housing,
employment and welfare
- Everyone was entitled to educational opportunities
- Peasants' and workers' faculties were set up to
aid the more vulnerable members of society.
- Efforts were
made to help
women enter
the workforce
eg nurseries
attached to
factories.
- Working class children
were given help
advancing at the cost of
middle-class children.
- However this imbalance was addressed in the 1960s, with
talents and skills becoming prized over background
- Everyone who could work had a
job - in fact, you could be
punished for being unemployed.
- All workers had to be part
of the FGDB (Free German
Trade Federation)
- This provided legal protection,
arbitration and organised holidays, but
also reported all subversive activity.
- Factories had their own
hospitals, flats and nurseries.
- Schoolchildren spent one day a week
at a production plant
- Factories had 'wall of fame workers' to
encourage high production - eg Adolf
Hennecke who exceeded his work norm 387%
- However, workers were also punished
for failing to meet their norms.
- Only the state could give promotions, so to
advance you had to have special training
available only to political conformists.
- YOUTH AND EDUCATION
- Only officially sanctioned youth
organisations were permitted.
- Joining the FDJ (ages 14-25) was vital for
anyone who wanted educational
advancement or a job.
- The Pioneers were a younger branch of the
FDJ for 6-14 year olds, offering educational,
cultural and sports programmes
- A university education was blocked to
dissidents, and those from dissident
families - even just outspoken Christians
- Dissident youths were punished - in 1959, 15 youths
were arrested for shouting publicly about wanting
elements of western culture such as rock 'n' roll
- Most who failed to join youth
organisations did so because
of religious reasons.
- All private
schools were
abolished.
- Marxist-Leninism was a
compulsory subject.
- The Jugendweihe,
a secular state
ceremony,
replaced
confirmation.
- WOMEN'S SITUATION
- The GDR constitution of 1949 guarunteed
equal women's rights before the law.
- Since the 1968 constitution said that
work was a duty, 87% of women had
a job outside the home
- The 1965 New Family Code said
that men should take on their
share of housework
- However, women still had shorter work
hours and had to take 'housework days off.'
- They also generally had
lower-paid, unskilled jobs.
- State nurseries, after-school provision
and factory creches aided this.
- The rates of divorce and children born outside
marriage rose - this shows that women had
more freedom and economic independence.
- However, the rates of marriage and
remarriage were also high, showing
that many women needed the
economic support.
- CHURCH
- The church was one hindrance to state
socialism, as it presented a forum for
opposition to the GDR.
- Ulbricht tried to weaken the churches
throughout the 1950s by removing the
church influence in education.
- The Young Christian
Organisation was made illegal.
- However, the Church still
ran old people's homes,
childcare centres and
hosptials
- In 1958, it was agreed that the Church
would be allowed to exist and that the
state would accept religious freedom.
- In 1969, an East German Church was founded within the state.
- Any Church leaders who spoke out, such as
Otto Dibelius, Bishop of Berlin, were
subjected to repeated harassment.
- CULTURE
- Art and literature were all
monitored.
- Western music, literature and art were
dismissed as decadent.
- All culture was subject
to censorship.
- Many writers left for the FRG.
- All literature had a
political agenda.
- The exception was
Church publications.
- IMPACT
- By 1955, the GDR was the
wealthiest country in the
Soviet bloc.
- However, it never
really competed with,
let alone surpassed
the FRG.
- The GDR's economy was
growing at 3% through
the 1960s. The FRG's was
growing at 8% in the
1950s.
- Those at the bottom of the social ladder had
more opportunities in the GDR.
- Those higher up found life harder.
- INDUSTRY AND AGRICULTURE
- By 1949, 60% of heavy industry had
been collectivised. By the late 1950s,
all energy production and major
iudustries were collectivised.
- This allowed labour and machinery to be exploited
to the full, however, the original 7000 large farm
estates were more efficient than the small farms
they were divided up into.
- 15,000 farmers left for the FRG
rather than join collective farms
- Collectivisation led to food
shortages leading to
rationing of goods such as
milk and butter
- Farmers received low prices for
their crops and were fined for late
deliveries - led to disctontentment
- SAGs were plants that
produced goods specifically
for the USSR; there were 213,
including some of the most
important chemical and
engineering plants.
- VEBs, public-owned enterprises,
successfully comprised 76% of
industrial production
- The first 5-year plan of 1950
doubled industrial output.
- However, the second 5-year plan failed to
increase regional specialisation as intended
and was abandoned.
- The 7-year plan adopted instead aimed to
increase production of chemicals,
engineered goods and energy. Ulbricht
announced that under its influence, the
GDR would outstrop the GDR.
- However this was totally unrealistic
and the plan was abandoned in 1962
after an economic downturn.
- Problems
- Little attention was paid to supply and demand.
- In order to produce enough,
managers lowered standards,
encouraging poor workmanship.
- Wages were also kept low.
- People were discontented at the
lack of focus on consumer goods.
- In 1963, the New Economic Plan aimed
to increase consumer good production
and allow some decentralisation.
- However, in 1968, this approach was
abandoned after the Prague Spring in
favour of more centralisation.