Economy of Berlin

Economy of Berlin

The economy of Berlin has been affected through the years by the city's changing political fortunes. Berlin was once a major manufacturing center and the economic and financial hub of Germany. The city suffered economically during the Cold War, when West Berlin was isolated geographically and East Berlin suffered from poor economic decisions made by East Germany’s socialist central planners. Since reunification, the city has relied increasingly on economic activity in the service sectors, but nevertheless accumulated a record state debt.

Berlin was founded at a point where trade routes crossed the River Spree and quickly became a commercial center. During the early modern period, the city prospered from its role as Prussian capital by manufacturing luxury goods for the Prussian court and supplies for the Prussian military.

During the mid-1800s, the Industrial Revolution transformed the city’s economy. Berlin became Germany’s main rail hub and a center of locomotive manufacturing. The city became a leader in the manufacture of other kinds of machinery as well, and developed an important chemical industry sector. Toward the end of the 19th century, Berlin became a world leader in the then cutting-edge sector of electrical equipment manufacturing. As the "de facto" center of the German Zollverein, or Customs Union, and later the seat of the Reichsbank, Berlin became Germany’s banking and financial center as well.

Berlin suffered from both the German hyperinflation of the 1920s and the Great Depression of the 1930s. The city’s economy revived as a center of weapons production under the Nazis, but it lost a pool of entrepreneurial talent when the Nazis forced Jewish businessmen to sell their holdings and ultimately massacred most who did not flee Germany. World War II severely damaged Berlin’s industrial infrastructure, and Soviet expropriation of machinery and other capital equipment as “war reparations” further damaged Berlin’s industrial base. Soviet restrictions on transport impeded communication with West Germany and ended hopes that Berlin would resume a role as Germany’s financial center; most banks established headquarters in Frankfurt. In East Berlin, socialist central planners rebuilt a manufacturing sector, but one that was not competitive internationally or responsive to market demand. West Berlin’s economy grew increasingly dependent on state subsidies and on its role as an educational and research center.

Berlin’s and Germany’s unification brought the collapse of many of East Berlin’s producers, which could not compete with market-disciplined Western competitors. Massive unemployment was only partly compensated by the growth of jobs in the construction and infrastructural sectors involved in rebuilding and upgrading East Berlin’s infrastructure. The arrival of the federal government in 1999 brought some economic stimulus to Berlin. Berlin’s service sectors have also benefited from improved transportation and communications links to the surrounding region. While some manufacturing remains in the city (Siemens and Schering are headquartered here, for instance), the service sectors have become the city’s economic mainstay. Recently, research and development have gained significance, and Berlin now ranks among the top three innovative regions in the EU (after Baden-Württemberg and the Ile de France region). [ [http://www.tagesspiegel.de/wirtschaft/archiv/20.11.2006/2909018.asp News analysis: innovation index November 2006 de icon] ] However, growth in the research and development sector has not been sufficient to offset job losses, and unemployment remains high, at 16.5% as of October 2006. [ [http://www.berlin.de/landespressestelle/archiv/2006/11/02/49680/index.html Landespresseamt de icon] URL accessed on November 2, 2006]

Fast-growing sectors are communications, life sciences, mobility and services with information and communication technologies, media and music, advertising and design, biotechnology and environmental services, transportation and medical engineering. [ [http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_id=7953479 Poor but sexy] , The Economist, Accessed November 12, 2006] Berlin is among the top five congress cities in the world and is home to Europe's biggest convention center in the form of the Internationales Congress Centrum (ICC). It contributes to the rapidly increasing tourism sector encompassing 592 hotels with 90,700 beds and numbered 17.3 million overnight stays and 7.5 million hotel guests in 2007. Berlin has established itself as the third most visited city destination in the European Union. [ [http://www.tagesspiegel.de/berlin/Stadtleben-Tourismus;art125,2470131 Jedes Jahr ein neuer Rekord] (German), Der Tagesspiegel, Accessed February 6, 2008] [ [http://www.rbb-online.de/_/nachrichten/wirtschaft/beitrag_jsp/key=news5305532.html Land Berlin stützt Tourismuswerbung] (German), www.rbb-online.de, Accessed January 10, 2007] The figures indicate the first surplus in the history of the city state. [ [http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/0,1518,527721,00.html Berlin schafft erstes Etatplus seit dem Krieg] (German), SpiegelOnline, Accessed February, 2008] Due to increasing growth rates and tax revenues, the Senate of Berlin calculates an increasing budget surplus in 2008 and 2009.

Some notable companies with their headquarters in Berlin are Axel Springer AG, Deutsche Bahn, Bombardier Transportation, Universal Music Germany and Vattenfall Europe.

ee also

*Economic history of Germany

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Berlin — This article is about the capital of Germany. For other uses, see Berlin (disambiguation). Berlin   State of Germany   Left to right: Berliner …   Wikipedia

  • Economy of Germany — Downtown Frankfurt Rank 4th (nominal) / 5th (PPP) Currency …   Wikipedia

  • Berlin Brandenburg Airport — Flughafen Berlin Brandenburg Willy Brandt (under construction) …   Wikipedia

  • BERLIN — BERLIN, largest city and capital of Germany. The Old Community (1295–1573) Jews are first mentioned in a letter from the Berlin local council of Oct. 28, 1295, forbidding wool merchants to supply Jews with wool yarn. Suzerainty over the Jews… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Berlin population statistics — Berlin is the second most populous city in the European Union, as calculated by city proper population (not metropolitan area). Contents 1 Population by borough 2 Historical development of Berlin s population 3 Population by nationality …   Wikipedia

  • Berlin/Brandenburg Metropolitan Region — Berlin Brandenburg redirects here. For the airport, see Berlin Brandenburg International Airport. Berlin/Brandenburg Metropolitan Region Metropolregion Berlin/Brandenburg Map of the Berlin/Brandenburg Metropolitan Region …   Wikipedia

  • Berlin Wall — For the chess opening variation, sometimes known as Berlin Wall, see Berlin Defence. View from the West Berlin side of graffiti art on the wall in 1986. The wall s infa …   Wikipedia

  • Berlin Wall — (1989)    When the infamous Berlin Wall was surprisingly opened and then torn down in November of 1989, what ensued was the unification of the communist German Democratic Republic (GDR) with the capitalist Federal Republic of Germany (FRG), the… …   Historical dictionary of Marxism

  • berlin — /beuhr lin , berr lin/, n. 1. a large, four wheeled, closed carriage hung between two perches and having two interior seats. 2. Auto. berline. 3. (sometimes cap.) See Berlin wool. [1725 35; after BERLIN, Germany; the carriage was allegedly… …   Universalium

  • Berlin — /beuhr lin / for 1, 2; /berr lin/ for 3, 4; for 2 also Ger. /berdd leen /, n. 1. Irving, born 1888, U.S. songwriter. 2. the capital of Germany, in the NE part: constitutes a state. 3,121,000; 341 sq. mi. (883 sq. km.). Formerly (1948 90) divided… …   Universalium

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”