- Automobile industry in Germany
The automobile industry in
Germany is one of the largest employers in the country, with a strong labour force of over 866,000 (2005) working in the industry. In addition, Germany has the largest share of passenger car production inEurope with over 29% market share (source: OICA, 2002), followed byFrance (18%),Spain (13%) and theUnited Kingdom (9%). [cite book |title=Europe's Automotive Industry on the Move |last=Heneric |first=Oliver |authorlink= |coauthors=Georg Licht, Wolfgang Sofka |year=2005 |publisher=Axel Springer AG |location=Germany |isbn=379081590X |pages=25 ]History
Germany is considered to be the birthplace of the automobile since
Karl Benz andNikolaus Otto independently developed four-strokeinternal combustion engine s in the late 1870s, with Benz fitting his design to a couch in 1887, which led to the modern day motor car. By 1901, Germany was producing about 900 cars a year. [ [http://www.bbc.co.uk/languages/german/lj/cultural_notes/car_industry.shtml The German Car Industry] , "German Steps - Cultural Notes" (BBC ).]American economist Robert A. Brady extensively documented the rationalization movement that shaped German industry in the 1920s, and although his general model of the movement applied to the automotive industry, the sector was in poor health in the later years of the
Weimar Republic . Germany's slow development of the industry left the market open for major American auto manufacturers such asGeneral Motors who took over German companyOpel in 1929, and theFord Motor Company which maintained a successful German subsidiary.cite book |title=The Fruits of Fascism: Postwar Prosperity in Historical Perspective |last=Reich |first=Simon |year=1990 | chapter=Volkswagen and the State | publisher=Cornell University |location=New York |isbn=0801497299 |pages=25 ]The collapse of the global economy during the
Great Depression in the early 1930s plunged Germany's auto industry into a severe crisis. While eighty-six auto companies had existed in Germany during the 1920s, barely twelve survived the depression, includingDaimler-Benz ,Opel and Ford's factory inCologne . In addition, four of the country's major car manufacturers —Horch , Dampf Kraft Wagen, Wanderer andAudi — formed a joint venture known as theAuto Union , which was to play a leading role in Germany's comeback from the depression. [cite book |title=The Dynamics of German Industry: Germany's Path Toward the New Economy and the American Challenge |last=Abelshauser |first=Werner | year=2005 |publisher=Berghahn Books |location=Germany |isbn=1845450728 |pages= ]The turnabout for the German motor industry came about in the 1930s with the election of the
Nazi Party to power. The Nazis instituted a policy known as "Motorisierung", a transport policy whichAdolf Hitler himself considered a key element of attempts to legitimise the Nazi government by raising the people'sstandard of living . In addition to development and extensions of majorhighway schemes, theVolkswagen project was also conceived to design an construct a robust but inexpensive "people's car".Present day
Currently, six German companies dominate the automotive industry in the country: VW,
Audi (owned by the Volkswagen Group),BMW ,Daimler AG ,Porsche andOpel (which is owned byGeneral Motors ). Nearly six million vehicles are produced in Germany each year, and approximately 4.8 million are produced overseas by German brands. Alongside theUnited States andJapan , Germany is one of the top three automobile manufacturers in the world. [cite web|url=http://www.tatsachen-ueber-deutschland.de/en/economy/main-content-06/car-making-and-service-providers.html |title= Facts about Germany: Car-making and service providers|author=Tatsachen über Deutschland |accessdate=2008-01-30]References
External links
* [http://www.vda.de/index_en.html Verband der Automobilindustrie (VDA)]
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