East Germany's economic history is typically told as a story of the
unravelling of an inherently flawed system. Yet, while the system's
inefficiency is undeniable, its economic history was much richer than
its comparatively poor economic performance suggests. For many who lived
there, it was a system that, over its forty years, was capable of
achievements and generally functioned at bearable levels. This book
combines the insights of behavioural economics with archival research to
peel away layers of rhetoric and assumptions about the East German
economy and explore aspects of that underlying functionality.
Through a series of cases studies that examine the establishment of
socialist workplaces, the searches for productivity growth and
efficiency, and the emergence of financial crisis, the book considers
the system from the perspective of the humans who operated it and made
the decisions that made it work. Unencumbered by political
preconceptions, it offers a more realistic understanding of East German
economic history than that derived from stagnant debates about the clash
of systems. The new perspectives and approaches presented demonstrate
that, extracted from its Cold War context, East Germany's economic
history can be analysed for what it was, rather than for what it
symbolised.