Causation

Causes of Slow Labor Market Adjustment in Post-Unification Germany

The slow economic adjustment in post-unification Germany stemmed from the failure of standard market mechanisms to restore equilibrium quickly. A dramatic rise in unemployment occurred as numerous East German manufacturing firms shut down due to their inability to operate profitably. This unprofitability was driven by two primary factors. First, contrary to the theoretical adjustment mechanism of falling wages in a high-unemployment environment, wages in the East increased rapidly to match West German levels. Second, East German firms were largely uncompetitive, unable to successfully sell their products in the unified German market or globally. The prolonged adjustment period highlights that if the model's self-correcting mechanisms had functioned swiftly, the recovery would have been significantly faster.

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Updated 2025-10-04

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