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German Reunification and Labor Market Adjustment

The economic adjustment following German reunification in 1990 serves as a real-world example of a slow return to equilibrium. Before unification, East Germany had very low unemployment. The shock of unification led to a sharp rise, and by 1994, the unemployment rate was 16.0% in the East compared to 9.1% in the West. Over the subsequent decades, the labor market slowly absorbed this shock, with unemployment rates gradually falling and converging. By 2022, the rates had decreased to 7.4% in the East and 5.4% in the West, illustrating a protracted adjustment process.

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Updated 2026-01-15

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