:Germany Geography

Total area:
    356,910 km2
Land area:
    349,520 km2; comprises the formerly separate Federal Republic of Germany,
    the German Democratic Republic, and Berlin following formal unification on 3
    October 1990
Comparative area:
    slightly smaller than Montana
Land boundaries:
    3,790 km; Austria 784 km, Belgium 167 km, Czechoslovakia 815 km, Denmark 68
    km, France 451 km, Luxembourg 138 km, Netherlands 577 km, Poland 456 km,
    Switzerland 334 km
Coastline:
    2,389 km
Maritime claims:
  Continental shelf:
    200 m (depth) or to depth of exploitation
  Exclusive fishing zone:
    200 nm
  Territorial sea:
    North Sea and Schleswig-Holstein coast of Baltic Sea - 3 nm (extends, at one
    point, to 16 nm in the Helgolander Bucht); remainder of Baltic Sea - 12 nm
Disputes:
    the boundaries of Germany were set by the Treaty on the Final Settlement
    With Respect to Germany signed 12 September 1990 in Moscow by the Federal
    Republic of Germany, the German Democratic Republic, France, the United
    Kingdom, the United States, and the Soviet Union; this Treaty entered into
    force on 15 March 1991; a subsequent Treaty between Germany and Poland,
    reaffirming the German-Polish boundary, was signed on 14 November 1990 and
    took effect on 16 January 1992
Climate:
    temperate and marine; cool, cloudy, wet winters and summers; occasional
    warm, tropical foehn wind; high relative humidity
Terrain:
    lowlands in north, uplands in center, Bavarian Alps in south
Natural resources:
    iron ore, coal, potash, timber, lignite, uranium, copper, natural gas, salt,
    nickel
Land use:
    arable land 34%; permanent crops 1%; meadows and pastures 16%; forest and
    woodland 30%; other 19%; includes irrigated 1%
Environment:
    air and water pollution; groundwater, lakes, and air quality in eastern
    Germany are especially bad; significant deforestation in the eastern
    mountains caused by air pollution and acid rain
Note:
    strategic location on North European Plain and along the entrance to the
    Baltic Sea

:Germany People

Population:
    80,387,283 (July 1992), growth rate 0.5% (1992)
Birth rate:
    11 births/1,000 population (1992)
Death rate:
    11 deaths/1,000 population (1992)
Net migration rate:
    5 migrants/1,000 population (1992)
Infant mortality rate:
    7 deaths/1,000 live births (1992)
Life expectancy at birth:
    73 years male, 79 years female (1992)
Total fertility rate:
    1.4 children born/woman (1992)
Nationality:
    noun - German(s); adjective - German
Ethnic divisions:
    primarily German; small Danish and Slavic minorities
Religions:
    Protestant 45%, Roman Catholic 37%, unaffiliated or other 18%
Languages:
    German
Literacy:
    99% (male NA%, female NA%) age 15 and over can read and write (1970 est.)
Labor force:
    36,750,000; industry 41%, agriculture 6%, other 53% (1987)
Organized labor:
    47% of labor force (1986 est.)

:Germany Government

Long-form name:
    Federal Republic of Germany
Type:
    federal republic
Capital:
    Berlin; note - the shift from Bonn to Berlin will take place over a period
    of years with Bonn retaining many administrative functions and several
    ministries
Administrative divisions:
    16 states (lander, singular - land); Baden-Wurttemberg, Bayern, Berlin,
    Brandenburg, Bremen, Hamburg, Hessen, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Niedersachsen,
    Nordrhein-Westfalen, Rheinland-Pfalz, Saarland, Sachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt,
    Schleswig-Holstein, Thuringen
Independence:
    18 January 1871 (German Empire unification); divided into four zones of
    occupation (UK, US, USSR, and later, France) in 1945 following World War II;
    Federal Republic of Germany (FRG or West Germany) proclaimed 23 May 1949 and
    included the former UK, US, and French zones; German Democratic Republic
    (GDR or East Germany) proclaimed 7 October 1949 and included the former USSR
    zone; unification of West Germany and East Germany took place 3 October
    1990; all four power rights formally relinquished 15 March 1991
Constitution:
    23 May 1949, provisional constitution known as Basic Law
Legal system:
    civil law system with indigenous concepts; judicial review of legislative
    acts in the Federal Constitutional Court; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
    jurisdiction
National holiday:
    German Unity Day, 3 October (1990)
Executive branch:
    president, chancellor, Cabinet
Legislative branch:
    bicameral parliament (no official name for the two chambers as a whole)
    consists of an upper chamber or Federal Council (Bundesrat) and a lower
    chamber or Federal Diet (Bundestag)
Judicial branch:
    Federal Constitutional Court (Bundesverfassungsgericht)
Leaders:
  Chief of State:
    President Dr. Richard von WEIZSACKER (since 1 July 1984)
  Head of Government:
    Chancellor Dr. Helmut KOHL (since 4 October 1982)
    *** No entry for this item ***
Political parties and leaders:
    Christian Democratic Union (CDU), Helmut KOHL, chairman; Christian Social
    Union (CSU), Theo WAIGEL; Free Democratic Party (FDP), Otto Count
    LAMBSDORFF, chairman; Social Democratic Party (SPD), Bjoern ENGHOLM, -
    chairman; - Green - Party - Ludger VOLMER, Christine WEISKE, co-chairmen
    (after the 2 December 1990 election the East and West German Green Parties
    united); Alliance 90 united to form one party in September 1991, Petra
    MORAWE, chairwoman; Republikaner, Franz SCHOENHUBER; National Democratic
    Party (NPD), Walter BACHMANN; Communist Party (DKP), Rolf PRIEMER
Suffrage:
    universal at age 18

:Germany Government

Elections:
  Federal Diet:
    last held 2 December 1990 (next to be held October 1994); results - CDU
    36.7%, SPD 33.5%, FDP 11.0%, CSU 7.1%, Green Party (West Germany) 3.9%, PDS
    2.4%, Republikaner 2.1%, Alliance 90/Green Party (East Germany) 1.2%, other
    2.1%; seats - (662 total, 656 statutory with special rules to allow for
    slight expansion) CDU 268, SPD 239, FDP 79, CSU 51, PDS 17, Alliance
    90/Green Party (East Germany) 8; note - special rules for this election
    allowed former East German parties to win seats if they received at least 5%
    of vote in eastern Germany
    *** No entry for this item ***
Communists:
    West - about 40,000 members and supporters; East - about 200,000 party
    members (December 1991)
Other political or pressure groups:
    expellee, refugee, and veterans groups
Member of:
    AfDB, AG (observer), AsDB, BDEAC, BIS, CCC, CE, CERN, COCOM, CSCE, EBRD, EC,
    ECE, EIB, ESA, FAO, G-5, G-7, G-10, GATT, IADB, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICC,
    ICFTU, IDA, IEA, IFAD, IFC, ILO, IMF, IMO, INMARSAT, INTELSAT, INTERPOL,
    IOC, IOM, ISO, ITU, LORCS, NATO, NEA, OAS (observer), OECD, PCA, UN, UNCTAD,
    UNESCO, UNIDO, UNHCR, UPU, WEU, WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WTO
Diplomatic representation:
    Ambassador Dr. Immo STABREIT will become Ambassador in late summer/early
    fall 1992; Chancery at 4645 Reservoir Road NW, Washington, DC 20007;
    telephone (202) 298-4000; there are German Consulates General in Atlanta,
    Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Houston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, and
    New York, and Consulates in Miami and New Orleans
  US:
    Ambassador Robert M. KIMMITT; Embassy at Deichmanns Avenue, 5300 Bonn 2
    (mailing address is APO AE 09080); telephone [49] (228) 3391; there is a US
    Branch Office in Berlin and US Consulates General in Frankfurt, Hamburg,
    Leipzig, Munich, and Stuttgart
Flag:
    three equal horizontal bands of black (top), red, and yellow

:Germany Economy

Overview:
    The Federal Republic of Germany is making substantial progress in
    integrating and modernizing eastern Germany, but at a heavy economic cost.
    Western Germany's growth in 1991 slowed to 3.1% - the lowest rate since 1987
    - because of slack world growth and higher interest rates and taxes required
    by the unification process. While western Germany's economy was in recession
    in the last half of 1991, eastern Germany's economy bottomed out after a
    nearly two-year freefall and shows signs of recovery, particularly in the
    construction, transportation, and service sectors. Eastern Germany could
    begin a fragile recovery later, concentrated in 1992 in construction,
    transportation, and services. The two regions remain vastly different,
    however, despite eastern Germany's progress. Western Germany has an advanced
    market economy and is a world leader in exports. It has a highly urbanized
    and skilled population that enjoys excellent living standards, abundant
    leisure time, and comprehensive social welfare benefits. Western Germany is
    relatively poor in natural resources, coal being the most important mineral.
    Western Germany's world-class companies manufacture technologically advanced
    goods. The region's economy is mature: services and manufacturing account
    for the dominant share of economic activity, and raw materials and
    semimanufactured goods constitute a large portion of imports. In recent
    years, manufacturing has accounted for about 31% of GDP, with other sectors
    contributing lesser amounts. Gross fixed investment in 1990 accounted for
    about 21% of GDP. In 1991, GDP in the western region was an estimated
    $19,200 per capita. In contrast, eastern Germany's economy is shedding the
    obsolete heavy industries that dominated the economy during the Communist
    era. Eastern Germany's share of all-German GDP is only about 7%, and eastern
    productivity is just 30% that of the west. The privatization agency for
    eastern Germany, the Treuhand, is rapidly selling many of the 11,500 firms
    under its control. The pace of private investment is starting to pick up,
    but questions about property rights and environmental liabilities remain.
    Eastern Germany has one of the world's largest reserves of low-grade lignite
    coal but little else in the way of mineral resources. The quality of
    statistics from eastern Germany is improving, yet many gaps remain; the
    federal government began producing all-German data for select economic
    statistics at the start of 1992. The most challenging economic problem is
    promoting eastern Germany's economic reconstruction - specifically, finding
    the right mix of fiscal, monetary, regulatory, and tax policies that will
    spur investment in eastern Germany - without destabilizing western Germany's
    economy or damaging relations with West European partners. The biggest
    danger is that excessive wage settlements and heavy federal borrowing could
    fuel inflation and prompt the German Central Bank, the Bundesbank, to keep a
    tight monetary policy to choke off a wage-price spiral. Meanwhile, the FRG
    has been providing billions of dollars to help the former Soviet republics
    and the reformist economies of Eastern Europe.
GDP:
    purchasing power equivalent - Federal Republic of Germany: $1,331.4 billion,
    per capita $16,700; real growth rate 0.7%; western Germany: $1,235.8
    billion, per capita $19,200; real growth rate 3.1%; eastern Germany $95.6
    billion, per capita $5,870; real growth rate - 30% (1991 est.)
Inflation rate (consumer prices):
    West - 3.5% (1991); East - NA%
Unemployment rate:
    West - 6.3% (1991); East - 11% (1991)
Budget:
    West (federal, state, local) - revenues $684 billion; expenditures $704
    billion, including capital expenditures $NA (1990), East - NA
Exports:
    West - $324.3 billion (f.o.b., 1989)

:Germany Economy

  commodities:
    manufactures 86.6% (including machines and machine tools, chemicals, motor
    vehicles, iron and steel products), agricultural products 4.9%, raw
    materials 2.3%, fuels 1.3%
Exports:
  partners:
    EC 53.3% (France 12.7%, Netherlands 8.3%, Italy 9.1%, UK 8.3%,
    Belgium-Luxembourg 7.3%), other Western Europe 15.9%, US 7.1%, Eastern
    Europe 4.1%, OPEC 2.7% (1990)
Imports:
    West - $346.5 billion (f.o.b., 1989)
  commodities:
    manufactures 68.5%, agricultural products 12.0%, fuels 9.7%, raw materials
    7.1%
  partners:
    EC 51.7% (France 11.7%, Netherlands 10.1%, Italy 9.3%, UK 6.7%,
    Belgium-Luxembourg 7.2%), other Western Europe 13.4%, US 6.6%, Eastern
    Europe 3.8%, OPEC 2.5% (1990)
External debt:
    West - $500 million (June 1988); East - $20.6 billion (1989)
Industrial production:
    growth rates, West - 5.4% (1990); East - 30% (1991 est.)
Electricity:
    133,000,000 kW capacity; 580,000 million kWh produced, 7,390 kWh per capita
    (1991)
Industries:
    West - among world's largest producers of iron, steel, coal, cement,
    chemicals, machinery, vehicles, machine tools, electronics; food and
    beverages; East - metal fabrication, chemicals, brown coal, shipbuilding,
    machine building, food and beverages, textiles, petroleum refining
Agriculture:
    West - accounts for about 2% of GDP (including fishing and forestry);
    diversified crop and livestock farming; principal crops and livestock
    include potatoes, wheat, barley, sugar beets, fruit, cabbage, cattle, pigs,
    poultry; net importer of food; fish catch of 202,000 metric tons in 1987;
    East - accounts for about 10% of GDP (including fishing and forestry);
    principal crops - wheat, rye, barley, potatoes, sugar beets, fruit;
    livestock products include pork, beef, chicken, milk, hides and skins; net
    importer of food; fish catch of 193,600 metric tons in 1987
Economic aid:
    West - donor - ODA and OOF commitments (1970-89), $75.5 billion; East -
    donor - $4.0 billion extended bilaterally to non-Communist less developed
    countries (1956-89)
Currency:
    deutsche mark (plural - deutsche marks); 1 deutsche mark (DM) = 100 pfennige
Exchange rates:
    deutsche marks (DM) per US$1 - 1.6611 (March 1992), 1.6595 (1991), 1.6157
    (1990), 1.8800 (1989), 1.7562 (1988), 1.7974 (1987)
Fiscal year:
    calendar year

:Germany Communications

Railroads:
    West - 31,443 km total; 27,421 km government owned, 1.435-meter standard
    gauge (12,491 km double track, 11,501 km electrified); 4,022 km
    nongovernment owned, including 3,598 km 1.435-meter standard gauge (214 km
    electrified) and 424 km 1.000-meter gauge (186 km electrified); East -
    14,025 km total; 13,750 km 1.435-meter standard gauge, 275 km 1.000-meter or
    other narrow gauge; 3,830 (est.) km 1.435-meter standard gauge double-track;
    3,475 km overhead electrified (1988)
Highways:
    West - 466,305 km total; 169,568 km primary, includes 6,435 km autobahn,
    32,460 km national highways (Bundesstrassen), 65,425 km state highways
    (Landesstrassen), 65,248 km county roads (Kreisstrassen); 296,737 km of
    secondary communal roads (Gemeindestrassen); East - 124,604 km total; 47,203
    km concrete, asphalt, stone block, of which 1,855 km are autobahn and
    limited access roads, 11,326 are trunk roads, and 34,022 are regional roads;
    77,401 municipal roads (1988)
Inland waterways:
    West - 5,222 km, of which almost 70% are usable by craft of 1,000-metric ton
    capacity or larger; major rivers include the Rhine and Elbe; Kiel Canal is
    an important connection between the Baltic Sea and North Sea; East - 2,319
    km (1988)
Pipelines:
    crude oil 3,644 km; petroleum products 3,946 km; natural gas 97,564 km
    (1988)
Ports:
    maritime - Bremerhaven, Brunsbuttel, Cuxhaven, Emden, Bremen, Hamburg, Kiel,
    Lubeck, Wilhelmshaven, Rostock, Wismar, Stralsund, Sassnitz; inland - 31
    major
Merchant marine:
    607 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 5,210,060 GRT/6,626,333 DWT; includes
    3 passenger, 5 short-sea passenger, 324 cargo, 10 refrigerated cargo, 135
    container, 31 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 5 railcar carrier, 6 barge carrier, 11
    oil tanker, 21 chemical tanker, 22 liquefied gas tanker, 5 combination
    ore/oil, 14 combination bulk, 15 bulk; note - the German register includes
    ships of the former East and West Germany; during 1991 the fleet underwent
    major restructuring as surplus ships were sold off
Civil air:
    239 major transport aircraft
Airports:
    462 total, 455 usable; 242 with permanent-surface runways; 4 with runways
    over 3,659 m; 40 with runways 2,440-3,659 m; 55 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications:
    West - highly developed, modern telecommunication service to all parts of
    the country; fully adequate in all respects; 40,300,000 telephones;
    intensively developed, highly redundant cable and radio relay networks, all
    completely automatic; broadcast stations - 80 AM, 470 FM, 225 (6,000
    repeaters) TV; 6 submarine coaxial cables; satellite earth stations - 12
    Atlantic Ocean INTELSAT antennas, 2 Indian Ocean INTELSAT antennas,
    EUTELSAT, and domestic systems; 2 HF radiocommunication centers;
    tropospheric links East - badly needs modernization; 3,970,000 telephones;
    broadcast stations - 23 AM, 17 FM, 21 TV (15 Soviet TV repeaters); 6,181,860
    TVs; 6,700,000 radios; 1 satellite earth station operating in INTELSAT and
    Intersputnik systems

:Germany Defense Forces

Branches:
    Army, Navy, Air Force, Federal Border Police
Manpower availability:
    males 15-49, 20,300,359; 17,612,677 fit for military service; 414,330 reach
    military age (18) annually
Defense expenditures:
    exchange rate conversion - $39.5 billion, 2.5% of GDP (1991)

