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A Win-Win Situation for American Investors in East Germany

Monika Dittrich (kjb)July 13, 2006

A central location, government subsidies, financial security and low wages make former East Germany attractive to American investors. US companies are bringing funds and much needed jobs to the former communist region.

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East Germany is giving American companies an edge of the global marketImage: AP

President George Bush on Thursday is visiting Angela Merkel in Stralsund on the Baltic Sea. The German chancellor invited her American counterpart to her own electoral district in eastern Germany, in part so he could form his own impressions of the "new" states nearly 16 years after German reunification.

Though unemployment is still uncomfortably high in the East -- between 20 and 30 percent in Stralsund -- Bush's countrymen and women have been playing a significant role in the recovery of the eastern German economy. American investors are attracted to the central European region, primarily because of its opportune geographical location, and numerous American companies have written their success stories there.

Billions from the US since reunification

"The US is the most important investor in the East German states," said the American ambassador to Germany, William R. Timken. "American companies employ nearly 40,000 people there and we Americans are an important part of the eastern German economy."

Ebay - Screenshot
Internet auction site E-bay is a California based company that has put down roots in East GermanyImage: AP

After the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 and German reunification in 1990, around 400 American companies set up shop in former East Germany -- from Dow Chemical, E-Bay and General Motors to Coca-Cola, Goodyear and smaller businesses, too.

American companies have since invested a total of 17 billion euros ($21.7 billion) in the East German economy.

Gateway to the East

Its proximity to new eastern European, southeastern European and Asian markets makes former East Germany particularly attractive to American investors, said Wolfgang Tiefensee, federal minister for the new German states.

"The new German states serve as a gateway to these new markets for the investors," he said.

However, geography is not the only plus to investing in former East Germany.

"Germany offers security: legal security and financial security for the investment," Tiefensee said. "And that gives it an advantage over other countries."

US chip maker in Saxony's micro-electronic cluster

AMD, the world's leading producer of computer chips next to Intel, is one of the American companies that have invested in eastern Germany. They came to Saxony, which even during communist times had been a hub for the micro-electronic industry.

Blick auf den Erweiterungsbau von AMD, Advanced Micro Devices, in Dresden am Freitag, 14. Mai 2004
AMD opened its largest semi-conductor plant outside the US in Dresden in 1999Image: AP

Wages are lower in Saxony than in western Germany, as is the case in all five new states. The labor market is also more flexible and cities with major universities, like Dresden in Saxony, have highly qualified specialists.

AMD manager Hans Deppe hasn't regretted the move to Saxony and has a positive outlook on the future, in spite of challenging market conditions.

Competition on the global market

"We face global competition in the semi-conductor industry, which is not limited to just the European Union," Deppe said. "What has been built up in the micro-electronic cluster in Saxony has so much potential that we are going to see growth in the future. I'm certain of that."

At AMD, growth is well underway: the chip producer recently announced plans to invest an additional $2.5 billion in its Dresden plant. Twenty percent of that will come from the German taxpayers in the form of investment bonuses.

Sachsen Karte
Saxony is one of Germany's 16 federal states

State subsidies are yet another alluring aspect of investing in former East Germany. The European Union, the federal government and the new German states all seek to attract potential investors by offering investment bonuses and tax breaks.

Federal government seeks to cut red tape

Even if the advantages of investment in eastern Germany seem to outweigh the disadvantages, there are a few drawbacks the new states will have to resolve if they want to enhance their global competitiveness.

Issues like recognizing American drivers' licenses in Germany or providing language training for employees are among the less formidable hurdles, but excessive bureaucracy is more critical.

"Germany still has the reputation of being overly bureaucratic, having too many rules and too much red tape," Tiefensee said. "That's something we have to deal with and the federal government is doing that through de-bureaucratizing and by accelerating planning processes."