Entrepreneurs as saviours of socialism? The complicated relationship between East German state socialism and entrepreneurship
Max Trecker (SFB 1199, GWZO)
Publication Date
June 2020
Publisher
Taylor & Francis online
Language
English
Type
Article
Journal
Business History
Additional Information
Abstract
The economic policy agenda of the SED has often been described as extremely orthodox in nature and—with the exception of a short period in the 1960s—hostile to reform. It is often overlooked that the GDR entertained the largest private sector of any of the CMEA economies up till the early 1980s. Besides the official propaganda, the SED leadership at no point abolished private entrepreneurship completely in the GDR. In this article, I analyze the ambiguous relationship between the state party and private entrepreneurship. I focus particularly on the late 1980s and the role private entrepreneurs were supposed to play in reforming and saving socialism in East Germany.
Biographical Note
Max Trecker (SFB 1199, GWZO Leipzig, Germany)
Max Trecker studied from 2008 until 2013 economics at Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich and at the Central European University, Budapest. Since 2020 he is an scientific employee at the Leibniz-Insititute for History and Culture for eastern Europe in the subproject “Socialist Development Models for the ‘Third World'” of the SFB 1199.