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Germany

The Federal Republic of Germany is a country in Western Europe covering an area of 357,021 sq km. It is the most populous member state of the European Union with 81.8 million inhabitants. Germany is home to the third-biggest number of international migrants worldwide.

4,376 Questions

Does Germany have Halloween?

Yes its one of there only holidays in fact. They only celebrate three holidays

Which is true of the Federal Republic of Germany?

It united the British, American, and French areas of control.

It was pro-American

Where are the Girl Scout camps in Germany?

Scouting and Guiding in Germany is very fragmented with about 150 different associations and federations. They own little property but extensively use national parks and forests.

Generally a patrol of six or eight Scouts- girls and boys -sleep in a big black tent called a kohte with an open fire in the middle.

What is the life style of German people?

life i eastern Germany when the Berlin wall was up was horrible. they were treated like robots. they had to do everything the state said. And without asking any questions. Its like the state had the controllers to the robots and the people were the robots!!!!!!!!!

What is the Social class for Germany?

The upper class makes up 12% of the economy in Germany.

The middle class make up about 75%.

The lower class makes up a little more than 12%.

What did Germans bring to America?

The brought hot dogs, hamburgers, and the idea of decorating a Christmas tree.

How is the country Germany similar to of its neighbors?

The German economy has been one of the wonders of the world over the last couple of years. While the rest of Europe staggered, German unemployment fell to the lowest level in decades.Enlarge This Image

Michael Dalder/Reuters

A Porsche factory in Germany. As other countries stagnate, the German economy is growing.

Stephanie Pilick/DPA, via Agence France-Presse - Getty Images

Angel Gurría is the general secretary of the O.E.C.D.

This week the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the club of developed economies around the world, issued a new "Economic Survey of Germany." The biggest challenge it could find facing the country was finding enough workers.

It recommended steps to encourage more women to work.

"Please accept our sincere congratulations for a well-managed economy," said Angel Gurría, the O.E.C.D.'s secretary general, in a speech in Berlin. The country's "growth model has been so successful in navigating through the stormy waters of the crisis."

The German labor system, with its incentives to move workers to part time rather than lay them off, does appear to have been critical in keeping the country's unemployment rate from rising more than it did during the credit crisis.

But the decline of unemployment since then has more to do with the fact that Germany - perhaps unintentionally but certainly effectively - has managed to assure that its currency is undervalued, both relative to that of its neighbors and to much of the rest of the world. That has helped the country's exporters and brought more business to the country.

In the Great Depression, many countries tried devaluations to gain export advantages over rivals. The strategy became known as "beggar thy neighbor." It generally failed to work because other countries responded with their own devaluations.

Now some of Germany's neighbors have been reduced to begging. They cannot take a page from the Depression playbook and devalue their own currency. They no longer have one.

The creation of the euro a dozen years ago at first seemed to provide a bonanza to many countries that adopted the currency. Their borrowing costs fell, as currency risk seemed to vanish and interest rates converged with the already low German rates. That cheaper credit helped them to borrow and grow. But most did little to hold down labor costs, or to enact structural reforms to let them cope with an environment where they could no longer regain competitiveness through currency devaluation.

The result is that unit labor costs, one measure of competitiveness between economies, fell in Germany while they were rising in other countries. Since the crisis, they have stabilized and even declined in many countries, but they are not close to making up the difference. German costs are not rising either.

That makes it much harder than it used to be for the rest of the countries in the euro zone to compete with Germany. Germans are correct when they say that it was mistakes made by the other countries - whether in allowing real estate bubbles in Spain and Ireland or borrowing too much and failing to enact structural reforms in Italy - that caused the problems. But the euro has become a straitjacket for troubled economies trying to recover.

For Germany, the problems of its neighbors have helped it compete against non-European exporters, like Japan and the United States. The value of the euro is set by markets, but it seems reasonable to think it is based on some sort of average condition in the euro zone. If Germany still had its own currency, it would no doubt be stronger than the euro is now.

The impact of currencies could be seen earlier this month on successive days when Nissan, the Japanese automaker, and Daimler, the German maker of Mercedes cars, announced profits. Nissan moaned about the yen, which makes it very difficult to make money exporting cars from Japan, while Daimler forecast strong earnings if the euro stays where it is. The euro has lost a third of its value against the yen since the credit crisis began.

The O.E.C.D. report is worth reading for its explanation of labor policies that other countries should consider. In good times, many German workers work overtime but are not immediately paid for it. Those hours are credited to their account, and when times get rough they go on part time but are paid full-time wages, with the difference coming out of the account. Another government policy allows companies to reduce hours with the government making up two-thirds of the lost pay.

Those policies no doubt reduce hiring when times are good, but also hold down layoffs when times are bad.

Not all is rosy in the German labor market. Felix Hüfner, an O.E.C.D. senior economist in charge of the German desk, told me that he was worried about the fact that about two-thirds of younger German workers did not have permanent jobs. Instead, they have "fixed-term contracts," which make it easier for companies to let them go when the contracts end. Germany may, he said, be in danger of becoming a "two-class society," with most older workers in a protected group and most younger ones outside of it.

The euro zone is also starting to look like a two-class society, with Germany and a few other northern countries in the top class and most of the rest in the bottom tier. France is somewhere in between.

Within each class, attitudes are hardening against the other. "The birth defect of the euro was to put very different cultures of economic activity in the straitjacket of a single currency," a commentator, Jan Fleischhauer, wrote in the German weekly Der Spiegel after an Italian cruise ship ran aground last month.

"Be honest," he added. "Did it surprise anyone that the unlucky captain of the Costa Concordia is Italian?" He asked whether anyone could imagine that a German, or even British, captain would have behaved as the Italian did.

An Italian newspaper, Il Giornale, fired back with a front-page article denouncing the Der Spiegel commentary. "We are persons to avoid, a burden for Europe," the author, Alessandro Sallusti, wrote. "The Germans are a superior race. We have already read that in the speeches of Hitler."

Germans are increasingly angry about having to bail out Greece and other countries, while those countries react bitterly to being forced to take orders from Berlin. The Financial Times reports that "a right-wing Greek newspaper depicts Angela Merkel, Germany's chancellor, in a Nazi uniform above the headline 'Memorandum macht frei' - an allusion to the memorandum in which Greece's foreign creditors demand more austerity measures and to the Auschwitz slogan."

One of the great accomplishments of the European Union has been an end to the possibility of war in a Continent that started two world wars in the last century. But the euro increasingly appears to be a step too far, or perhaps not far enough. A currency union cannot endure if countries pursue very different economic, regulatory and fiscal policies.

Greece is an outlier, a country that lied its way into the euro and should have been kicked out when that became known years ago. But other countries are also at severe disadvantages to Germany now, after a decade in which labor costs diverged so sharply. Neither austerity nor structural reforms are likely to improve their competitiveness in the near future. German inflation could help, but that is an idea with no traction in Germany.

The euro has been very good to Germany, but if the country wants to continue to reap the benefits it needs to do more than angrily pay for bailouts while increasing its demands. Having already imposed an unelected prime minister on the Greeks, it now wants elections delayed to assure that the government continues to follow proper policies.

The two classes of Europe need to either get different currencies or become much more integrated by agreement, not dictation.

One trouble with "beggar thy neighbor" is that the neighbors don't like it. During the Depression, they could retaliate by devaluing their own currencies. Now they are simply getting angry, and hitting back at Germany the only way they can, with Nazi allusions and, in Athens, burning buildings.

How many US troops were stationed in Germany in 1980?

Since the end of the Second World War to the present day.

What were the beliefs of Germany?

Those believe Aryans may be Veda believers & worshiping Sun

What was the first cold war era conflict that occurred in Berlin?

it was not fought there were tensions between the us and Russia about nuclear war heads

Distance between Frankfurt to karlsruhe?

Hi, The Distance between Franfurt & karlsruhe is 76 Miles or 123 Kms Karlsruhe is the gud place to see around you can hire the taxi or take the bus if you wanna to go to karlsruhe by road. you can also take the local train from franfurt to reach the destination. The nearest airport is sattagurt which is 76.5 Kms. Regards Yatharth Gupta

What are 3 ways Germany's people have changed the environment?

you know, this website seems to be very unhelpful with everyone thinking its funny to answer something funnily. Well it's not very helpful when i'm trying to do school work and the answer is "i don't know" or "bumbumbum". So get your smarts together if you're gonna answer something, and if you dont want to answer it right, then DON'T

What does the German flag stand for?

Well that's quite a long and complicated answer. But basically its stands, historically, for the unification of Germany, The colors were first used in the 19th century during the struggle of the unification of the hundreds German (independent) states into a more democratic construct of a nation. In a poem it is called the dark night (presence with small states, a lot of borders within Germany, powerful autocrats and no citizen rigths), the red morning (the idea of a better future, the ideals of the young, the struggle) and the golden light (the future of a united Germany where all Germans together can work for the better in the country).Similarities can be found in the German anthem. Later was freedom added to the symbols.As the only German flag the flag of the President and the Chancelor have an eagle in the middle due to the heraldic history of German flags.

What sports does Germany play?

In Germany they play every sport you can think of;

soccer (football), tennis, squash, basketball, badminton, rugby etc whatever sport you would play anywhere else in the world is also played in Germany to some extend even if it is just a few kids out in a park

How did the Munich putsch fail?

The failure of the Munich Putsch is crucial to an understanding of Nazi Policy from 1925 onwards. Whilst initially a disastrous setback that resulted in the death of sixteen Nazis and the banning of the Nazi Party, this failure woke Hitler up to the reality of 'legality' in pursuing the downfall of the Weimar Republic.

The Putsch was a clear failure in terms of achieving its aims, with von Seeckt commanding the army to defend the Republic that the Nazis felt its people did not want. Cornered and left bereft of options, Hitler was arrested and put to trial, but it is this trial of 1924 that is highly significant to an understanding of how the Munich Putsch eventually benefitted the Nazis. For the trial, lenient in its eventual sentencing, and ultimately a damning indictment of the Weimar judicial system, provided Hitler with an ideal stage from which he could assert his oratory brilliance, which woke people across Germany up to this tiny right-wing Bavarian party, with a leader whose anti-Versailles and anti-Weimar views were highly effective in grabbing the attention of a populace who had recently suffered the effects of hyperinflation. So it was that Hitler emerged from prison before Christmas 1924, having written Mein Kampf, with a rejuvenated sense of purpose for the Nazi Party. It is clear that in the boom years of the 1920s, that despite the Nazi vote floundering, Hitler was able to reap benefit from the lessons of the Munich Putsch in restructuring the Nazi Party (aided by Strasser), and that this trial was to provide the people of Germany with the lingering memory of the party, which was to be placed back into public consciousness by Hugenburg's 1929 media campaigns against the Young Plan.

What the failed Munich Putsch really did was cause Hitler to realize that control of Germany, and the army in particular, could only be found through legal or parliamentary means. Consequently, he readdressed the party's priorities and provided a clear structure for his aims which had been given clarity during his prison stint through Mein Kampf, another benefit that was the product of the Putsch. The structure of Gaue backed up by propaganda and revolutionary methods of gaining support through legal means are by-products of the Munich Putscch, which provided Hitler with the impetus to change the Nazi Party; to provide it with the foundations which are so crucial to an understanding of how they seized power ten years after this failed Putsch.

What colony was established by Germany?

wyoming, texas, new york. Dis iz rite, yu betr beleve itt

Why is Germany called Germany?

The word Germania was used by the Romans to describe the region now known as Germany. Because English contains some Latin roots, the name Germany has continued to be used.