Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 July 2019
As in other countries, textile and apparel production in Germany is considered a victim of globalization. Domestic production and employment declined dramatically after its postwar peak in the late 1950s. Research has often attributed this trajectory to the trade liberalization policy of the German governments. However, this interpretation is puzzling. German trade policy was not as liberal as is claimed, nor did the industry disappear. This article addresses the issue using statistical evidence as well as archival material. The West German textile and apparel industry was using outward processing strategies comparatively early and was supported in that by German politicians starting in the early 1960s. As a result, the industry moved up the global value chain of textile production.
The development of the topic profited from conference presentations at BHC and EBHA annual meetings as well as the Boston WEHC. Furthermore the author wants to thank three anonymous.
1 The source quote is from an article in Textilmitteilungen, the weekly journal of the employers’ association of the German textile and apparel industry. Wollenschläger, Dora, “Die Hersteller sind empört,” Textilmitteilungen 38 (1978)Google Scholar, box 208117, Minister of Economics Archive (B 102), Federal Archives of Germany (Bundesarchiv), Koblenz (hereafter, BArch B102).
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18 European Commission, The Moving Frontier: The Changing Geography of Production in Labour Industries (Project CIT2 – CT2004-001695, Luxembourg, July 2005).
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27 See “Summary of the Trade Policy towards Japan,” 3 June 1969, box 153900, BArch B102. On the LTA, see Rivoli, Travels of a T-Shirt, 193–96.
28 Wiemann, Selektiver Protektionismus, 122–27.
29 Rivoli, Travels of a T-Shirt, 193–207.
30 Rivoli; Wiemann, Selektiver Protektionismus, 125–26.
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33 Minutes of a meeting of the minister of economics and the trade union of the textile and apparel industry (Gesamttextil), 13 Mar. 1970, box 110043, BArch B102.
34 Minutes of a meeting of Helmut Schmidt, minister of economics, with Karl Buschmann, chair of the textile and apparel trade union, 23 Aug. 1972, box 163945, BArch B102.
35 The paragraph on outward processing was deleted from a manuscript for a speech by Friderichs at the annual meeting of the textile entrepreneurs’ association, 4 Dec. 1974, box 163938 BArch B102; and Friderichs to Richard Uhle, Neunkirchen, 3 Feb. 1975, box 163938, BArch B102.
36 Speech by the chair of the association of the apparel industry, Dec. 1982, quoted in Gertschen, Klassenfeinde – Branchenpartner?, 296.
37 Gillingham, John, European Integration, 1950–2003: Superstate or New Market Economy? (Cambridge, UK, 2003), esp. 60–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar, on the “empty chair crises” in 1965.
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41 Boussemart and De Bandt, “The Textile Industry,” 203–35, esp. 211.
42 Internal comment on a meeting of the workgroup “Sectoral Structural Policy” within the Committee for Medium-Term Economic Policy, European Communities, Brussels, 5 Sept. 1969, box 134128, BArch B102. For background, see also Gillingham, European Integration, 60–61.
43 Mühleck, Krise und Anpassung, 183.
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47 See the telex in the files of the Bundeskanzleramt (similar to the White House in the United States). “Daily announcements by the Ministry of Economics,” 12 Jan. 1967. See also the telex by Martin Adolff, 10 Oct. 1967, and the note on the Romania contract from 24 Oct. 1967, in box 7742, Bundeskanzleramt (B 136), BArch (hereafter, BArch B136).
48 Rembert van Delden to Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger, 7. Aug. 1969, box 7742, BArch B136.
49 This is the main topic of Gertschen, Klassenfeinde – Branchenpartner?, esp. 202. Gertschen dates the starting point of closer relationships in the mid-1960s to the head of the trade union addressing the employees of the Adolff company on an anniversary.
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56 “Activities of the German government for increases of imports in textile and apparel markets,” 30 Apr. 1969, box 7742, BArch B136.
57 “Note for the Secretary of State on the Protests of the Textile Industry,” 12 Aug. 1969, box 7742, BArch B136. Unfortunately, research on the East European side of the chain is sparse and usually focuses on the post–1989 period; see, for example, Smith, Adrian, “Power Relations, Industrial Cluster and Regional Transformations: Pan-European Integration and Outward Processing in the Slovak Clothing Industry,” Economic Geography 79, no. 1 (2003): 17–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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61 Mühleck, Krise und Anpassung, 222; Lindner, Den Faden verloren, 168.
62 However, scholars claim that the actual proportion leveled off at around 40 percent in the 1970s, while only 30 percent of total revenue was allowed to receive tariff reductions as “outward processing” by European regulation. Birgit Beese and Brigitte Schneider, Arbeit an der Mode: Zur Geschichte der Bekleidungsindustrie im Ruhrgebiet (Essen, 2001), 116.
63 Gertschen, Klassenfeinde – Branchenpartner?, 192.
64 Figures from Textilmitteilungen, the journal of the textile industry, quoted from Mühleck, Krise und Anpassung, 224; see also Fröbel, Heinrichs, and Kreye, Die neue internationale Arbeitsteilung, 116.
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66 Notice on the van Delden Group, 18 Oct. 1978, box 237552, BArch B102; see also Lauschke, “Strategien ökonomischer Krisenbewältigung,” 218.
67 “Lambsdorf übt Kritik an Firmen-Management: ‘Staat darf keine Sterbehilfen geben,’” Delmenhorster Kreisblatt, 16 Sept. 1980, refers to the case of the “Vereinigte Kammgarnspinnerei” in Bremen. Also, the state of Bavaria had helped its local textile manufacturers (e.g., the support of the “Erba AG” in Bamberg) with a state loan of DM 5 million. See Von Würzen to Vorndran, Bavarian minister of economics, 30 June 1981, both in box 237552, BArch B102.
68 Felix Spies, “Staat als Sanierer eine Fehlbesetzung: Van Deldens Kollaps signalisiert dennoch keine Textilkrise,” Süddeutsche Zeitung, 10 Jan. 1981, box 237552, BArch B102.
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