Günter Mittag

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Günter Mittag
Mittag in 1984
Secretary for the Economy of the
Central Committee Secretariat of the Socialist Unity Party
In office
22 May 1976 – 18 October 1989
General Secretary
Preceded byWerner Krolikowski
Succeeded byWolfgang Rauchfuß
In office
28 June 1962 – 2 October 1973
First Secretary
Preceded byErich Apel
Succeeded byWerner Krolikowski
First Deputy Chairman of the
Council of Ministers
In office
3 October 1973 – 1 November 1976
Serving with Alfred Neumann
Chairman
Preceded byHorst Sindermann
Succeeded byWerner Krolikowski
Member of the Volkskammer
for Erfurt-Stadt[1]
In office
20 October 1963 – 16 November 1989
Preceded bymulti-member district
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Personal details
Born(1926-10-08)8 October 1926
Stettin, Province of Pomerania, Free State of Prussia, Weimar Republic (now Szczecin, Poland)
Died18 March 1994 (1994-03-19) (aged 67)
Berlin, Germany
Political partyIndependent
Other political
affiliations
Socialist Unity Party
(1946–1989)
Communist Party of Germany (1945–1946)
Alma materHochschule für Verkehrswesen
Occupation
  • Politician
  • Union Secretary
AwardsOrder of Karl Marx
Central institution membership

Other offices held

Günter Mittag (8 October 1926 – 18 March 1994) was a German member of parliament, secretary of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED), and a central figure in East Germany's command economy.

Biography

Günter Mittag, 1981

Born to a working-class family in Stettin (now Szczecin). After completing vocational education with the Reichsbahn, Mittag served in a flak regiment of the Wehrmacht in the Second World War. He joined the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) in 1945, became a member of the SED in 1946 and by 1958, when he had earned his doctorate with a dissertation entitled "Die Überlegenheit der sozialistischen Organisation und Leitung im Eisenbahnwesen der DDR gegenüber dem kapitalistischen Eisenbahnwesen" (en: The Superiority of Socialist Organisation and Performance in the Railroads of the GDR to the Capitalist Railroads), he became Secretary of the Economic Commission at the Politbüro. In 1963 he became a member of parliament and (until 1971, and then again from 1979 to 1989) a member of the State Council of the German Democratic Republic (GDR).

Also in 1963 he became Leiter des Büros für Industrie- und Bauwesen des ZK ("Head of the Office for Industry and Construction of the Central Committee of the SED"). He and Erich Apel designed the New System for Economic Management and Planning (NÖSPL), to modernise and streamline the formerly-bureaucratic economy of the GDR. This was politically controversial and only very partially implemented.

In 1976 Mittag became Secretary for the Economy of the ZK (Central Committee of the SED). He advocated, and implemented, strict economic controls throughout his tenure. His leadership style was controversial, involving confrontations with ministers and demands for the summary dismissal of certain officials. He was particularly close to Franz Josef Strauss, and in the early 1980s arranged the so-called "Billion Loan" from West Germany.

Mittag was severely diabetic and in 1984 one of his lower legs was amputated: the other was removed in 1989.[2] He left office after a controversy that resulted in him being taken into custody, but he was released on health grounds. In 1991 he was accused of using government funds for a private home.

He received honorary doctorates from the University of Tokyo and the University of Leoben in Austria.

Günter Mittag, 1980

Sources

  • Przybylski, Peter: Tatort Politburo, 1992,
  • Hertle, Hans-Hermann: Prior to the bankruptcy of the GDR: documents of the Politburo of the CC of the SED from 1988 to the failure of the "Economic and social policy" (The Schürer / Mittag controversy). In an interview with Gerhard Schürer, Berlin 1991
  • Janson, Carl-Heinz: Gravedigger of the GDR. How Günter Mittag ruined state, Düsseldorf 1991
  • Mittag, Günter: At any price. In the tension between two systems, Berlin / Weimar, 1991
  • Mittag, Günter: "It breaks my heart': Spiegel-interview with the former East German economic czar Günter Mittag on his policies and his errors, in Der Spiegel, 37/1991, p. 88-104.

Notes

External links