While cycling through villages and small
towns in the Bavarian Black Forest, I realize again how well Angela Merkel Land
is organized and how clean it is. Everything is well maintained, the houses,
roads, forests, fields and everything else. The prosperity or should I write
the wealth splashes off. You wonder why.
Germans are not only hard workers, but also
tough, technically inventive and what is called in German gründlich (thoroughly).
The car museum in Schramberg is a testimony of this. Immediately after the
Second World War, when the country was nearly completely destroyed, the Germans
rebuild American jeeps into mobile sawmills that produced the wood for things
like for example the famous cuckoo clocks. While the Allied Forces occupying
Germany did not allow anymore Messerschmitt to build their dangerous fighter
planes, the company switched to the production of small cars. Volkswagen, DKW
(later AUDI) and BMW soon followed. NSU motorcycles and mopeds like Zündapp
were in the fifties of the last century even popular in the Netherlands.
It is also the land of the craftsman who succeeds
in building up a medium or even large company thanks to his inventiveness and
creativity, even on the world market. Almost every village or small town has
its own industrial park where not only agricultural equipment is repaired.
There are also a lot of medium sized companies producing export market products
with the latest technology. I see a plant for laser technology in the small
village of Aichhalden and one for lightweight rims in Schiltach. The German
countryside and its industry are perfectly integrated. The countryside is no
longer a farmers business due to the more well-maintained and extended
infrastructure of roads where even the cycle tourist is not forgotten.
Everywhere there are cycle roads and signs. Also on this field the Germans strive
for perfection.
But there's more. Merkel Land is also a
stable democracy with a reliable legislation that can be trusted by international
investors. This of course supports economic and industrial development together
with stable labour relations. Of course there are sometimes labour conflicts.
The great and mighty trade union IGMetall occasionally organizes strikes or mass
demonstrations but ultimately it is always ready to start a dialogue with
employers or the government with the aim to find a compromise. The German
consensus model works just as well or perhaps better than the so-called Dutch
polder model.
But sometimes I get the creeps of so much
perfection. It does not seem healthy to exclude all surprises from life. Life
must also be an adventure or we will die of boredom.