Carl Hahn – the Visionary in China

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Carl Hahn – the Visionary in China Media Information Carl Hahn – The visionary in China Wolfsburg, December 14, 2018 – Carl Hahn, the former CEO of the Volkswagen Group, brought the Volkswagen brand to China in the 1980s. For his dedication to the automotive industry China, China Newsweek has named Carl Hahn “Person of the Year.” When Professor Carl Horst Hahn (92) walks onto the stage of the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing on Saturday, he will add another honor to the long list of tributes that he has received in his life. During a career that spans nearly 70 years, his résumé includes many different career stops, awards and memberships. The photos, prizes and inscriptions in his Wolfsburg office impressively document his life’s work: Images of international personalities like Pope John Paul II, tennis legend Steffi Graf, Soviet reformer Mikhail Gorbachev and Chinese leaders cover the walls. Family photos of his wife, Marisa, and their four children fill the gaps in-between. Professor Carl Hahn is “Person of the Year” in China In the 1980s, Hahn laid the foundation for the success of the company in China while he served as CEO of the Volkswagen Group – and for the long-term success of the entire Group as well. As a partner who helped establish the automotive industry in China, Volkswagen shaped the economic and social development of the country in the decades that followed like no other car manufacturer. China’s transformation into an economic powerhouse was made possible by the country’s policies of reform and opening that were introduced 40 years ago. To mark this 40th anniversary in 2018, the Chinese magazine China Newsweek is honoring 40 personalities for the services they provided during China’s period of reform. Four of them will be honored as “Person of the Year” this weekend in Beijing as representatives of the entire group – Carl Hahn will be one of the four. For the 92-year-old Hahn, the award in China is one of many. But there is still something very special about it. “This honor is the biggest gift you can receive in life,” Hahn said. “I have had such a rich life, and I am grateful for it every day. I could not have done it all on my own. I had many associates and supporters. I would like to thank each of them, including my former Board of Management colleague Dr. Martin Posth. I will accept the award on behalf of them and the Volkswagen team in China and throughout the world. 1 Carl Hahn came in contact with the automotive industry during his childhood Born in 1926 in the eastern German city of Chemnitz, Hahn was the son of an industrialist. His relationship with the automotive industry began during his childhood. Before World War II his father served as a high-level executive at the automaker DKW in Zschopau, a city near Zwickau, and later at the newly established company Auto Union in Chemnitz. His family started over again in Ingolstadt after 1945. Following the war, Hahn’s father and Richard Bruhn reestablished Auto Union in Ingolstadt with the help of the Bavarian State Bank. In the process, they laid the cornerstone for the Group brand that is known today as Audi. After majoring in business administration in Paris, Hahn earned his doctorate at the University of Bern. He initially worked at the OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development) in Paris. From assistant to CEO of the Volkswagen Group He began his career at Volkswagen in 1954 as an assistant to Heinrich Nordhoff at the former Volkswagenwerk GmbH. One year later, he was named head of export promotion. Four years later, he became CEO of Volkswagen of America, where he conquered the U.S. market with the help of the VW Beetle. Back in Wolfsburg, the 38-year-old Hahn was named to the Board of Management and handed responsibility for Group sales. After differences of opinion emerged over the strategic direction of the Group – Hahn did not just make friends with his divisionalization policy because he wanted even back then to position the Group brands into various segments – he left Volkswagen in 1972. He then served as head of the former company Continental Gummi-Werke AG in Hannover for nine years. “If I had a talent, it was my talent for strategy.” Once he returned to Volkswagen as CEO in 1982, he added the issue of China to the company’s agenda. The decision was well thought out. As a far-sighted strategist, Hahn carried out a global expansion campaign at Volkswagen, an effort that he began by entering markets in Brazil and Mexico. “If I had a talent, it was my talent for strategy,” Hahn says. With the acquisitions of SEAT and ŠKODA, Volkswagen became the European market leader under Hahn’s direction. Volkswagen’s vision for China also had its detractors. Some critics described it as simply “nonsense” that would “waste millions of dollars on the Communists,” Hahn says. The arguments against doing business in China were obvious: A communist-run state economy and anemic purchasing power – one car per 1,000 residents. 2 Visionary Carl Hahn argued for Volkswagen’s market entry in China Together with a group of other advocates, Hahn continued to call for Volkswagen to enter the market in China and pushed for the creation of a Chinese automotive industry. After diplomatic relations between West Germany and China were initiated and a Chinese delegation visited West Germany in 1978, negotiations began a few weeks later on plans to build Volkswagen models locally in China. The year of 1984 marked a milestone: Volkswagen became the first foreign automaker to sign a joint-venture agreement. The signing marked the establishment of the Shanghai-Volkswagen Automotive Company. The Santana rolled off the assembly line in China a year later. Hahn systematically expanded the production location in the years that followed. In 1991, a second joint venture was set up: FAW-Volkswagen in Changchun. In 1992, Hahn left the Board of Management at Volkswagen and joined the company’s Supervisory Board, where he served until 1997. Long-term partnerships and transfer of know-how In creating the Chinese automotive industry, Hahn focused on establishing long-term business partnerships. “We brought the largest automotive suppliers to China and initially had to set up a supply network,” Hahn says. “We also created fundamental structures like collective bargaining agreements in the process.” With the help of the VW Foundation, Hahn also made a major contribution to China’s social and cultural development. Volkswagen’s global foundation has carried out more than 100 projects in China since then – from erecting sanitary facilities to universities. “We wanted to do something that would move the country forward and generate new momentum,” the 92-year-old Hahn says. Hahn began to promote knowledge transfers at an early stage. This commitment was illustrated by the construction of a training workshop staffed by German master craftsmen in China and the introduction of a training program to instruct employees in Germany and China. “We had to exchange know-how and qualify our own people,” Hahn says. At home in China: Carl Hahn still continues to support a range of projects in China today. To this day, Carl Hahn feels right at home in China. He visits the country regularly and assists with a range of projects being done locally, including ones that involve foundations and research into such areas as genetic engineering. You feel his admiration of and excitement about the country and its people. “Today, you simply cannot overlook China’s significance, particularly in the area of digitalization,” he says. “The Chinese are unbelievably fast learners and have real business acumen. They act in a very disciplined and logical manner. They are also entrepreneurial and inventive.” 3 Even at 92, Carl Hahn goes to the office almost every day. You really feel his spirit for ideas and projects. “We once brought Volkswagen know-how to China. Today, the Chinese have surpassed us in electromobility,” Hahn says. “China is on the right track. Our partnership with China cannot be too close.” The country has been the largest and most important individual market for the Volkswagen Group for many years now: The early total of a few thousand cars a year has grown into a figure of nearly 4 million sold vehicles in 2017. He laid the cornerstone for this success 40 years ago – the visionary and strategist Carl Hahn. 4 .
Recommended publications
  • Vorlage Für Geschäftsbrief
    AUDI AG 85045 Ingolstadt Germany History of the Four Rings AUDI AG can look back on a very eventful and varied history; its tradition of car and motorcycle manufacturing goes right back to the 19th century. The Audi and Horch brands in the town of Zwickau in Saxony, Wanderer in Chemnitz and DKW in Zschopau all enriched Germany’s automobile industry and contributed to the development of the motor vehicle. These four brands came together in 1932 to form Auto Union AG, the second largest motor-vehicle manufacturer in Germany in terms of total production volume. The new company chose as its emblem four interlinked rings, which even today remind us of the four founder companies. After the Second World War the Soviet occupying power requisitioned and dismantled Auto Union AG’s production facilities in Saxony. Leading company executives made their way to Bavaria, and in 1949 established a new company, Auto Union GmbH, which continued the tradition associated with the four-ring emblem. In 1969, Auto Union GmbH and NSU merged to form Audi NSU Auto Union AG, which since 1985 has been known as AUDI AG and has its head offices in Ingolstadt. The Four Rings remain the company’s identifying symbol. Horch This company’s activities are closely associated with its original founder August Horch, one of Germany’s automobile manufacturing pioneers. After graduating from the Technical Academy in Mittweida, Saxony he worked on engine construction and later as head of the motor vehicle production department of the Carl Benz company in Mannheim. In 1899 he started his own business, Horch & Cie., in Cologne.
    [Show full text]
  • Of a New Era“
    Start of Production ID.3 at Zwickau „Start of a new era“ November 4, 2019 Corporate Communications Volkswagen Group Start of Production ID.3 November 4, 2019 | Zwickau Speech Check against delivery 1. Dr. Herbert Diess Chairman of the Board of Management of Volkswagen AG and Chairman of the Board of Management of the Volkswagen Passenger Cars brand Start of Production ID.3 page 1 Dr. Herbert Diess Start of Production ID.3 Ladies and Gentlemen, Welcome to the production start of the ID.3. Welcome to Zwickau, where the future of Volkswagen begins. Chancellor Merkel, Minister-President Kretschmer: I am delighted you could join us here today. And I would also like to greet my predecessor Carl Hahn. Professor Hahn, not long after the border was opened, you traveled to Zwickau in December 1989. The world had changed within the space of a few short weeks. You responded with great entrepreneurial foresight. You saw how a factory in eastern Germany would give Volkswagen a head start. You recognized the advantages of the location with its skilled and motivated workforce. And you knew this endeavor would require some rebuilding. Just a few months later, in May 1990, the first Polo left the assembly line. Automobiles have now been built in Zwickau for 105 years. A long history – marked by a constant will to embrace change. That was the case back in 1989. And it is the case today. There is a lot of talk at the moment about the demise of the German automotive industry. But whether that actually happens is up to us.
    [Show full text]
  • Chemnitz – Im Herzschlag Der Mobilität
    Chemnitz – Im Herzschlag der Mobilität Zur Geschichte des Volkswagen Standorts an der Kauffahrtei Chemnitz – Im Herzschlag der Mobilität Zur Geschichte des Volkswagen Standorts an der Kauffahrtei Marcel Stierand DER AUTOR Marcel Stierand Jg. 1989, M. Sc., Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter und Archivar der Gesellschaft für Unternehmensgeschichte im Projekt Sartorius Historisches Unternehmens archiv, 2015/16 Praktikant der Historischen Kommuni kation der Volkswagen Aktiengesellschaft. Veröffentlichung: Der demographische Übergang in Sachsen im 19. Jahrhundert, in: Oliver Brehm/Jürgen Kabus (Hg.): 25 Jahre Industriemuseum Chemnitz, Chemnitz 2017, S. 262-271 [mit Susi Bogen/Philipp Frank/Sebastian Müller]. Erarbeitet unter Mitwirkung von Christoph Hoffmann, Jürgen Kaiser, Sven Müller, Steffen Thierfelder. Impressum Herausgeber Dieter Landenberger, Ulrike Gutzmann Redaktion Manfred Grieger Gestaltung Hunger & Koch, Hannover ISSN 1615-0201 ISBN 978-3-935112-55-0 ©Volkswagen Aktiengesellschaft Wolfsburg 2019 INHALT 1. Carl Horst Hahn – Statt einer Einleitung 4 Vorspann 2. Das Motorenwerk Chemnitz heute 8 Rückblick 3. Die Kauffahrtei – Zur Entstehung eines neuen Gewerbe- und Industriestandorts in Chemnitz 14 3.1 Die Anfänge – Waren des täglichen Bedarfs und Teppiche 16 3.2 Krise und „Arisierung“ der Kohorn’schen Unternehmen (1931-1941) 24 4. Automobilproduktion bis 1945 – Prestowerke und Auto Union AG 28 4.1 Eine mobile Region – der Weg in die Kauffahrtei bis 1936 30 4.2 Die Auto Union AG in der Kauffahrtei 1936-1945 – Standortweiterentwicklung und Kriegswirtschaft 34 5. Zwischen Demontage, Umstrukturierung und Neubeginn (1945-1957) 46 5.1 Wirtschaftliche Neuordnung in der Sowjetischen Besatzungszone (1945-1949) 47 5.2 Das Werk in den ersten DDR-Jahren (1949-1957) 54 6. Der „Barkas“-Standort in Karl-Marx-Stadt (1958-1989) 60 6.1 Gründung und Ausbau des „VEB Barkas-Werke Karl-Marx-Stadt“ 61 6.2 „Motorenprojekt Alpha“ – Kooperation mit Volkswagen 70 7.
    [Show full text]
  • Volkswagen Cars, Politics, and Culture in the Post-1978 China: the Social Construction of Success
    Volkswagen Cars, Politics, and Culture in the Post-1978 China: The Social Construction of Success Xiaolan Qiu Dissertation submitted to the faculty of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy In Science and Technology Studies Timothy W. Luke (Chair) Daniel Breslau Ellsworth Fuhrman Saul Halfon February 13, 2012 Blacksburg, Virginia Keywords: Volkswagen, Shanghai-Volkswagen, technology policy, sociology of technology, China Volkswagen Cars, Politics, and Culture in the Post-1978 China: The Social Construction of Success Xiaolan Qiu ABSTRACT Volkswagen (VW) is one of the first foreign carmakers that made direct investments in China after 1978. From its entry in the Chinese market to the year of 2009, VW enjoyed popularity, high reputation, and undisputed leadership in the Chinese passenger car market, and achieved a great commercial success. Most previous accounts attribute VW’s success in China to VW’s wise business operation or Chinese government’s support. This study guided by the methods and theories of technology studies, especially the actor- network theory (ANT), takes into account technical, socioeconomic, political, or cultural factors simultaneously. By selecting one of VW’s successful joint ventures with China – Shanghai Volkswagen (SVW) – as a case to do in-depth investigation, it examines the relationship between heterogeneous actors (both humans and nonhumans) and the pathways of SVW development, and has found that all of the SVW establishment, production, marketing, and development were shaped by a range of diverse social and material actors, including the central planners, local government, VW, local suppliers, Chinese consumers, and VW cars, and depended on Chinese particular political and cultural context; VW’s success in China presents a story of co-construction of power and actor-networks.
    [Show full text]
  • The Volkswagen Group, Part a (2002 - Aug 2015): Reaching for the Top Case Study
    The Volkswagen Group, Part A (2002 - Aug 2015): Reaching for the top Case Study Case Study The Volkswagen Group Part A: 2002 - Aug 2015 Reaching for the top In progress: Part B (Sept-Oct 2015) Disaster in the integrated corporation This case was written by Günter Müller-Stewens (University of St Gallen) and Joachim Stonig (University of St. Gallen). We thank Thomas Schlenzig and Manuel Strasser who helped to write, refine and improve the case significantly. The case is intended to be used as the basis for class discussion rather than to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a management situation. The case was compiled from published sources. This case will be part of the University of St. Gallen case collection at the Case Centre: http://www.thecasecentre.org/educators/ordering/whatsavailable/collections/stgallen © Aug 2015, Version 1.1, University of St. Gallen No part of this publication may be copied, stored, transmitted, reproduced or distributed in any form or medium whatsoever without the permission of the copyright owner. 1 The Volkswagen Group, Part A (2002 - Aug 2015): Reaching for the top Case Study "I'm profoundly convinced that we can be the world's most successful car producers in a few years"1, said Martin Winterkorn in 2007, one year after becoming CEO of Volkswagen AG. "VW conquers the world. Germany’s biggest carmaker is leaving rivals in the dust." was the Economist cover story on 7.7.12. And the 2014 financial year seemed to confirm Winterkorn's prognosis. Sales of € 202.5 bn. (2007: € 108.9 bn.) succeeded in toppling Toyota's status as best selling automobile group (Toyota: 2007: € 159.7 bn.; 2014: € 191.5 bn.) thus attaining Winterkorn's goal in terms of sales.
    [Show full text]
  • Der Mann, Der Volkswagen Zum Welt Kon Z Ern Machte
    ‡ PORTRÄT Carl H. Hahn Der Mann, der Volkswagen zum Welt kon z ern machte inmal in seinem Leben war er wirk- Wie Carl H. Hahn die lich leichtsinnig: vor exakt zehn Jahren, als er an seinem 80. Ge- burtstag laut überlegte, dereinst Unternehmensgeschichte Emit 90 in den Ruhestand zu gehen. „Das“, sagt Carl H. Hahn heute, „war eine Fehl- prognose. Ich hab das erst mal verscho- geprägt hat und warum ben und bin auch nicht unglücklich darüber, dass ich falsch lag.“ er mit 90 noch jeden Tag Wolfsburg, 2016. Vor 90 Jahren, am 1. Juli 1926, wurde Carl H. Hahn in Chem- nitz geboren, von 1982 bis 1992 war er in ins Büro fährt Wolfsburg VW-Vorstandsvorsitzender. In Chemnitz hatte er auf Tuchfühlung zu DKW und zur Auto Union gelebt, die sein gleichnamiger Vater lange Zeit mit- lenkte. Er selbst griff dann als Chef bei VW ins Lenkrad. Im Jahre 1982 wagte er frisch berufen den damals unerhörten Sprung mit VW ins kommunistische China, 1986 und 1991 folgte der Kauf von Seat und Skoda. Damit wurde Hahn nach Generaldirektor Heinrich Nordhoff, der Volkswagen in den 1950er-Jahren inter- nationalisiert hatte, zum Begründer des Weltkonzerns VW AG. Hinzu kommt, dass Hahn VW, diesen zunächst von der Konkurrenz belächelten Käfer-Muckler am Mittellandkanal, bereits zwischen 1959 und 1964 als Chef von Volkswagen of America bestens positioniert hatte. Hier in Wolfsburg residiert Hahn noch immer. 24 Jahre nach seinem Dienstende als VW-Vorstandsvorsitzender fährt er täglich von seinem Wohnsitz, dem Rothe- hof, in sein Büro im Gebäude des 1992 von ihm initiierten Kunstmuseums Wolfsburg.
    [Show full text]
  • PRESS RELEASE Page 1 of 5
    PRESS RELEASE Page 1 of 5 ŠKODA AUTO looks back on a successful 2020 despite the coronavirus pandemic › More than one million vehicles delivered to customers for the seventh consecutive year › Model portfolio upgraded and expanded with the new-generation OCTAVIA and ENYAQ iV › ŠKODA takes on additional responsibility within the Volkswagen Group for Russia and North Africa › Numerous strategic decisions taken to maintain growth course › NEXT LEVEL ŠKODA programme for the future forms the basis for leading the company successfully through the new decade › Czech car manufacturer systematically continues its 2021 model campaign › New models: FABIA, ENYAQ iV Coupé, facelifts of KODIAQ and KAROQ, OCTAVIA PRO in China, KUSHAQ in India › Testing capacities for COVID-19 greatly expanded, in-house vaccination centres ready Mladá Boleslav, 24 March 2021 – ŠKODA AUTO can look back on a successful 2020 despite the COVID-19 pandemic. For the seventh year in a row, the manufacturer delivered more than one million vehicles worldwide. The company also upgraded its model portfolio with the new-generation OCTAVIA and expanded it to include the ENYAQ iV. Besides India, ŠKODA is taking on additional responsibilities within the Volkswagen Group for the regions of Russia and North Africa. With the comprehensive NEXT LEVEL ŠKODA programme for the future, the Czech car manufacturer is focusing on expanding its model portfolio towards the entry-level segments, opening up new markets for further growth and engaging with diversity and sustainability in every aspect of its work. ŠKODA is also continuing its model campaign this year with the latest FABIA generation, the coupé variant of the ENYAQ iV and facelifts of the best-selling KODIAQ and KAROQ SUVs.
    [Show full text]
  • Ferdinand Piëch: 17 April 1937 to 25 August 2019
    www.porscheroadandrace.com Ferdinand Piëch: 17 April 1937 to 25 August 2019 Published: 28th August 2019 By: Glen Smale Online version: https://www.porscheroadandrace.com/ferdinand-piech-17-april-1937-to-25-august-2019/ Professor Ferdinand Porsche (centre) with F. A. ‘Butzi’ Porsche (left) and Ferdinand Piëch (right), ca. 1949 Ferdinand Karl Piëch was born in Vienna, Austria, on 17 April 1937, to Louise (daughter to Ferdinand and sister of Ferry Porsche) and Anton Piëch, a lawyer. He was the grandson of Ferdinand Porsche, from whom he undoubtedly inherited his love for all things mechanical. www.porscheroadandrace.com A 1966 Porsche 906 which laid the foundation for the generation of Porsche prototype racers that followed from the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s Piëch graduated from the ETH Zurich (university for science and technology) in Switzerland in 1962, with a degree in mechanical engineering. His Master’s thesis was unsurprisingly written on the development of a Formula One engine as the Type 804 F1 race car was being developed at Porsche at that time. From 1963 to 1971, he worked at the family firm in Stuttgart where he introduced many significant changes in the company’s policy. As the head of Research & Development, which included motorsport, he was instrumental in the development of the Porsche 906, 910, 907, 908, 909 and of course the iconic Porsche 917 that ruled the circuits up to 1971. www.porscheroadandrace.com A 1968 Porsche 908 LH Coupé in the Porsche Museum, Stuttgart www.porscheroadandrace.com This Porsche 917 LH was entered by John Woolfe Racing in the 1969 Le Mans 24 Hours, the first privately entered 917 to compete in this famous endurance race www.porscheroadandrace.com Entered by Zitro Racing, this car was the only privately entered Porsche 917 K at the 1971 Le Mans 24 Hours In order to prevent disagreements among the family members who worked at Porsche, Ferry decreed in early 1972 that all Porsche family members were to withdraw from the management of the company.
    [Show full text]
  • Die Auto Union AG Und Ihre Reaktionen Auf Das „Volkswagen“-Projekt 1931-1942
    Die Auto Union AG Die Auto Union AG und ihre Reaktionen auf das „Volkswagen“-Projekt 1931-1942 VON LUTZ SARTOR Überblick Es wird an einem Beispiel der Frage nachgegangen, wie sich die deutsche Automobilindustrie zum nationalsozialistischen Projekt eines Volkswagens1 und damit zu einem neuen Produkt auf dem umkämpften Kleinwagenmarkt verhalten hat. Die Auto Union AG eignet sich für diese Untersuchung beson- ders,2 da sie als zweitgrößter Kleinwagenproduzent Deutschlands in beson- derem Maße von den Planungen zum Volkswagen betroffen war. Nach ein- leitenden Bemerkungen zu den Grundlagen des Volkswagen-Projekts und der Vorstellung des erfolgreichen Kleinwagens von DKW und später Auto Union wird untersucht, wie der Konzern auf den neuen Kleinwagen Volks- wagen reagierte und seinen Spielraum ausschöpfte. Hierbei sind verschiede- ne Unternehmensstrategien und Grade der Aktivität zu verfolgen. Der Schwer- punkt lag auf Maßnahmen im Rahmen des Reichsverbandes der deutschen Automobilindustrie (RDA) und im Konzern selbst. Im Zusammenhang mit dem letzteren Punkt sind auch die im Auftrag der Firma angefertigten Berichte und Analysen eines externen Fachmannes von Interesse. Die Anstrengungen der Auto Union AG waren zwar alle als gescheitert anzusehen, behinderten aber in keiner Weise die weitere Entwicklung. Abstract This article presents an example of the way in which the German automobile industry responded to the national socialists’ idea of a „people’s car“3 and, correspondingly, to a new product in the heavily contestet small car market. 1 Anstelle des ebenfalls gebräuchlichen Namens „KdF-Wagen“ wird durchgängig dieser Begriff verwendet. 2 Der 1998 bis 2000 im Sächsischen Staatsarchiv Chemnitz mustergültig erschlossene Be- stand dieses Konzerns eröffnet die Möglichkeit, die Verhaltensweisen des Konzerns in den verschiedenen Stadien der Entwicklung des Volkswagen-Projektes nachzuzeichnen.
    [Show full text]
  • The Auto Industry's Direct Investment Projects in Eastern Central Europe
    A Service of Leibniz-Informationszentrum econstor Wirtschaft Leibniz Information Centre Make Your Publications Visible. zbw for Economics Dörr, Gerlinde; Kessel, Tanja Working Paper Restructuring via internationalization: The auto industry's direct investment projects in Eastern Central Europe WZB Discussion Paper, No. FS II 99-201 Provided in Cooperation with: WZB Berlin Social Science Center Suggested Citation: Dörr, Gerlinde; Kessel, Tanja (1999) : Restructuring via internationalization: The auto industry's direct investment projects in Eastern Central Europe, WZB Discussion Paper, No. FS II 99-201, Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (WZB), Berlin This Version is available at: http://hdl.handle.net/10419/50765 Standard-Nutzungsbedingungen: Terms of use: Die Dokumente auf EconStor dürfen zu eigenen wissenschaftlichen Documents in EconStor may be saved and copied for your Zwecken und zum Privatgebrauch gespeichert und kopiert werden. personal and scholarly purposes. Sie dürfen die Dokumente nicht für öffentliche oder kommerzielle You are not to copy documents for public or commercial Zwecke vervielfältigen, öffentlich ausstellen, öffentlich zugänglich purposes, to exhibit the documents publicly, to make them machen, vertreiben oder anderweitig nutzen. publicly available on the internet, or to distribute or otherwise use the documents in public. Sofern die Verfasser die Dokumente unter Open-Content-Lizenzen (insbesondere CC-Lizenzen) zur Verfügung gestellt haben sollten, If the documents have been made available under an
    [Show full text]
  • "German Model": the Transformation of Volkswagen, 1967-1991
    From "Beetle Monoculture" to the "German Model": the Transformation of Volkswagen, 1967-1991 Steven Tomday Departmentof Economicand Social History, Universityof Leeds,UK The German automobile industry, and particularly the Volkswagencompany (VW), has been a crucialpart of Germany's post-warmanufacturing success story. In the 1980s,VW is oftencited as an epitome of the successfactors in this area. Writers such as Wolfgang Streeck, Lowell Turner, and Kathleen Thelen have examined its institutional relationshipsas embodimentsof "microcorporatism,""social partnership," or "co-operativeconflict resolution"[Streeck,1989; Turner, 1991; Thelen, 1991]; otherssuch as Ulrich Jurgens,Thomas Malsch and Knuth Dohse, and Ben Dankbaar, have examined its use of automation and new forms of work organizationin the contextof a relativelysuccessful alternative form of productionorganization to theJapanese or "leanproduction" models[Jurgens, Malsch and Dohse, 1993; Dankbaar,1993]. What is lessclear in thesewritings (which are not primarilyhistorical in focus) is the extent to which the "model" causedthe success.This articleis a preliminaryexploration of someof the issuesinvolved in suchan analysis. The starting point is that the institutional and production structuresof VW have not evolved smoothly and continuously throughthe postwaryears. In fact, there have been two periodsof institutionaland productive success and stability, with a periodof crisis and transformation in between. From the late 1940s to the late 1960s,VW succeededon thebasis of relentlessmass production of a single-model("Beetle monoculture"), in a mannerthat madethe companyalmost "more Fordist than Ford." The factory was organized BUSINESS AND ECONOMIC HISTORY, Volume 24, no. 2 Winter 1995. Copyright¸1995 by the BusinessHistory Conference. ISSN 0849-6825. StevenTolliday / 112 alongthe linesof a minuteTaylorized division of labor,paced by the assemblyline.
    [Show full text]
  • 50 Jahre REUSS Jahrbuch Der Luft- Und Raumfahrt
    50 Jahre REUSS Jahrbuch der Luft- und Raumfahrt * 50 Jahre Luft- und Raumfahrt in Deutschland * 50 Jahre REUSS - Eine Dokumentation von Arno L. Schmitz November 2000 2 Statt einer Einleitung Deutschland in den zu Ende gehenden 40er-Jahren war ein Land noch voller Not, Trümmer überall! Langsam begann das so genannte Wirtschaftswunder zu greifen, der Aufschwung begann – insbesondere nach der Währungsreform vom 18. Juni 1948. Jeder Deutsche be- kam ein Kopfgeld von 40,00 Deutsche Mark (was etwa der Grundausgabe einer Woche entsprach) und später nochmals 20,00 DM. Der Parlamentarische Rat konstituierte sich in Bonn, die Westalliierten schränkten ihre Demontage ein und gaben die Idee auf, Deutsch- land im Zustand eines nicht-industriellen Landes zu halten. Deutschland konnte sich wie- der „einrichten“. Armes, deutsches Volk, du hast Städte gebaut, hast Dome gebaut, du hast einen frei- en Bauern auf freien Grund gestellt, hast auf dem Gebiet der Kunst, der Wissen- schaft, des Rechts, der Sprache Höhen erreicht. Du hast die Hansa, hast Zünfte, hast das freie Gewerbe, hast mannigfaltigen Ausdruck für deine Wesenheit gefunden und deine Militärorganisation kann allenfalls als ein Zug deines Gesichtes gelten, als ein Ressort deiner gesamten gesellschaftlichen Verfassung. Dieses Ressort hat sich auf- gebläht, ist mächtig geworden, hat alles in sich einbezogen. Es hat alle Dämme nie- dergerissen und ist über die Landesgrenzen hinweggeschwemmt, und der Bauer hat von seinem Land, der Arbeiter von seiner Arbeit, der Priester von seiner Gemeinde, der Lehrer von seinen Hörern, die Jugend von ihrer Jugend, der Mann von seiner Frau lassen müssen, und das Volk hat als Volk aufgehört und ist nichts als Brenn- stoff für den ungeheuren rauchenden Berg, und der Einzelne ist nichts als Holz, als Torf, als brennbares Fett und zuletzt eine ausgespiene schwarze Flocke.
    [Show full text]