|
Ok, I had to come back to this.
Your position makes no sense.
West Germany was initially supported by the USA with the Marshall plan. This ran from 1948 to 1952, and saw West Germany receive about $1.4bn, which is about $14bn today. Thereafter, all their success was based on their hard work and their superior economic model.
East Germany was the most successful of the Soviet Bloc economies, but lagged massively behind West Germany. The wall that was built was to prevent people fleeing to the west for a more prosperous and free future.
South Korea had no direct financial assistance like the Marshall Plan. Their economic success has been based on investing in skills and innovation plus their superior economic model of capitalism.
North Korea has received significant aid, being unable to feed itself reliably. It's economy is a complete basket case with state ownership, collectivised farms, etc under their heavily socialist model.
Together the split Germanies and Korea's are the closest we can get to an experiment to try running from the same starting point and see which economic model is more successful.
And it is completely unequivocal. The capitalist countries delivered far superior living standards than their socialist counterparts.
The other great example of how capitalism delivers is China. Since they moved towards capitalism, the country has grown much richer and living standards have shot up on the whole. |
|