The Treuhandanstalt (, "Trust law agency"), colloquially referred to as Treuhand, was a government agency of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) from June to October 1990 and reunified Germany from 1990 to 1994, responsible for the Reprivatization/privatization of the Volkseigene Betriebe (VEBs) and other state-owned enterprises in East Germany.
The Treuhand was established by the Volkskammer of East Germany during Die Wende, to oversee the restructure and sale of about 8,500 state-owned companies with over four million employees – the world's largest industrial enterprise, controlling everything from Steel mill to the Babelsberg Studios. It inherited the Asset of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany and other East German government agencies after German reunification in October 1990. The Treuhand was dissolved by the Federal Government of Germany on 1 January 1995 and reconstituted as the Federal Agency for Special Tasks Related to Unification ( Bundesanstalt für vereinigungsbedingte Sonderaufgaben) which was active until 2000.
The Treuhand has faced criticism and opposition for its handling of the privatisation process in the former East Germany, particularly for excessive Liquidation and the resulting layoffs. On 1 April 1991, Treuhand chairman Detlev Karsten Rohwedder was assassinated.
By the time of Die Wende and the fall of the SED regime in 1989, East Germany's industries were significantly Labor intensity and underdeveloped compared to those in the West Germany (West Germany), which made many of them unprofitable and indebted. The de Maizière cabinet, the first non-socialist government of East Germany, decided on a mass privatisation of these industries.
On 3 October 1990, the day of reunification, it took over the property of the SED, as well as the other political parties and the Communist front of the National Front. Treuhandanstalt: Privatisation, Unemployment, Protests. In: Sites of Unity (Haus der Geschichte), 2022.
On 1 April 1991, chairman of the Treuhand Detlev Karsten Rohwedder was shot dead by an unknown assassin (possibly the Red Army Faction). He was succeeded by Birgit Breuel.
The trust itself was extraordinarily unprofitable, such that, when its operations ended in 1994, it had amassed 260 to 270 billion Deutsche Mark in debt, equal to around 350 billion United States dollars in 2025.
The BvS ceased operations at the end of 2000, but it remains legally in existence; its remaining tasks are all delegated to other bodies. TLG and BVVG remain the largest real estate owners in the new federal states. In 2000, TLG was reoriented from focussing on privatisation of its assets to "active portfolio management" with a view to making profits for the German federal government. By 2007, having sold 45,000 properties in six years and reinvested 1.5 billion euros, it was still managing 1500 properties worth 1.4 billion euros. TLG – History The planned privatisation of TLG itself was put on hold in July 2008 because of adverse economic conditions. "TLG Immobilien: Federal government halts privatization", Thomas Daily, 11 July 2008 In January 2020, TLG Immobilien was acquired by the Luxembourg-domiciled property company Aroundtown SA.
In July 2008, the BVVG announced total privatization receipts of 3.5 billion euros since its establishment in 1992, which it had gained through the sale of around of agricultural land, with a similar amount of forest land and a small amount of other land. Total land sales amounted to around half the area of the state of Saxony-Anhalt. At the end of 2007, it still owned over of agricultural land and just under of forest land. "BVVG erzielt in 16 Jahren für den Bund über drei Milliarden Euro Überschuss", BVVG press release 24 July 2008
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