Walter Ulbricht at the speaker’s stand for the Seven-Year Plan 1959; Photo; Licensed item; Original: 2880×2160; Photographer: Unknown;a0 Licensable; Rights: a9 Bleek/zb Media.
Walter Ulbricht at the Speaker’s Stand for the Seven-Year Plan 1959
Description
Walter Ulbricht at the speaker’s stand for the Seven-Year Plan 1959; Photo; Licensed item; Original: 2880×2160; Photographer: Unknown;a0 Licensable; Rights: a9 Bleek/zb Media. The photo shows Walter Ulbricht giving a speech on the Seven-Year Plan of the GDR in 1959, a central economic policy announcement by the SED leadership.
Scene: Ulbricht, then first secretary of the SED, speaks at a speaker’s stand, with a large banner bearing hammer and compass.
Significance of the Seven-Year Plan: In 1959, the GDR leadership announced an economic strategy to increase industrial production and align with the Soviet Union. The goal was to economically surpass the Federal Republic (“overtake without catching up”).
Zeitgeist: The GDR presented itself as a socialist model state, but the planned economy led to problems such as supply bottlenecks and growing tensions with the population.
The photo documents the propaganda and economic ambitions of the GDR in the late 1950s, a phase of increasing state control and political separation from West Germany.