CavLancer
This aint fertilizer
Just want to know what you know. For what I know the Ruble, the currency of the USSR, was not usable for trade, but I don't know why or how that came to be. Anyone? Did the rest of NATO trade in Rubles?
Between West germany and the UdSSR it was mostly barter trade . german machinery against russian oil and natural gas.
Between West germany and the UdSSR it was mostly barter trade . german machinery against russian oil and natural gas.
I think that trade was done, as usual, in the currency of the people with the tech.
You want these machines, we only take payment in marks. You need marks, we will buy your resources, but of course since the need is on you we won't pay a fair price.
Pretty much the same arrangement the US has with their pet oil producers.
I see, thanks. I read somewhere ages ago that the FRG would offer trade for GDR citizens caught escaping, can you confirm this?
When I lived in communist Poland the currency was of course the Zloty.
The East Mark was probably worth even less than the Ruble (I don't have any info on that though)
What can I say... I'm sorry. If it makes it easier, we had it full time in the early 90s. So, I suggest it's a draw, OK?My mom and dad were both teachers at the local elementary school. They spent 50% of their income on rent and a lot of the rest on food. And the thing with important foodstuffs (like meat, milk, etc.) was that it came in once a month, and you had to line up early each month if you wanted some. You also got food stamps each month, and had to use those to buy a limited amount of meat and milk and whatever else.
This one?My dad liked to travel and one time he went to Moscow. Came back with some sort of a Soviet moon car thingy. Was pretty cool, you would put blocks in it, and that would tell/program it and tell it how to move once you turned it on. I have no idea how much it cost, though.
Groovy. You are lucky. Well, chocolate was available to me (not every day though, but still). While bananas... What's that?The best gifts he brought back were always from Austria. Stuff like chocolates and bananas. No bananas were available to buy in stores at the time, so whenever I went outside with a banana (of course I would, I wanted to show off my western spoils and be the popular kid for a change), DOZENS of kids would follow me. One of them even took my banana peel after I was done with it and ate it. I will never forget that.
Strange, that's not a lot for lecturers - my parents had about the same (probably a bit more), but they were ordinary workers in provincial town.My mom's and dad's salaries (both were uni lecturers) were 120 and 130 respectively. Did quite fine.
You didn't have free apartment?They spent 50% of their income on rent and a lot of the rest on food.
We also had food stamps and lines. But only after 1988 and the worst part of it was after "communism", in 1991-1992.You also got food stamps each month, and had to use those to buy a limited amount of meat and milk and whatever else.
Strange, that's not a lot for lecturers - my parents had about the same (probably a bit more), but they were ordinary workers in provincial town.
Well, not exactly. Qualified workers, valuable specialists and those who worked hard (miners, etc.) could get 300 and even 500.I guess everybody was supposed to get pretty much the same. That was what the whole thing was supposed to be about actually, IIRC.![]()