The political Rule
Germany is a dominant democratic nation in the world. This domination, not with-standing; Germany has had an unstable past. The political, economic, and social intensity that sailed modernization in Western Europe flowed at a slower pace. Germany has undergone a great deal of transformation since the 1800s. Germany participated in the First and the Second World Wars in 1918 and 1945. Between 1945 and 1990, Germany was split into the West, better known as the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) and the East was known as the Democratic Republic (GDR). After the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989, Germany was unified. In 2005 Angela Merkel was elected as the Chancellor.
Germany is a Chancellor democracy, and the most influential political body is the Chancellor. The Rudimentary Law designed a Federalism system whereby Federal and State Governments share power. The President is ceremonial. The Legislature is comprises two houses; the Lower House (Federal Diet), and the Upper House (Federal Council). Specific social and economic facets sway state politics. Socially, ideology and political culture, ethnic and national identity have a significant impact on politics. Economically, codetermination is a strategy prescribed by Social Democrats, and it influences state politics. In future, Germans will incur inflated energy bills since most nuclear power plants are closing down.
Positive Facets of the Federal Republic of Germany
In terms of political parties, Germany is ahead of China. Germany has more than six parties, while the Peoples Republic of China has one major political party and nominally self-sustaining small parties controlled by the Communist Party (CP). The German parliament is bicameral while, China’s House is unicameral.