Gerhard Schürer
Gerhard Schürer (14 April 1921 – 22 December 2010) was a leading politician in East Germany.
Gerhard Schürer | |||||||||||||
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Schürer in 1982 | |||||||||||||
Chairman of the State Planning Commission | |||||||||||||
In office 22 December 1965 – 11 January 1990 | |||||||||||||
Chairman of the Council of Ministers |
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First Deputy | See list
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Preceded by | Erich Apel | ||||||||||||
Succeeded by | Karl Grünheid (as Chairman of the Economic Committee of the Council of Ministers) | ||||||||||||
First Deputy Chairman of the State Planning Commission | |||||||||||||
In office 14 November 1963 – 22 December 1965 Serving with Karl Grünheid | |||||||||||||
Chairman | |||||||||||||
Preceded by | Rudolf Müller | ||||||||||||
Succeeded by | Helmut Lilie | ||||||||||||
Head of the Department for Planning and Finances of the Central Committee | |||||||||||||
In office 1960–1962 | |||||||||||||
Secretary | |||||||||||||
Preceded by | Fritz Müller | ||||||||||||
Succeeded by | Siegfried Böhm | ||||||||||||
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Personal details | |||||||||||||
Born | Paul Gerhard Schürer 14 April 1921 Auerbach, Free State of Saxony, Weimar Republic (now Zwickau–Auerbach, Germany) | ||||||||||||
Died | 22 December 2010 89) Berlin, Germany | (aged||||||||||||
Political party | Independent | ||||||||||||
Other political affiliations | Party of Democratic Socialism (1989–1990) Socialist Unity Party of Germany (1948–1989) | ||||||||||||
Children | 8 | ||||||||||||
Alma mater | Landesparteischule Mecklenburg Parteihochschule der KPdSU Engineering School Mittweida | ||||||||||||
Occupation |
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Awards | Patriotic Order of Merit Order of Karl Marx | ||||||||||||
Central institution membership
Other offices held
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Between 1963 and 1989 he was a member of the powerful Central Committee of the country's ruling SED (party). He also served, between 1965 and 1989, as chairman of the State Planning Commission of East Germany's Council of Ministers.
It is one mark of his importance that during the 1980s Schürer lived with his family at House 7 in the Wandlitz residential estate. Wandlitz was the exclusive Berlin enclave where the top party officials lived. House 7 was a large house, with space to accommodate his (at this stage) second wife and seven children. A previous occupant had been Chairman Walter Ulbricht. After reunification, and as the German Democratic Republic receded into history, there were times when he felt able to recall his experiences with greater candour and clarity than others who had known the ruling establishment from the inside.