• Log InLog In
  • Register
Liquid`
Team Liquid Liquipedia
EDT 16:06
CEST 22:06
KST 05:06
  • Home
  • Forum
  • Calendar
  • Streams
  • Liquipedia
  • Features
  • Store
  • EPT
  • TL+
  • StarCraft 2
  • Brood War
  • Smash
  • Heroes
  • Counter-Strike
  • Overwatch
  • Liquibet
  • Fantasy StarCraft
  • TLPD
  • StarCraft 2
  • Brood War
  • Blogs
Forum Sidebar
Events/Features
News
Featured News
Code S RO12 Preview: Cure, Zoun, Solar, Creator2[ASL19] Finals Preview: Daunting Task30[ASL19] Ro4 Recap : The Peak15DreamHack Dallas 2025 - Info & Preview21herO wins GSL Code S Season 1 (2025)18
Community News
Weekly Cups (May 19-25): Hindsight is 20/20?0DreamHack Dallas 2025 - Official Replay Pack7[BSL20] RO20 Group Stage2EWC 2025 Regional Qualifiers (May 28-June 1)9Weekly Cups (May 12-18): Clem sweeps WardiTV May3
StarCraft 2
General
DreamHack Dallas 2025 - Official Replay Pack Code S RO12 Preview: Cure, Zoun, Solar, Creator herO wins GSL Code S Season 1 (2025) DreamHack Dallas 2025 - Info & Preview RankedFTW - Site With Ladder Rankings Over Time
Tourneys
[GSL 2025] Code S:Season 2 - RO12 - Group A DreamHack Dallas 2025 SOOPer7s Showmatches 2025 StarCraft Evolution League (SC Evo Biweekly) Sparkling Tuna Cup - Weekly Open Tournament
Strategy
Simple Questions Simple Answers [G] PvT Cheese: 13 Gate Proxy Robo
Custom Maps
[UMS] Zillion Zerglings
External Content
Mutation # 475 Hard Target Mutation # 474 Futile Resistance Mutation # 473 Cold is the Void Mutation # 472 Dead Heat
Brood War
General
BGH auto balance -> http://bghmmr.eu/ Will foreigners ever be able to challenge Koreans? GG Lan Party Bulgaria (Live in about 3 hours) BW General Discussion Recent recommended BW games
Tourneys
[ASL19] Grand Finals [BSL20] GosuLeague RO16 - Tue & Wed 20:00+CET [Megathread] Daily Proleagues [ASL19] Ro8 Day 4
Strategy
I am doing this better than progamers do. [G] How to get started on ladder as a new Z player
Other Games
General Games
Nintendo Switch Thread Battle Aces/David Kim RTS Megathread Path of Exile Stormgate/Frost Giant Megathread Beyond All Reason
Dota 2
Official 'what is Dota anymore' discussion
League of Legends
LiquidLegends to reintegrate into TL.net
Heroes of the Storm
Simple Questions, Simple Answers
Hearthstone
Heroes of StarCraft mini-set
TL Mafia
Vanilla Mini Mafia TL Mafia Community Thread TL Mafia Plays: Diplomacy TL Mafia: Generative Agents Showdown Survivor II: The Amazon
Community
General
US Politics Mega-thread Things Aren’t Peaceful in Palestine Russo-Ukrainian War Thread European Politico-economics QA Mega-thread Trading/Investing Thread
Fan Clubs
Serral Fan Club
Media & Entertainment
[Manga] One Piece Movie Discussion!
Sports
2024 - 2025 Football Thread NHL Playoffs 2024 Formula 1 Discussion NBA General Discussion
World Cup 2022
Tech Support
Computer Build, Upgrade & Buying Resource Thread Cleaning My Mechanical Keyboard How to clean a TTe Thermaltake keyboard?
TL Community
The Automated Ban List TL.net Ten Commandments
Blogs
Need Your Help/Advice
Glider
Trip to the Zoo
micronesia
Yes Sir! How Commanding Impr…
TrAiDoS
Poker
Nebuchad
Info SLEgma_12
SLEgma_12
SECOND COMMING
XenOsky
WombaT’s Old BW Terran Theme …
WombaT
Customize Sidebar...

Website Feedback

Closed Threads



Active: 13516 users

The European Debt Crisis and the Euro - Page 132

Forum Index > General Forum
Post a Reply
Prev 1 130 131 132 133 134 158 Next
aksfjh
Profile Joined November 2010
United States4853 Posts
June 29 2013 05:07 GMT
#2621
On June 28 2013 07:49 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:
Show nested quote +
After more than a year of divisive and unproductive squabbling, the European Union has finally agreed to a budget deal, just hours ahead of a summit to end rampant youth unemployment in the bloc.

The last-minute agreement was reached on Thursday, as officials finally signed off on a $1.3 trillion budget for the EU, including the first spending cuts in its history.

The agreement still requires parliamentary approval.

Without a budget in place, the programmes to tackle unemployment and other issues to be discussed in the upcoming two-day summit in Brussels would not have been able to be launched.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso announced the agreement, saying "this is a good deal for Europe, this is a good deal for European citizens, this is a good deal for the European economy".

The 2014-2020 trillion-euro budget was only agreed upon with compromises on all sides.

At a summit in February, Britain, backed by Germany and the Netherlands, shot down a Commission bid to increase the budget by 5 percent as being unacceptable in times of austerity.

Instead, EU leaders for the first time ever agreed to cut spending, by 3.0 percent, in a move that angered MEPs who said money was needed to implement growth measures in their struggling countries.


Source

Britain is sticking to it's austerity guns out of fear of embarrassment and Germany is still convinced everybody must be punished for not having a German economy.
Melliflue
Profile Joined October 2012
United Kingdom1389 Posts
June 29 2013 11:00 GMT
#2622
On June 26 2013 04:52 Restrider wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 26 2013 04:21 aksfjh wrote:
On June 26 2013 03:17 JonnyBNoHo wrote:
On June 26 2013 03:12 lord_nibbler wrote:
On June 26 2013 02:12 WhiteDog wrote:
On June 26 2013 01:48 lord_nibbler wrote:
On June 26 2013 01:04 WhiteDog wrote:
Economy is war anyway. Germany's behavior right now showed that to all others europeans.

What is that supposed to mean?
Seriously, I do not understand. Either you thought 'economy is war' before, then Germany showed you nothing, or you actually did not believe so not long ago?

Then again, you want to 'localize' the auto industry for France and Italy in order to protect it, when in fact you should strive for global sales. There is half a billion cars to be sold to Chinese and Indian customers in the coming decades, it has to be your cars that are sold, and that is how you protect your auto industry in France.

Also the Euro was essentially a deal, the southern countries would get cheap interest rates for building lots of new infrastructure, while the northern countries would sell and loan to them like crazy.
All sides knew what they agreed to. The south also knew that 'economy is war'. They just thought they had made a bargain.

Well, after WW2 a lot of people thought economy was a mean to avoid war. That's part of the reason why all countries worked so hard to push international trade through bretton woods.
The EU has been made with the same idea in mind : connect countries that made war against each others for century.

I do not see it this way at all (and I am kind of convinced most others as well).
Economy does not avoid war, on the contrary it often causes it. 'Free trade' was pushed after the war by USA in order to loan (control) much more capital in the rebuilding countries than previously possible.
Countries had been trading goods for centuries and still fought wars against each other. What changed was massive foreign investment. If for example German banks own shares in French cooperations they will never want to invade France again, because that would ruin their investment. And also why invade anyway when you can just buy / invest?


You cannot blame small country for having a smaller industry that you. You cannot blame Greece for being a weaker economy than Germany, because that's how it is since a hundred years.

Greece is not blamed for it size. It is blamed for it's relative high debts.
It is about the fact that they did invest way to much money with too little return after the introduction of the Euro. The fact that they delayed reforms or never tackled economic and social problems is what bites them now.

Also, I know I sad it already, but please realize, the Euro was not forced onto Greece, they agreed to it. In fact they wanted it so much they cooked the books for it. Why? Because it was a unique chance for them to get massive foreign investment.
They took the deal.

That's true, but the borrower and lender both share responsibility in that.

This is a fact that people are too quick to dismiss. High savings rate in Germany and low wages, but a refusal to take on debt means the money flowed out of Germany. At the same time, Germans weren't buying their own products (that were strangely prohibitively expensive to them), but were taking advantage of their savings by funding other countries to buy their goods, mainly these other EU countries more comfortable with debt. The strange thing is, there was no reason to lend to Greece or Italy at these rates because of their history of devaluing currency to relieve debt. People forgot why these countries had unstable currencies before the Euro, and figured the Euro would fix everything.


This happened mainly due to a false sense of security caused by the Treaty of Maastricht. Alas, no one really tried to keep that treaty.

Ireland and Spain did a pretty good job of keeping to the Maastricht Treaty. Until 2007/2008 at least. Germany on the other hand broke the 3% deficit rule as early as 2001.

Furthermore, Germany was going through a time of hard social and economical reforms. People feared to lose their jobs and thus did not spend their money and rather saved it, because having no savings or even debts while not knowing whether you have a job next year or not, is something you do not want to be in.
Thus, they kept their money tight on their bank accounts and other financial saving plans. The banks invested in the southern countries, because they tried to get higher interests with low risks. And at that time, the interests for investments in southern Europe were higher than in Germany, but appeared to be as save as in Germany (i.e. Treaty of Maastricht, no risks of currency fluctuations etc.).

It's not possible for other European countries to do now what Germany did then. Germany benefited from rising wages in other EU countries (making Germany more competitive) as well as a strong global market. Germany also had (possibly still does) a large trade surplus with the rest of the Eurozone. It's impossible for all Eurozone countries to have a trade surplus within the Eurozone, and most countries globally are trying to boost exports so it is harder to get outside Eurozone trade. Plus; Germany still seems reluctant to let wages rise so the other Eurozone countries can't become more competitive by keeping wages constant, they would need to reduce wages.
SilentchiLL
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
Germany1405 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-06-29 11:03:00
June 29 2013 11:02 GMT
#2623
On June 29 2013 14:07 aksfjh wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 28 2013 07:49 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:
After more than a year of divisive and unproductive squabbling, the European Union has finally agreed to a budget deal, just hours ahead of a summit to end rampant youth unemployment in the bloc.

The last-minute agreement was reached on Thursday, as officials finally signed off on a $1.3 trillion budget for the EU, including the first spending cuts in its history.

The agreement still requires parliamentary approval.

Without a budget in place, the programmes to tackle unemployment and other issues to be discussed in the upcoming two-day summit in Brussels would not have been able to be launched.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso announced the agreement, saying "this is a good deal for Europe, this is a good deal for European citizens, this is a good deal for the European economy".

The 2014-2020 trillion-euro budget was only agreed upon with compromises on all sides.

At a summit in February, Britain, backed by Germany and the Netherlands, shot down a Commission bid to increase the budget by 5 percent as being unacceptable in times of austerity.

Instead, EU leaders for the first time ever agreed to cut spending, by 3.0 percent, in a move that angered MEPs who said money was needed to implement growth measures in their struggling countries.


Source

Britain is sticking to it's austerity guns out of fear of embarrassment and Germany is still convinced everybody must be punished for not having a German economy.



As an American you're obviously an expert of both countries and your short, exaggerrated, proofless and extremely simplified version of reality illuminates us all.
possum, sed nolo - Real men play random. ___ "Who the fuck is Kyle?!" C*****EX
aksfjh
Profile Joined November 2010
United States4853 Posts
June 29 2013 12:03 GMT
#2624
On June 29 2013 20:02 SilentchiLL wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 29 2013 14:07 aksfjh wrote:
On June 28 2013 07:49 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:
After more than a year of divisive and unproductive squabbling, the European Union has finally agreed to a budget deal, just hours ahead of a summit to end rampant youth unemployment in the bloc.

The last-minute agreement was reached on Thursday, as officials finally signed off on a $1.3 trillion budget for the EU, including the first spending cuts in its history.

The agreement still requires parliamentary approval.

Without a budget in place, the programmes to tackle unemployment and other issues to be discussed in the upcoming two-day summit in Brussels would not have been able to be launched.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso announced the agreement, saying "this is a good deal for Europe, this is a good deal for European citizens, this is a good deal for the European economy".

The 2014-2020 trillion-euro budget was only agreed upon with compromises on all sides.

At a summit in February, Britain, backed by Germany and the Netherlands, shot down a Commission bid to increase the budget by 5 percent as being unacceptable in times of austerity.

Instead, EU leaders for the first time ever agreed to cut spending, by 3.0 percent, in a move that angered MEPs who said money was needed to implement growth measures in their struggling countries.


Source

Britain is sticking to it's austerity guns out of fear of embarrassment and Germany is still convinced everybody must be punished for not having a German economy.



As an American you're obviously an expert of both countries and your short, exaggerrated, proofless and extremely simplified version of reality illuminates us all.

I'm far from an expert on either, but I at least keep up with news and information on both the US and Euro economy. Austerity in high unemployment/depressed economies has shown to screw the economy over much more than help. This is empirical by now. However, Great Britain elected Cameron's government into power, they went full force behind budget cuts and tax increases, and almost pushed their country into a double dip recession. They now carry enormous economic burden and the worst recovery in a long time (possibly ever). If they try to change course, they have to admit they were wrong or risk looking like the politicians they are.

Germany has had a relatively strong economic position simply due to the measures taken to insure their bad loans to the rest of the EU. However, instead of admitting that they lent money without adequately managing risk, they instead blame these borrowers for their "recklessness." Germany has pushed for policies just hard enough to get the money back to their banks, but no more. Any aid that has been given (in loan packages and whatnot) have come with the express rules that these governments need to manage their debt first, then worry about the economy (gee wonder why).

Maybe you could chime in your views on the matter instead of just flaming me (and my nationality).
SilentchiLL
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
Germany1405 Posts
June 29 2013 14:10 GMT
#2625
On June 29 2013 21:03 aksfjh wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 29 2013 20:02 SilentchiLL wrote:
On June 29 2013 14:07 aksfjh wrote:
On June 28 2013 07:49 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:
After more than a year of divisive and unproductive squabbling, the European Union has finally agreed to a budget deal, just hours ahead of a summit to end rampant youth unemployment in the bloc.

The last-minute agreement was reached on Thursday, as officials finally signed off on a $1.3 trillion budget for the EU, including the first spending cuts in its history.

The agreement still requires parliamentary approval.

Without a budget in place, the programmes to tackle unemployment and other issues to be discussed in the upcoming two-day summit in Brussels would not have been able to be launched.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso announced the agreement, saying "this is a good deal for Europe, this is a good deal for European citizens, this is a good deal for the European economy".

The 2014-2020 trillion-euro budget was only agreed upon with compromises on all sides.

At a summit in February, Britain, backed by Germany and the Netherlands, shot down a Commission bid to increase the budget by 5 percent as being unacceptable in times of austerity.

Instead, EU leaders for the first time ever agreed to cut spending, by 3.0 percent, in a move that angered MEPs who said money was needed to implement growth measures in their struggling countries.


Source

Britain is sticking to it's austerity guns out of fear of embarrassment and Germany is still convinced everybody must be punished for not having a German economy.



As an American you're obviously an expert of both countries and your short, exaggerrated, proofless and extremely simplified version of reality illuminates us all.

I'm far from an expert on either, but I at least keep up with news and information on both the US and Euro economy. Austerity in high unemployment/depressed economies has shown to screw the economy over much more than help. This is empirical by now. However, Great Britain elected Cameron's government into power, they went full force behind budget cuts and tax increases, and almost pushed their country into a double dip recession. They now carry enormous economic burden and the worst recovery in a long time (possibly ever). If they try to change course, they have to admit they were wrong or risk looking like the politicians they are.

Germany has had a relatively strong economic position simply due to the measures taken to insure their bad loans to the rest of the EU. However, instead of admitting that they lent money without adequately managing risk, they instead blame these borrowers for their "recklessness." Germany has pushed for policies just hard enough to get the money back to their banks, but no more. Any aid that has been given (in loan packages and whatnot) have come with the express rules that these governments need to manage their debt first, then worry about the economy (gee wonder why).

Maybe you could chime in your views on the matter instead of just flaming me (and my nationality).


I never flamed your nationality, just used it to question your knowledge on the subject since you contributed nothing in that post.
I guess it's argueable that I also didn't flame you, since what I wrote is the truth, but I do know that my sarcasm wasn't the nicest way to go about it so I apologize for that.
From your post alone I also don't feel any need to start a discussion with you, what I wanted is that you post more than some blank statements, since you took my mentioning of your country alone with no insult attached as a flame you may realise why your short post could be received in the wrong way by quite a lot of people.
Now you actually wrote something that backed up what you mean instead of just an empty statement, it's still overly simplified and wrong in my opinion, but I'm sure somebody else will argue with that about you now that you actually wrote something about it.

possum, sed nolo - Real men play random. ___ "Who the fuck is Kyle?!" C*****EX
Rassy
Profile Joined August 2010
Netherlands2308 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-06-29 16:08:25
June 29 2013 16:02 GMT
#2626
.
lord_nibbler
Profile Joined March 2004
Germany591 Posts
June 29 2013 18:50 GMT
#2627
On June 29 2013 21:03 aksfjh wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 29 2013 20:02 SilentchiLL wrote:
On June 29 2013 14:07 aksfjh wrote:
On June 28 2013 07:49 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:
After more than a year of divisive and unproductive squabbling, the European Union has finally agreed to a budget deal, just hours ahead of a summit to end rampant youth unemployment in the bloc.

The last-minute agreement was reached on Thursday, as officials finally signed off on a $1.3 trillion budget for the EU, including the first spending cuts in its history.

The agreement still requires parliamentary approval.

Without a budget in place, the programmes to tackle unemployment and other issues to be discussed in the upcoming two-day summit in Brussels would not have been able to be launched.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso announced the agreement, saying "this is a good deal for Europe, this is a good deal for European citizens, this is a good deal for the European economy".

The 2014-2020 trillion-euro budget was only agreed upon with compromises on all sides.

At a summit in February, Britain, backed by Germany and the Netherlands, shot down a Commission bid to increase the budget by 5 percent as being unacceptable in times of austerity.

Instead, EU leaders for the first time ever agreed to cut spending, by 3.0 percent, in a move that angered MEPs who said money was needed to implement growth measures in their struggling countries.


Source

Britain is sticking to it's austerity guns out of fear of embarrassment and Germany is still convinced everybody must be punished for not having a German economy.



As an American you're obviously an expert of both countries and your short, exaggerrated, proofless and extremely simplified version of reality illuminates us all.

I'm far from an expert on either, but I at least keep up with news and information on both the US and Euro economy. Austerity in high unemployment/depressed economies has shown to screw the economy over much more than help. This is empirical by now.

No, it is not!
Regardless of what (US) media tries to tell you, almost nothing in economic theory is proven by empirical evidence. In economic 'science' different school of thoughts postulate various assertions and then 'prove' them by selected correlations.
In fact, this whole Austerity strategy also comes from empirical evidence. Namely that no comparable country in recent history went to Greece's level of relative dept and not went bankrupt afterwards (obvious exception is the US, but they have an unbeatable army).
I am not saying, I like the current Austerity strategy, I just want to make clear, that there is no 'proven' or 'right' strategy. And whoever claims to have the sure answer in economic issues is a quack or hides self-interest.


However, Great Britain elected Cameron's government into power, they went full force behind budget cuts and tax increases, and almost pushed their country into a double dip recession. They now carry enormous economic burden and the worst recovery in a long time (possibly ever). If they try to change course, they have to admit they were wrong or risk looking like the politicians they are.

What does GB have to do with the Euro zone problem? Unlike the other Europeans they are the ones that did follow the US and 'printed more money'.


Germany has had a relatively strong economic position simply due to the measures taken to insure their bad loans to the rest of the EU. However, instead of admitting that they lent money without adequately managing risk, they instead blame these borrowers for their "recklessness." Germany has pushed for policies just hard enough to get the money back to their banks, but no more.

I got some news for you, US is much more into Greece government bonds than Germany. Something like $800 billion or so, if I remember correctly. So why don't you tell Obama that he should waive his claims to help Greece.

It's so easy, to point the finger at the other guy and tell him to man up and take the hit for the team. It's suddenly much harder once you are the the position yourself...
dreamsmasher
Profile Joined November 2010
816 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-06-29 19:07:43
June 29 2013 19:04 GMT
#2628
On June 30 2013 03:50 lord_nibbler wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 29 2013 21:03 aksfjh wrote:
On June 29 2013 20:02 SilentchiLL wrote:
On June 29 2013 14:07 aksfjh wrote:
On June 28 2013 07:49 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:
After more than a year of divisive and unproductive squabbling, the European Union has finally agreed to a budget deal, just hours ahead of a summit to end rampant youth unemployment in the bloc.

The last-minute agreement was reached on Thursday, as officials finally signed off on a $1.3 trillion budget for the EU, including the first spending cuts in its history.

The agreement still requires parliamentary approval.

Without a budget in place, the programmes to tackle unemployment and other issues to be discussed in the upcoming two-day summit in Brussels would not have been able to be launched.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso announced the agreement, saying "this is a good deal for Europe, this is a good deal for European citizens, this is a good deal for the European economy".

The 2014-2020 trillion-euro budget was only agreed upon with compromises on all sides.

At a summit in February, Britain, backed by Germany and the Netherlands, shot down a Commission bid to increase the budget by 5 percent as being unacceptable in times of austerity.

Instead, EU leaders for the first time ever agreed to cut spending, by 3.0 percent, in a move that angered MEPs who said money was needed to implement growth measures in their struggling countries.


Source

Britain is sticking to it's austerity guns out of fear of embarrassment and Germany is still convinced everybody must be punished for not having a German economy.



As an American you're obviously an expert of both countries and your short, exaggerrated, proofless and extremely simplified version of reality illuminates us all.

I'm far from an expert on either, but I at least keep up with news and information on both the US and Euro economy. Austerity in high unemployment/depressed economies has shown to screw the economy over much more than help. This is empirical by now.

No, it is not!
Regardless of what (US) media tries to tell you, almost nothing in economic theory is proven by empirical evidence. In economic 'science' different school of thoughts postulate various assertions and then 'prove' them by selected correlations.
In fact, this whole Austerity strategy also comes from empirical evidence. Namely that no comparable country in recent history went to Greece's level of relative dept and not went bankrupt afterwards (obvious exception is the US, but they have an unbeatable army).
I am not saying, I like the current Austerity strategy, I just want to make clear, that there is no 'proven' or 'right' strategy. And whoever claims to have the sure answer in economic issues is a quack or hides self-interest.

Show nested quote +

However, Great Britain elected Cameron's government into power, they went full force behind budget cuts and tax increases, and almost pushed their country into a double dip recession. They now carry enormous economic burden and the worst recovery in a long time (possibly ever). If they try to change course, they have to admit they were wrong or risk looking like the politicians they are.

What does GB have to do with the Euro zone problem? Unlike the other Europeans they are the ones that did follow the US and 'printed more money'.

Show nested quote +

Germany has had a relatively strong economic position simply due to the measures taken to insure their bad loans to the rest of the EU. However, instead of admitting that they lent money without adequately managing risk, they instead blame these borrowers for their "recklessness." Germany has pushed for policies just hard enough to get the money back to their banks, but no more.

I got some news for you, US is much more into Greece government bonds than Germany. Something like $800 billion or so, if I remember correctly. So why don't you tell Obama that he should waive his claims to help Greece.

It's so easy, to point the finger at the other guy and tell him to man up and take the hit for the team. It's suddenly much harder once you are the the position yourself...


there might not be an optimally correct strategy that is known but austerity is not one of them -- that much is true.

what study, the only study i can remember was reinhart roghoff between debt levels vs growth and that was an extremely poor study (it was wrong). austerity measures usually capitalize on people's psychological fears more than anything else.
Nyxisto
Profile Joined August 2010
Germany6287 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-06-29 19:41:53
June 29 2013 19:26 GMT
#2629
Germany has had a relatively strong economic position simply due to the measures taken to insure their bad loans to the rest of the EU


That's way to simple. I agree with you that loans should go up in Germany, but it's not just our low wages that benefit our economy. And yes our loans are pretty low, but many EU countries pay a lot less.

https://www.destatis.de/EN/FactsFigures/NationalEconomyEnvironment/EarningsLabourCosts/LabourCostsNonWageCosts/EUComparison/Tables/LabourCostPerHourWorked.html

(Labour costs in the EU)

One of Germany's main benefits is its big industrial sector (20% of our GDP) compared to 10% in the UK for example, which is of course way more crisis-proof than the service sector. Germany was actually perceived as kind of a "redneck country" just one or two decades ago, and the GB was praised for going into a kind of post-industrialized era.

There are also more problems: Spain had high private debt rates, which lead to a bubble in the real estate market. (85% of people in Spain owned a home, compared to 50% here).

Italy has serious political problems and low legal-certainty, which will stop people from investing there. France has high unemployment rates due to pretty high wages and a badly accessible employment market.

I agree that the austerity measures mainly driven by Germany aren't good without stimulus packages(that's the way Germany solved it's problems at the beginning of the last decade), and we should at least get minimal wages of about 8,50 here in Germany, but i think it's highly stupid and simplistic to just blame it on us without taking a closer look at what is actually going on.

Germany has pushed for policies just hard enough to get the money back to their banks, but no more.


That's also false.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_systemically_important_banks

If you look at the list of the systemically important financial institutions, you will see that only two of those are residing in Germany. Most bail-outs happened in countries that are actually not Germany.(Not saying bail-outs are a good thing or that we didn't do it because it also benefited us) But we didn't just bail-out "our banks".

JonnyBNoHo
Profile Joined July 2011
United States6277 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-06-29 19:55:37
June 29 2013 19:42 GMT
#2630
On June 30 2013 03:50 lord_nibbler wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 29 2013 21:03 aksfjh wrote:
On June 29 2013 20:02 SilentchiLL wrote:
On June 29 2013 14:07 aksfjh wrote:
On June 28 2013 07:49 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:
After more than a year of divisive and unproductive squabbling, the European Union has finally agreed to a budget deal, just hours ahead of a summit to end rampant youth unemployment in the bloc.

The last-minute agreement was reached on Thursday, as officials finally signed off on a $1.3 trillion budget for the EU, including the first spending cuts in its history.

The agreement still requires parliamentary approval.

Without a budget in place, the programmes to tackle unemployment and other issues to be discussed in the upcoming two-day summit in Brussels would not have been able to be launched.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso announced the agreement, saying "this is a good deal for Europe, this is a good deal for European citizens, this is a good deal for the European economy".

The 2014-2020 trillion-euro budget was only agreed upon with compromises on all sides.

At a summit in February, Britain, backed by Germany and the Netherlands, shot down a Commission bid to increase the budget by 5 percent as being unacceptable in times of austerity.

Instead, EU leaders for the first time ever agreed to cut spending, by 3.0 percent, in a move that angered MEPs who said money was needed to implement growth measures in their struggling countries.


Source

Britain is sticking to it's austerity guns out of fear of embarrassment and Germany is still convinced everybody must be punished for not having a German economy.



As an American you're obviously an expert of both countries and your short, exaggerrated, proofless and extremely simplified version of reality illuminates us all.

I'm far from an expert on either, but I at least keep up with news and information on both the US and Euro economy. Austerity in high unemployment/depressed economies has shown to screw the economy over much more than help. This is empirical by now.

No, it is not!
Regardless of what (US) media tries to tell you, almost nothing in economic theory is proven by empirical evidence. In economic 'science' different school of thoughts postulate various assertions and then 'prove' them by selected correlations.
In fact, this whole Austerity strategy also comes from empirical evidence. Namely that no comparable country in recent history went to Greece's level of relative dept and not went bankrupt afterwards (obvious exception is the US, but they have an unbeatable army).
I am not saying, I like the current Austerity strategy, I just want to make clear, that there is no 'proven' or 'right' strategy. And whoever claims to have the sure answer in economic issues is a quack or hides self-interest.

Show nested quote +

However, Great Britain elected Cameron's government into power, they went full force behind budget cuts and tax increases, and almost pushed their country into a double dip recession. They now carry enormous economic burden and the worst recovery in a long time (possibly ever). If they try to change course, they have to admit they were wrong or risk looking like the politicians they are.

What does GB have to do with the Euro zone problem? Unlike the other Europeans they are the ones that did follow the US and 'printed more money'.

Show nested quote +

Germany has had a relatively strong economic position simply due to the measures taken to insure their bad loans to the rest of the EU. However, instead of admitting that they lent money without adequately managing risk, they instead blame these borrowers for their "recklessness." Germany has pushed for policies just hard enough to get the money back to their banks, but no more.

I got some news for you, US is much more into Greece government bonds than Germany. Something like $800 billion or so, if I remember correctly. So why don't you tell Obama that he should waive his claims to help Greece.

It's so easy, to point the finger at the other guy and tell him to man up and take the hit for the team. It's suddenly much harder once you are the the position yourself...

Is there even $800B of Greek debt in existence?

The US didn't lend much to Greece (source). We're a debtor country, we don't lend much to anyone

Edit: Germany needs to re-balance its economy by improving its domestic economy and importing more. That's not a painful thing! There shouldn't be so much resistance to that.
Melliflue
Profile Joined October 2012
United Kingdom1389 Posts
June 29 2013 20:31 GMT
#2631
On June 30 2013 03:50 lord_nibbler wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 29 2013 21:03 aksfjh wrote:
On June 29 2013 20:02 SilentchiLL wrote:
On June 29 2013 14:07 aksfjh wrote:
On June 28 2013 07:49 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:
After more than a year of divisive and unproductive squabbling, the European Union has finally agreed to a budget deal, just hours ahead of a summit to end rampant youth unemployment in the bloc.

The last-minute agreement was reached on Thursday, as officials finally signed off on a $1.3 trillion budget for the EU, including the first spending cuts in its history.

The agreement still requires parliamentary approval.

Without a budget in place, the programmes to tackle unemployment and other issues to be discussed in the upcoming two-day summit in Brussels would not have been able to be launched.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso announced the agreement, saying "this is a good deal for Europe, this is a good deal for European citizens, this is a good deal for the European economy".

The 2014-2020 trillion-euro budget was only agreed upon with compromises on all sides.

At a summit in February, Britain, backed by Germany and the Netherlands, shot down a Commission bid to increase the budget by 5 percent as being unacceptable in times of austerity.

Instead, EU leaders for the first time ever agreed to cut spending, by 3.0 percent, in a move that angered MEPs who said money was needed to implement growth measures in their struggling countries.


Source

Britain is sticking to it's austerity guns out of fear of embarrassment and Germany is still convinced everybody must be punished for not having a German economy.



As an American you're obviously an expert of both countries and your short, exaggerrated, proofless and extremely simplified version of reality illuminates us all.

I'm far from an expert on either, but I at least keep up with news and information on both the US and Euro economy. Austerity in high unemployment/depressed economies has shown to screw the economy over much more than help. This is empirical by now.

No, it is not!
Regardless of what (US) media tries to tell you, almost nothing in economic theory is proven by empirical evidence. In economic 'science' different school of thoughts postulate various assertions and then 'prove' them by selected correlations.

As with any science, economics (when done properly) relies on using models to make predictions and seeing how those predictions match up with what happens. A lot of the predictions about the positive effects of austerity have not worked out. How often have things turned out to be worse than predicted? If your model for what should happen keeps failing to predict what will happen then the model is probably wrong. Or at least in need of modification.

In fact, this whole Austerity strategy also comes from empirical evidence. Namely that no comparable country in recent history went to Greece's level of relative dept and not went bankrupt afterwards (obvious exception is the US, but they have an unbeatable army).

But the argument is that (in some circumstances) austerity actually increases debt in the long-run and that sometimes it is better to take on some more debt in the short-term in order to have a lower debt in the long-term. The problem with austerity in times like these is that it will lead to lower revenues for the government as well as increased costs for things like social security.

The main reasoning for austerity seemed to be that Reinhart-Rogoff paper, which claimed that over 90% government debt caused a major drag on growth. But the paper has been completely debunked. They selectively picked data and they made calculation errors.

I am not saying, I like the current Austerity strategy, I just want to make clear, that there is no 'proven' or 'right' strategy. And whoever claims to have the sure answer in economic issues is a quack or hides self-interest.

Although there is no way to "prove" anything empirically the evidence does seem to suggest that austerity can be a bad idea. Consider how countries like the UK and Ireland have fared compared to countries like South Korea that went for stimulus instead.

Show nested quote +
However, Great Britain elected Cameron's government into power, they went full force behind budget cuts and tax increases, and almost pushed their country into a double dip recession. They now carry enormous economic burden and the worst recovery in a long time (possibly ever). If they try to change course, they have to admit they were wrong or risk looking like the politicians they are.

What does GB have to do with the Euro zone problem? Unlike the other Europeans they are the ones that did follow the US and 'printed more money'.

The UK government went for harsh austerity. Government expenditure as a % of GDP has been going down for the UK since 2007 (source).

Show nested quote +
Germany has had a relatively strong economic position simply due to the measures taken to insure their bad loans to the rest of the EU. However, instead of admitting that they lent money without adequately managing risk, they instead blame these borrowers for their "recklessness." Germany has pushed for policies just hard enough to get the money back to their banks, but no more.

I got some news for you, US is much more into Greece government bonds than Germany. Something like $800 billion or so, if I remember correctly. So why don't you tell Obama that he should waive his claims to help Greece.

It's so easy, to point the finger at the other guy and tell him to man up and take the hit for the team. It's suddenly much harder once you are the the position yourself...

I have no idea where you got that figure from. I found this graph on the BBC website:
[image loading]
(source)

The problem is not necessarily what each country has directly invested in Greece, but rather not knowing what the knock-on effects would be.

The BBC did a good explanation of what caused the problems in Europe in an article back in 2011. Link.
aksfjh
Profile Joined November 2010
United States4853 Posts
June 29 2013 22:23 GMT
#2632
People already did a good job of responding to some of this stuff, so this is kind of a piecewise response to what's left.
On June 30 2013 03:50 lord_nibbler wrote:
What does GB have to do with the Euro zone problem? Unlike the other Europeans they are the ones that did follow the US and 'printed more money'.

If you look at the article I originally responded to, it talks about cutting the EU budget. The first cut in history while unemployment across the entire Eurozone climbs. I'm describing why the 2 biggest players behind the cuts voted the way they did (in my opinion).

On June 30 2013 04:26 Nyxisto wrote:
Show nested quote +
Germany has pushed for policies just hard enough to get the money back to their banks, but no more.


That's also false.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_systemically_important_banks

If you look at the list of the systemically important financial institutions, you will see that only two of those are residing in Germany. Most bail-outs happened in countries that are actually not Germany.(Not saying bail-outs are a good thing or that we didn't do it because it also benefited us) But we didn't just bail-out "our banks".

The troubled banks first to need bailouts weren't the ones exposed to government debt, but rather exposed to private markets that collapsed with the economy. Spain and Ireland were part of the initial impact, requiring their banks to be bailed out for bad mortgages, which put additional stress on their public debt along with the government spending to either stabilize those unemployed or prop up their economy. Greece and Portugal did the same, but without those troubled banks to suck out more money. The issue with the "sovereign debt crisis" has more to do with how long it took for governments to default. The crisis started around 2010, but Greece wasn't allowed to default on any of their debts until 2012. This gave banks time to either dump the debt or diversify enough that a default wouldn't bring them down.

On June 30 2013 05:31 Melliflue wrote:
I have no idea where you got that figure from. I found this graph on the BBC website:
[image loading]
(source)

The problem is not necessarily what each country has directly invested in Greece, but rather not knowing what the knock-on effects would be.

The BBC did a good explanation of what caused the problems in Europe in an article back in 2011. Link.

Key note here: that graph is from July 2012. You can see how small the exposure is to Greek government debt 2 years after the crisis started. What you should look at is the exposure right after the crisis began. This article has some decent numbers. At that time, Germany had up to €30 billion exposed to Greek government debt. In total, Germany had about €226 billion from banks exposed to Greece, Portugal, and Spain, the 3 most troubled countries in the crisis. The debt write-down plan (basically a default) didn't come about until October of 2011, after plenty of bailout money was put into Greece and (German) banks were able to dump their Greek bonds enough to save their skin. Whether you want to argue this is a good or bad thing, you can see how German support for Greece (and other troubled nations) dropped off tremendously at that point. Troubled EU economies were no longer their problem when their banks were off the hook.

Now, as Germany is pushing these economies to act more like German economies, there is tremendous pressure to make that as hard as possible, all for the sake of Germany (and political parties that support austerity). The ECB won't chase a higher inflation target, or even pursue their current target more aggressively because of fear that it would overheat the German economy. The expectation is that these economies will have to become export economies (but not to the rich countries of the EU), but without the aid of government investment or higher inflation.
{CC}StealthBlue
Profile Blog Joined January 2003
United States41117 Posts
July 03 2013 02:12 GMT
#2633
Portugal's prime minister says he "won't resign" despite the resignations of two key members of his Cabinet in a spat over country's controversial austerity policies.

Pedro Passos Coelho said in a televised address to the nation late on Tuesday that his government will continue its battle to restore the bailed-out country's financial health.

"I won't give up on my country," he said.

But the government's future is hanging in the balance after the resignation earlier Tuesday of Foreign Minister Paulo Portas, the leader of the junior party in the governing centre-right coalition, in protest against austerity measures.

Passos Coelho said he wouldn't accept Portas's resignation and would seek to heal the rift between the coalition partners.

Finance Minister Vitor Gaspar, the architect of the country's reforms under its EU-IMF bailout, quit a day earlier, complaining he lacked political support for his austerity programmes.

Though Portas did not say whether his party would pull its support from the government, the resignations pitched what for two years had been a stable administration into disarray within the space of 24 hours.

It recalled the political strife that has dogged Greece's efforts to recover from its own bailout.


Source
"Smokey, this is not 'Nam, this is bowling. There are rules."
JonnyBNoHo
Profile Joined July 2011
United States6277 Posts
July 03 2013 09:02 GMT
#2634
From Alphaville.

Portuguese turmoil
Here’s Portugal’s 10 year benchmark punching through 8 per cent to start your morning. We’d note it was sitting at 6.4 per cent on the 1st of this month…
[image loading]

To lose one cabinet minister is bad luck, to lose two in two days… means… time for another eurozone peripheral crisis? The resignation of Portugal’s foreign minister Paulo Portas yesterday has everyone worried, because of his role as leader of the CDS-PP, the junior partner in the governing coalition. If CDS-PP withdrew their support, the government would be left with 108 seats in a 230-seat parliament and uncertain prospects for scraping together a majority.

And all this less than two weeks before a troika delegation is due to start their next review of the economy as the lenders consider whether Portugal will get an easing of terms on its 2011 €78bn bailout, and receive the next €2bn instalment. ...

AbstractSC
Profile Joined April 2012
Greece28 Posts
July 03 2013 23:04 GMT
#2635
Because people post a lot of numbers about the Greek Debt-Crisis, I'd like to make somethings clearer for people not living in Greece, that are not told by popular media around the world.

First of all, numbers are numbers. They do NOT paint the whole picture of what is going on in a country. Almost no Greek had any problem with big changes occurring in Greece. Before the huge cuts in salaries and the insane amount of people ending in unemployment, in 2010, a lot of people and probably the majority agreed that if we were to go bankrupt as a country, then yeah OK... we'll pay for that by lowering our monthly wages. The problem is a lot of things were either NOT done at all (like chasing tax-evasion) or they were done without a real plan in a non-democratic way.

Let's see where we were 3 years ago and where we are now. Today there is approx 67% official unemployment for people between 15-24 years old. The real unemployment (which means taking into account anyone working in the black market or is a college-university student which is searching for a job) is much much greater, which means almost no young person in Greece has any chance of finding any kind of job at all.

So let's stop looking at numbers just as numbers and let's start thinking that behind all those numbers are people's dreams, families, lives. And when you have taken a huge hit to your own life for nothing in return, for so long, and with nothing on the horizon, then I don't see how any of the policies used in Greece "make sense" for an economic point of view.

Secondly, the problem in Europe is no longer ECONOMICAL, as weird as that sounds. We've reached the point where Greece will NEVER, and I really mean NEVER be able to payback the money Greece owes. And the same probably goes for other countries as well. The problem is now POLITICAL. The solution can no longer by economical means because there's no way to "fix" those numbers. With huge unemployment, and the constant hit both the public and private sector receive, there will never be economic growth, and when there will be, we will need to pay everything we make to cover our debt, leaving nothing for growth. Just to paint a picture for you, every new baby born and every young kid that's still going to school, already "owes" more than 10.000 Euros. How do you build a life like that?

So since the solution can only be political, numbers lose their meaning. After WWII, the Marshal Plan was a political solution, that gave the opportunity to Germany to stand on it's feet, and achieve economic growth. The austerity measures are in no way similar to what the Marshal Plan was, and I find it astounding that 2 different plans have been used in the past, with obvious results as to which works, and we're still keep trying to make this terrible plan work.

Lastly, I don't know what the big media in other countries say about Greeks, whether their lazy, corrupt etc etc. but according to an official survey done in 2008, Greeks are the most hardworking people in Europe.

[image loading]

So in my opinion don't blame the Greeks for the situation except for voting the wrong people and not protesting and fighting as hard as they could.
I could probably write a lot more on the subject but I don't want to make a huge post.
"There are five possible operations for any army. If you can fight, fight; if you cannot fight, defend; if you cannot defend, flee; if you cannot flee, surrender; if you cannot surrender, die."-Sima Yi
Gorsameth
Profile Joined April 2010
Netherlands21557 Posts
July 03 2013 23:49 GMT
#2636
1) Hours worked is useless. I can sit in a room for 16 hours a day. doesnt mean i worked hard. This is not an insult at you it just means to show that as you say. numbers are just numbers.

2) Greece couldnt pay its dept. We gave them money to pay next month. Ofc they then cant pay the month after, and the month after that. Governments dont suddenly generate several millions in monthly income. There not your broke brother who could go and find a job to pay it off.

3) Greece was forced to take massive cuts. Who knew that sufficating an economy in a crisis was a bad thing. Who knew that firing half your workforce means that they can no longer afford the goods your other half produces.

Greece is the exhibition piece for economic intervention screw ups. And dont despair, The rest of us are running hard to join you with all the cuts being done everywhere.
It ignores such insignificant forces as time, entropy, and death
Zealos
Profile Blog Joined November 2011
United Kingdom3573 Posts
July 04 2013 00:13 GMT
#2637
On June 29 2013 20:02 SilentchiLL wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 29 2013 14:07 aksfjh wrote:
On June 28 2013 07:49 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:
After more than a year of divisive and unproductive squabbling, the European Union has finally agreed to a budget deal, just hours ahead of a summit to end rampant youth unemployment in the bloc.

The last-minute agreement was reached on Thursday, as officials finally signed off on a $1.3 trillion budget for the EU, including the first spending cuts in its history.

The agreement still requires parliamentary approval.

Without a budget in place, the programmes to tackle unemployment and other issues to be discussed in the upcoming two-day summit in Brussels would not have been able to be launched.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso announced the agreement, saying "this is a good deal for Europe, this is a good deal for European citizens, this is a good deal for the European economy".

The 2014-2020 trillion-euro budget was only agreed upon with compromises on all sides.

At a summit in February, Britain, backed by Germany and the Netherlands, shot down a Commission bid to increase the budget by 5 percent as being unacceptable in times of austerity.

Instead, EU leaders for the first time ever agreed to cut spending, by 3.0 percent, in a move that angered MEPs who said money was needed to implement growth measures in their struggling countries.


Source

Britain is sticking to it's austerity guns out of fear of embarrassment and Germany is still convinced everybody must be punished for not having a German economy.



As an American you're obviously an expert of both countries and your short, exaggerrated, proofless and extremely simplified version of reality illuminates us all.

Well, I have no idea about germany, but he's got it about right for the UK
On the internet if you disagree with or dislike something you're angry and taking it too seriously. == Join TLMafia !
lord_nibbler
Profile Joined March 2004
Germany591 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-07-04 01:11:21
July 04 2013 01:06 GMT
#2638
On July 04 2013 08:04 AbstractSC wrote:
Almost no Greek had any problem with big changes occurring in Greece. Before the huge cuts in salaries and the insane amount of people ending in unemployment, in 2010, a lot of people and probably the majority agreed that if we were to go bankrupt as a country, then yeah OK... we'll pay for that by lowering our monthly wages. The problem is a lot of things were either NOT done at all (like chasing tax-evasion) or they were done without a real plan in a non-democratic way.

We know all that.
But please realize that, while 'our politicians are stupid, the plans they make are unfair and undemocratic' gets our sympathy, it does not lead to more support. Because you are not unique, we all have (very) stupid politicians.


So let's stop looking at numbers just as numbers and let's start thinking that behind all those numbers are people's dreams, families, lives. And when you have taken a huge hit to your own life for nothing in return, for so long, and with nothing on the horizon, then I don't see how any of the policies used in Greece "make sense" for an economic point of view.

Again, Greece is not unique in any way. There are millions in similar positions everywhere. Take France for example, if you are a French muslim living in a banlieue your dreams are worth nothing as well.
In Germany we have like 20% of people either without a job or with one so low paid that they can not live on it (no minimum wage). They survive on livelong social services.
And that is the worldwide trend. Capitalist societies don't give a fuck about at least one third of it's population, there are no real jobs for them and never will.


Secondly, the problem in Europe is no longer ECONOMICAL, as weird as that sounds. We've reached the point where Greece will NEVER, and I really mean NEVER be able to payback the money Greece owes. And the same probably goes for other countries as well. The problem is now POLITICAL.

No country in this world is ever going to payback its dept (unless it has oil). That is the case for everybody!
In fact, almost every country has to lend more money every year just to pay the interest of its current loans.
Again, Greece is not unique in that in any way.


The solution can no longer by economical means because there's no way to "fix" those numbers. With huge unemployment, and the constant hit both the public and private sector receive, there will never be economic growth, and when there will be, we will need to pay everything we make to cover our debt, leaving nothing for growth.

Wake up already! Who seriously talks about growing economy or Greece paying back loans?
This crisis will be 'fixed' the moment Greece can borrow for 3% or less again!
Nobody gives a flying fuck how many people will have lost their job by then or how Greece will keep its poor masses in check. As long as interest rates are low the 'problem will be solved'.
For that Greece might get a partial haircut on their loans soon and maybe a token 'youth unemployment initiative'.


After WWII, the Marshal Plan was a political solution, that gave the opportunity to Germany to stand on it's feet, and achieve economic growth. The austerity measures are in no way similar to what the Marshal Plan was, and I find it astounding that 2 different plans have been used in the past, with obvious results as to which works, and we're still keep trying to make this terrible plan work.

Where do you suggest we take the money for your Marshall Plan from? Nobody is currently lending you money, that is the whole problem.
Also while we are at it, the Marshall Plan after the war was in no way an altruistic initiative. US made a fortune with these loans and got political control on top of it (and even got to be the 'good guy').
And it came with serious strings attached. You moan about the 'Merkel influence' on you politics now? Try imagine a 'New Marshall Plan Euro Commissioner' standing above your government restructuring your country from Brussels.


Lastly, I don't know what the big media in other countries say about Greeks, whether their lazy, corrupt etc etc. but according to an official survey done in 2008, Greeks are the most hardworking people in Europe.

We already had this statistic in this thread some pages ago, please look it up. In short, Germany has a lot more part time workers.
Rassy
Profile Joined August 2010
Netherlands2308 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-07-04 08:47:39
July 04 2013 08:42 GMT
#2639
On July 04 2013 08:04 AbstractSC wrote:
Because people post a lot of numbers about the Greek Debt-Crisis, I'd like to make somethings clearer for people not living in Greece, that are not told by popular media around the world.

First of all, numbers are numbers. They do NOT paint the whole picture of what is going on in a country. Almost no Greek had any problem with big changes occurring in Greece. Before the huge cuts in salaries and the insane amount of people ending in unemployment, in 2010, a lot of people and probably the majority agreed that if we were to go bankrupt as a country, then yeah OK... we'll pay for that by lowering our monthly wages. The problem is a lot of things were either NOT done at all (like chasing tax-evasion) or they were done without a real plan in a non-democratic way.

Let's see where we were 3 years ago and where we are now. Today there is approx 67% official unemployment for people between 15-24 years old. The real unemployment (which means taking into account anyone working in the black market or is a college-university student which is searching for a job) is much much greater, which means almost no young person in Greece has any chance of finding any kind of job at all.

So let's stop looking at numbers just as numbers and let's start thinking that behind all those numbers are people's dreams, families, lives. And when you have taken a huge hit to your own life for nothing in return, for so long, and with nothing on the horizon, then I don't see how any of the policies used in Greece "make sense" for an economic point of view.

Secondly, the problem in Europe is no longer ECONOMICAL, as weird as that sounds. We've reached the point where Greece will NEVER, and I really mean NEVER be able to payback the money Greece owes. And the same probably goes for other countries as well. The problem is now POLITICAL. The solution can no longer by economical means because there's no way to "fix" those numbers. With huge unemployment, and the constant hit both the public and private sector receive, there will never be economic growth, and when there will be, we will need to pay everything we make to cover our debt, leaving nothing for growth. Just to paint a picture for you, every new baby born and every young kid that's still going to school, already "owes" more than 10.000 Euros. How do you build a life like that?

So since the solution can only be political, numbers lose their meaning. After WWII, the Marshal Plan was a political solution, that gave the opportunity to Germany to stand on it's feet, and achieve economic growth. The austerity measures are in no way similar to what the Marshal Plan was, and I find it astounding that 2 different plans have been used in the past, with obvious results as to which works, and we're still keep trying to make this terrible plan work.

Lastly, I don't know what the big media in other countries say about Greeks, whether their lazy, corrupt etc etc. but according to an official survey done in 2008, Greeks are the most hardworking people in Europe.

[image loading]

So in my opinion don't blame the Greeks for the situation except for voting the wrong people and not protesting and fighting as hard as they could.
I could probably write a lot more on the subject but I don't want to make a huge post.


Ty for this post, it gives a perspective we dont often read in our newspapers.
In the netherlands there is not much coverage on greek at all, they more or less comletely ignore the huge human tragedys wich are now happening there, and personally i definatly do not blame the greeks for annything. I have been to athens once for a week and all the people i met there where wonderfull people.
Greece is a victem of the attempt to unify europe economically, wich makes it near impossible to aply a good economic and monetary policy for the situation in greece specifically, since the same policy also has to work for manny other countrys wich are in different positions.I do realy feel sry for the people there when i read storys like yours and i have no idea how i could help or make it better in anny way
Just be sure there are manny people who have sympathy for the average greek person suffering from this ordeal.
I have no answer or idea what policys should be employed , my hope is that after the german elections we will leave asuterity behind us and start a policy aimed towards growth but i am not sure that will happen.
fleeze
Profile Joined March 2010
Germany895 Posts
July 04 2013 09:00 GMT
#2640
On July 04 2013 08:04 AbstractSC wrote:
Because people post a lot of numbers about the Greek Debt-Crisis, I'd like to make somethings clearer for people not living in Greece, that are not told by popular media around the world.

First of all, numbers are numbers. They do NOT paint the whole picture of what is going on in a country. Almost no Greek had any problem with big changes occurring in Greece. Before the huge cuts in salaries and the insane amount of people ending in unemployment, in 2010, a lot of people and probably the majority agreed that if we were to go bankrupt as a country, then yeah OK... we'll pay for that by lowering our monthly wages. The problem is a lot of things were either NOT done at all (like chasing tax-evasion) or they were done without a real plan in a non-democratic way.

Let's see where we were 3 years ago and where we are now. Today there is approx 67% official unemployment for people between 15-24 years old. The real unemployment (which means taking into account anyone working in the black market or is a college-university student which is searching for a job) is much much greater, which means almost no young person in Greece has any chance of finding any kind of job at all.

So let's stop looking at numbers just as numbers and let's start thinking that behind all those numbers are people's dreams, families, lives. And when you have taken a huge hit to your own life for nothing in return, for so long, and with nothing on the horizon, then I don't see how any of the policies used in Greece "make sense" for an economic point of view.

Secondly, the problem in Europe is no longer ECONOMICAL, as weird as that sounds. We've reached the point where Greece will NEVER, and I really mean NEVER be able to payback the money Greece owes. And the same probably goes for other countries as well. The problem is now POLITICAL. The solution can no longer by economical means because there's no way to "fix" those numbers. With huge unemployment, and the constant hit both the public and private sector receive, there will never be economic growth, and when there will be, we will need to pay everything we make to cover our debt, leaving nothing for growth. Just to paint a picture for you, every new baby born and every young kid that's still going to school, already "owes" more than 10.000 Euros. How do you build a life like that?

So since the solution can only be political, numbers lose their meaning. After WWII, the Marshal Plan was a political solution, that gave the opportunity to Germany to stand on it's feet, and achieve economic growth. The austerity measures are in no way similar to what the Marshal Plan was, and I find it astounding that 2 different plans have been used in the past, with obvious results as to which works, and we're still keep trying to make this terrible plan work.

Lastly, I don't know what the big media in other countries say about Greeks, whether their lazy, corrupt etc etc. but according to an official survey done in 2008, Greeks are the most hardworking people in Europe.

[image loading]

So in my opinion don't blame the Greeks for the situation except for voting the wrong people and not protesting and fighting as hard as they could.
I could probably write a lot more on the subject but I don't want to make a huge post.

i just want to comment the graphic. it's missleading, especially because it highlights germany.
there are much more part time or 400€ jobs, that don't work full time, in germany. so take this with a grain of salt.
Prev 1 130 131 132 133 134 158 Next
Please log in or register to reply.
Live Events Refresh
BSL: GosuLeague
19:00
RO16 SWISS - Round 3
Semih vs cavapoo
Hejek vs TousaN
ZZZero.O87
Liquipedia
[ Submit Event ]
Live Streams
Refresh
StarCraft 2
UpATreeSC 173
NeuroSwarm 114
JuggernautJason73
Livibee 72
MindelVK 38
StarCraft: Brood War
BeSt 634
firebathero 288
Dewaltoss 140
ZZZero.O 87
Movie 15
Dota 2
Dendi2551
febbydoto3
Counter-Strike
fl0m1765
Stewie2K1213
flusha199
Super Smash Bros
C9.Mang0102
Other Games
Grubby4153
Beastyqt860
ceh9421
mouzStarbuck262
ToD176
TKL 105
KnowMe70
Trikslyr63
QueenE61
NightEnD7
Organizations
StarCraft 2
angryscii 35
Blizzard YouTube
StarCraft: Brood War
BSLTrovo
sctven
[ Show 23 non-featured ]
StarCraft 2
• kabyraGe 263
• StrangeGG 64
• 3DClanTV 19
• Reevou 7
• sooper7s
• AfreecaTV YouTube
• Migwel
• intothetv
• LaughNgamezSOOP
• Kozan
• IndyKCrew
StarCraft: Brood War
• Eskiya23 11
• FirePhoenix3
• STPLYoutube
• ZZZeroYoutube
• BSLYoutube
Dota 2
• masondota21499
• WagamamaTV553
• Ler124
League of Legends
• Nemesis6108
• TFBlade2070
• Jankos1521
Other Games
• imaqtpie2041
Upcoming Events
PiGosaur Monday
3h 55m
GSL Code S
13h 25m
Cure vs Zoun
Solar vs Creator
The PondCast
13h 55m
Road to EWC
13h 55m
Online Event
18h 55m
Clem vs ShoWTimE
herO vs MaxPax
HupCup
18h 55m
Road to EWC
19h 55m
Road to EWC
1d 1h
GSL Code S
1d 13h
GuMiho vs Bunny
ByuN vs SHIN
Road to EWC
1d 13h
[ Show More ]
Online Event
1d 16h
Road to EWC
1d 19h
Road to EWC
2 days
Replay Cast
2 days
Road to EWC
2 days
Road to EWC
2 days
Road to EWC
3 days
Road to EWC
3 days
CranKy Ducklings
3 days
Road to EWC
3 days
Replay Cast
4 days
Road to EWC
4 days
Sparkling Tuna Cup
4 days
Replay Cast
5 days
Replay Cast
6 days
Liquipedia Results

Completed

ASL Season 19
DreamHack Dallas 2025
Calamity Stars S2

Ongoing

JPL Season 2
YSL S1
BSL Season 20
KCM Race Survival 2025 Season 2
NPSL S3
Rose Open S1
CSL Season 17: Qualifier 1
Heroes 10 EU
ESL Impact League Season 7
IEM Dallas 2025
PGL Astana 2025
Asian Champions League '25
ECL Season 49: Europe
BLAST Rivals Spring 2025
MESA Nomadic Masters
CCT Season 2 Global Finals
IEM Melbourne 2025
YaLLa Compass Qatar 2025
PGL Bucharest 2025
BLAST Open Spring 2025
ESL Pro League S21

Upcoming

CSL Season 17: Qualifier 2
CSL 17: 2025 SUMMER
Copa Latinoamericana 4
CSLPRO Last Chance 2025
CSLAN 2025
K-Championship
SEL Season 2 Championship
Esports World Cup 2025
HSC XXVII
Championship of Russia 2025
Bellum Gens Elite Stara Zagora 2025
2025 GSL S2
BLAST Bounty Fall Qual
IEM Cologne 2025
FISSURE Playground #1
BLAST.tv Austin Major 2025
TLPD

1. ByuN
2. TY
3. Dark
4. Solar
5. Stats
6. Nerchio
7. sOs
8. soO
9. INnoVation
10. Elazer
1. Rain
2. Flash
3. EffOrt
4. Last
5. Bisu
6. Soulkey
7. Mini
8. Sharp
Sidebar Settings...

Advertising | Privacy Policy | Terms Of Use | Contact Us

Original banner artwork: Jim Warren
The contents of this webpage are copyright © 2025 TLnet. All Rights Reserved.