But you don't have business friendliness. You have an environment where it is obscenely costly to hire anyone. High minimum wage laws, expensive taxes to cover health care, job for life laws like France has etc. Socialism causes economic stagnation, there's just no getting around it.Shocking wrote:
Germany had to absorb the DDR post-soviet union and rebuild its economy. They maintained growth all throughout that enormously costly project and ended up having the largest economy on the continent. My country never topped 8% unemployment in the span of 20 years and had an average GDP growth of 3,4% from 1987-2001. The US averaged 3,4% as well in the same period. (world bank data). The rest of the continent didn't do too bad either and LOTS of money has been funneled to eastern Europe, which is doing much better growth wise.Jay wrote:
That's nice. Germany and France also averaged 10%+ unemployment and half our growth.Shocking wrote:
The entire continent here shared in the 90s economic boom in the US. GDP and average disposable income have grown massively over the past 20-30 years.
Stagnant? No way. The US has a much higher average disposable income because of its low tax rates (as much as 14,000 USD more on average in comparison to my country - gross the numbers are much closer), yet your economic growth doesn't show this. Why? Because business friendliness makes an economy boom, not the size of an individual's disposable income.
Socialism and the regulations that go with them are the kind of economy you adopt when you simply want to maintain your position economically. It's an ultra-conservative risk-averse economic ideology that is incompatible with growth. If you want proof, look at the people that advocate socialism. They're generally fearful, ignorant, and pessimistic.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat