http://politicalcalculations.blogspot.com/2005/12/eu-vs-usa-two-years-of-economic-data.html
12/14/2005 3:38:46 PM
Obligatory "OMF your info is biased!!1 There's no mention of free time!!1"
12/14/2005 3:43:59 PM
I had no idea D.C's gdp per capita would be that highTheir GINI index must be through the roofI think I posted this study in a thread a while back but I cant find it
12/14/2005 3:45:46 PM
^gentrification'll do that before too long. hell most of northern VA is the same, all the rich politicians using teh g0v to run the poor people out...
12/14/2005 3:56:22 PM
Goes to show that Liberal California >>> Liberal EuropeScore one for America.
12/14/2005 4:05:16 PM
not that I support the Swedish system but look at all the stupid shit they throw into GDP numbers:http://www.redefiningprogress.org/media/clips/040701_csm.html
12/14/2005 8:27:02 PM
Luxembourg
12/14/2005 9:37:40 PM
oh yeah, well, OUR POOR PEOPLE ARE ALOT POORER! #1![Edited on December 14, 2005 at 11:13 PM. Reason : .]
12/14/2005 11:01:22 PM
Capitalism is just a better system, duh. If we would have more open banking laws then we could have a GDP/capita like Luxembourg.
12/14/2005 11:43:55 PM
Europe has a completely different lifestyle than Americayou can't really compare the 2 like this
12/15/2005 12:04:47 AM
^winnerhow much does europe even manufacture these days, anyway? its all service sector. at least we still have some commodities to ship.[Edited on December 15, 2005 at 12:34 AM. Reason : .]
12/15/2005 12:21:59 AM
^the service sector makes up a larger a percentage of our labor force than that of the EU[Edited on December 15, 2005 at 1:50 AM. Reason : ]
12/15/2005 1:45:26 AM
And yet europe is still much safer and a better palce to live. Someone posted something a while ago where it had the 25%th percentile GPD. Most of the west europe nations kicked the shit out of the US. This country has a LOT of poverty.
12/15/2005 2:13:57 AM
Yeah we don't give out as many hand outs to stupid lazy people
12/15/2005 2:15:32 AM
right, which is reflected in the much greater number of people not working or doing anything usefull in Europe.wait...
12/15/2005 2:16:52 AM
Unemployment rates in Europe are often in the double digits. wait...
12/15/2005 2:18:16 AM
i cant speak for the rest of europe, but i know britain has a heavier % in the service sector than the US does. aside from wool, theres really know substantial industrial exports left there.id like to see russia and the former SRs thrown into this comparison out of curiosity. my dad's employer has started selling (oddly enough) sweet potatos to distributors over there, and apparently their distribution co.'s and supermarkets are really doing very well right now.[Edited on December 15, 2005 at 2:27 AM. Reason : .]
12/15/2005 2:25:17 AM
12/15/2005 2:37:27 AM
^^No, thats not true.The service sector accounts for approximately 75% of Britain's GDP, versus 80% for the US[Edited on December 15, 2005 at 2:41 AM. Reason : 7]
12/15/2005 2:41:17 AM
Interesting.
12/15/2005 2:41:25 AM
WOWTHIS INFORMATION SHOWS THE US CONSUMES MORE THAN EUROPEIM AMAZED!
12/15/2005 2:42:13 AM
gtfo you crazy communist
12/15/2005 2:42:56 AM
^^ You would be shocked, you damn communist (I expect you to take this as a compliment). Capitalism is simply more productive.
12/15/2005 9:44:40 AM
That, or our culture values consumption more than others
12/15/2005 10:40:33 AM
Nobody ever argued that the EU was richer then the US but I would really like to see the distribution of Wealth in Europe as opposed to the distribution of wealth in the United States.
12/15/2005 11:17:43 AM
well, fascist movements are on the rise in europe these days, maybe youll get your wish soon.
12/15/2005 12:26:32 PM
Nepal or Bhutan has a "Gross National Happiness" indexsomeone with time plz dig that up
12/15/2005 1:42:45 PM
tired of using seperate jars of mustard and mayonaise?use mayostarmustardayonaise!
12/15/2005 2:08:53 PM
12/15/2005 4:36:53 PM
you missed my point
12/15/2005 4:44:39 PM
totally missed the point there, ggthis is like apples and orangessure, everyone loves mickey mouse, but that doesnt mean everyone wants to live in disney world
12/15/2005 4:58:21 PM
^^ Then perhaps you could rephrase it? It sounded like your point was that europeans favor free time over additional consumption and therefore work less. The answer to this would be to simply demonstrate that much of the reduced consumption in Europe is due to structural problems in the economy, such as I stated.
12/15/2005 5:20:01 PM
Former German Chancellor Shroeder works for Russia now. So Europe becomes more and more interesting to me.
12/15/2005 5:21:33 PM
what you see as structural problems in the economy, they see as 3 weeks in the french rivieraand because i know you aren't going to drop it, explain legally enforced 35 hour work weeks in france, 2 hour siestas in spain, and across europe on average 2-3 times as much vacation time for workers compared to the USand because i know you are going to bring up taxes, explain why they simply don't vote in government representatives that lower taxes
12/15/2005 5:26:32 PM
do people not understand the Europe is capitalist too?hey guys i tossed all these numbers together and i found out the information i wanted to find. what are the ODDS!
12/15/2005 5:35:42 PM
12/15/2005 5:35:55 PM
LoneSnark apparently doesnt know anyone thats ever lived in europe. Reduced consuption is due to1) people live closer to where they need to go, thus they dont spend all that money on personal transportation like we do, b/c they dont NEED to. Its stupid to drive to the store to get milk when its less than a mile away, and the arrangements of their cities allows for that. of course, one would think theyre more healthy, but thats what smoking does to you.2) they choose free time over consumption and overworking.just b/c you arent buying a buncha shit doesnt mean your economy is broken, thats just silly. its the culture. having family living over there at various times in Brussels and Northhampton, Eng. has taught me this. maybe im biased b/c im conservative in the sense that im a tight-ass w/ money, but still, you dont need things to make you happy, and most, but not all, other world cultures realize that a little better than we do. numbers wont tell you that, tho, so it might be hard to see. sure, everyone wants things, but theres a line b/w having what it takes to make you happy and being a glutton who eats 3 burgers at a meal.and yes, they are capitalist, they just choose to focus on social programs more than we do as opposed to a bloated defense budget and money for useless programs like bridges to nowhere. we could afford this stuff too if we were better at managing money (not saying they're necissarily any better, but i digress).hooray for the social sciences![Edited on December 15, 2005 at 6:02 PM. Reason : .]
12/15/2005 6:02:19 PM
12/15/2005 6:59:17 PM
US- 5.5%Sweden- 5.6%UK- 4.8%Ireland- 4.3%Spain- 10.4%France- 10.1%Belgium- 12%Norway- 4.3%The Netherlands-6%Germany- 10.6%Basically, the trend here is that in the EU, youve got unemployment thats either = to the US or slightly lower, or ~5% higher, so you cant really make a blanket statement and compare the EU and the US. Northern Europe seems to be winning this category by a slight bit. Maybe its the French influence in the low countries And Canada is at 7%, FWIW.http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index.htmlShit, some Eastern European countries are still up around 30%. [Edited on December 15, 2005 at 7:17 PM. Reason : .]
12/15/2005 7:14:39 PM
12/15/2005 9:21:07 PM
somehow i dont think an "overwhelming tax burden" was what killed them. then again, its france, and i already said that theyre pretty much silly.apples to oranges.[Edited on December 15, 2005 at 9:38 PM. Reason : .]
12/15/2005 9:35:34 PM
^ Who are you quoting? (just curious) It wasn't me, because I said French taxation was "a major burden" but obviously not overwhelming. As a matter of being correct, to the best of my knowledge high tax rates do encourage illegality, but that is about it. Add this to the fact that France is obviously NOT overwealmed. It may have a GDP 2/3 that of the US, but it is obviously far richer than Africa which, I think we can agree, should be the default example of a country "overwealmed."My point is merely that France does not operate at maximum efficiency, which I suppose is kinda silly. Who cares about 2% vs 5% economic growth? Any society that doesn't nightly have people rioting in the street is a resounding success. I'm just talking for the sake of hearing myself type, I assumed everyone else was here for the same reason (hearing themselves type).
12/15/2005 10:42:57 PM
12/15/2005 11:26:02 PM
12/15/2005 11:35:40 PM
12/15/2005 11:50:33 PM
12/16/2005 12:21:44 AM
12/16/2005 12:48:20 AM
Comparing France to South Carolina on the same scale is preposterous. One does not generally drive around France and get the overwhelming sense that "this is a shithole." Perhaps they are directly comparable in that both income measures are likely driven down by the local minority legacies.As to the 35 hour work week: well, the French are the French, after all. South Carolina would secede from the union tomorrow and wallow in their own economic isolation forever if they were given the choice. It's a bit difficult to compare cultural standards on the basis of per capita income; it being, after all, basically an average measure.
12/16/2005 1:03:18 AM
12/16/2005 8:50:23 AM
So, scottncst8, what we have here is the people of France got together and decided, collectively, that "we want fewer choices!" So be it, I never said "why" they had such labor restrictions, it was not my intention of doing so. My intent was to point out the effects such policies have on a minority of French citizens. The numbers speak for themselves, take them or leave them. My point was that I believed the restrictive labor practices were examples of tyranny of the majority. "We voted to legally secure about 80% of our jobs, all we had to do was sacrifice about 10% of the population to permanent unemployment!" Of course they have a majority of the vote, who wouldn't vote to protect themselves?
12/16/2005 10:11:31 AM