Why Europe Needs Higher Wages

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  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2024
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    Mario Draghi is on a mission to fix the European economy - or at least his report might. In this video, we take a look at the economic challenges facing Europe, Draghi's proposed solutions, and his argument for higher wages.
    Why Southern Europe is Finally Outperforming Northern Europe: • Why Southern Europe is...
    What's Gone Wrong with Sweden's Economy?: • What's Gone Wrong with...
    Why Separatists are on the Rise in Spain: • Why Separatists are on...
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    1 - www.wsj.com/articles/inflatio...
    2 - www.euronews.com/business/202...
    3 - www.visualcapitalist.com/visu...
    4 - ec.europa.eu/stories/soteu202...
    5 - www.ft.com/content/f6200dc5-e...
    6 - geopolitique.eu/en/2024/04/16...
    00:00 - Introduction
    01:08 - Why Europe's Economy is Struggling
    05:19 - Higher Wages
    06:40 - Better Intra-European Cooperation
    07:22 - More Active State
    08:06 - Sponsored Content

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @_braileanul
    @_braileanul 14 дней назад +1875

    As an European I can't disagree

    • @maritaschweizer1117
      @maritaschweizer1117 14 дней назад +49

      As an Eurpean I must disagree. To follow Italy means to get Italy' problems. Higher wages in Europe only helps China.

    • @undefined6341
      @undefined6341 14 дней назад +147

      As a European, I can. Wages are fine. It's just that as soon as you receive your wage, 60-70% immediately goes to rent. You know what happens if wages go up? Landlord rubs hands together...

    • @martynasg9652
      @martynasg9652 14 дней назад +19

      Wage - price spiral would just go crazy. Inflation would go crazy and we would still be at the exact same spot as we are now except bank accounts would look more impressive

    • @Kalimdor199Menegroth
      @Kalimdor199Menegroth 14 дней назад +20

      @@martynasg9652 That is only if wages are raised with a bureaucrats pencil, and not organically, based on overall productivity. However, what Draghi wants is to have both his cake and eat it. The guy essentially wants for people to have higher wages, but at the same time for the states to expand their spending deficits even further. The problem is that without stimulating labor, without tax reduction and without incentives to create higher paid jobs, you can't have higher wages. And indebting future generations even further is not the solution.

    • @_braileanul
      @_braileanul 14 дней назад +3

      @@undefined6341 that's probably true

  • @diogovale700
    @diogovale700 14 дней назад +1039

    Now imagine living in Portugal where the average salary is less then most minimum salaries in Europe, and the prices are basically the same if not higher in some things.

    • @PedroPinto-tf9bg
      @PedroPinto-tf9bg 14 дней назад

      PORTUGAL CARALHO!!!!

    • @misere4
      @misere4 14 дней назад +96

      Had to compare Portugal to Croatia, our cost of living index is almost the same, so I guess I don't have to imagine it.

    • @luisfernandotapia451
      @luisfernandotapia451 14 дней назад +54

      How do you survive with that. I live in Spain, near Alentejo and with a much higher salary I still struggle. Can´t believe how it is in the other side of the border.

    • @alldee2532
      @alldee2532 14 дней назад +62

      Now imagine living in Czechia (or anywhere in Eastern Europe) where the average salary is less then most minimum salaries in Europe, and the prices are basically the same if not higher in some things.

    • @MundoSportiva
      @MundoSportiva 14 дней назад +38

      And then take Croatia where the medial wage is 1057€ but the prices are the same and sometimes higher (supermarkets are more expensive in Croatia than in Germany for example). I really don’t know how people make it through the month

  • @joseantoniodepilares6509
    @joseantoniodepilares6509 14 дней назад +763

    Do you mean to say that making us poorer didn't magically fix the economy? Who would have thought!

    • @MrTohawk
      @MrTohawk 14 дней назад +26

      Not spending more than you earn does fix a debt crisis. Who would've thought that debt is bad? The question isn't if but how. Who is to pay for this? And the powers that be don't want to pay their fair share

    • @keksentdecker
      @keksentdecker 14 дней назад +2

      the finance minister in my country does 😅😖

    • @filipmihalovic2822
      @filipmihalovic2822 14 дней назад +9

      Making you poorer? By having a balanced budget? You have no clue about economics, right?

    • @maurice22ravel
      @maurice22ravel 14 дней назад

      That was not to fix the economy it was to help with Climate Change. Now you can't afford to go on vacation, have several cars, and your carbon lowered as a result. If the EU makes you even poorer you will help the Climate agenda even more as you probably will only travel on public transportation. Just take comfort in the fact that your sacrifice is to help the planet.

    • @coolbanana165
      @coolbanana165 14 дней назад +30

      @@filipmihalovic2822 Yeah, austerity caused GDP to stagnate, which makes it harder to reduce debt.
      Investing to increase GDP makes sense to reduce debt.

  • @startobyman
    @startobyman 14 дней назад +788

    High wages means higher consumption which will grow tertiary industries eg Services. Higher wages allows for higher spending full stop. Europe and the UK needs this desperately imo

    • @mennowolters3359
      @mennowolters3359 14 дней назад +93

      True, but higher wages also means higher production cost and higher service cost, most companies make costomers pay for those cost. Its a difficult problem.

    • @MayankTrivedi2
      @MayankTrivedi2 14 дней назад

      @@mennowolters3359 No. Workers will just become more productive with more investments and better tech

    • @lol2121-hy4cw
      @lol2121-hy4cw 14 дней назад +38

      I agree with you as a scientist 30k-35k GBP as BMS in UK while in USA its like 84k USD averagely and usually 30k bonuses that's a quick google search on medical industry. UK wants to be a superpower in science, pay more and recruit more. Otherwise, as George Freeman said, our science ministry that the UK is not a scientific superpower and won't become one.

    • @pistolen87
      @pistolen87 14 дней назад +61

      'There are no solutions. There are only trade-offs.' - Thomas Sowell

    • @karimabidi8312
      @karimabidi8312 14 дней назад +3

      Well, try to explain that to "experts" like Christian neoliberalism Lindner

  • @Lilla88able
    @Lilla88able 14 дней назад +451

    In Italy, we have the same wages of 30 years ago. I'm not kindding! Meanwhile the cost of living has doubled.
    I'm not an economist, I just know this sucks 😅

    • @grace-sw4zx
      @grace-sw4zx 14 дней назад +36

      I've heard this many times by Italians but it's misleading. In truth, wages in Italy have stagnated on real terms, which means that they have only increased on nominal terms, but the purchasing power remained the same. If wages were the same as 30 years ago and "the cost of living has doubled" as you say, purchasing power would have been cut in half, which is not the case.

    • @Lilla88able
      @Lilla88able 14 дней назад +17

      ​@@grace-sw4zxWell, cost of living is higher, I can see it with my eyes. Maybe it's not as "bad" as we believe it, it can definitely be better tho

    • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
      @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад +6

      You are surely no economist!

    • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
      @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад +7

      What we need is tax and fee cuts!
      The state is the problem not the private sector!
      Low incomes should not be taxed at all, consume taxes should be cut by at least 50%.
      The rich should pay their fair share but most importantly the states must use our money wisely plus when they dont have enough, they can borrow it, as it used to be!
      I desperately want Europeans to have more money!
      But let us do in the right!

    • @Lilla88able
      @Lilla88able 14 дней назад

      @@tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 oh the genius has arrived! I've never claimed to have a solution dude

  • @matteofalduto766
    @matteofalduto766 14 дней назад +375

    My feeling is that in Italy, for example, labor is taxed too highly, while property relatively too low. We should shift taxation out of worker incomes to rise employment and spending power.

    • @footballuniverse6522
      @footballuniverse6522 14 дней назад +17

      esatto ma figurati se i nostri politici hanno le palle di fare grossi cambiamenti

    • @Bleilock1
      @Bleilock1 14 дней назад +55

      Honestly whole world should abandon income tax and start a dividend tax
      Screw the capitalism

    • @benghiskahn3673
      @benghiskahn3673 14 дней назад +33

      Same in the UK. Property is the thing that is really killing European disposable incomes. So much investment goes into property speculation, which forces up prices and rents, whilst rental income and gains on property sales are much lower than earned income.

    • @SuperLusername
      @SuperLusername 14 дней назад

      Most countries have dividend tax​@@Bleilock1

    • @danield2836
      @danield2836 14 дней назад +1

      @@footballuniverse6522 darei la "colpa" al popolo in questo caso ;)

  • @janhumiecki2827
    @janhumiecki2827 14 дней назад +464

    Even the EPP realised that wages need to be raised

    • @mabuhayproductionltd3627
      @mabuhayproductionltd3627 14 дней назад +9

      Europe can only Raise Wages with an lower Rate than our competitors, if we raise more ? We just get higher Unemployment. Countries with Lack of Workers (Fx Denmark) can Raise more to attract workers from other EU countrys, But Countries with high unemployment can only Raise littel.

    • @rabidlorax1650
      @rabidlorax1650 14 дней назад +6

      @@mabuhayproductionltd3627even if it’s only certain EU countries that increase wages, it will increase demand within all of Europe. Now it will be individual countries with a big export strategy within the EU so they won’t have to worry about protectionism.

    • @thijsjong
      @thijsjong 14 дней назад

      @@rabidlorax1650 Leads to higher imports from outside the EU wich is just silly. Europe will just bleed money.
      The blight called Temu and the likes of the sort. China is a dytopian so iety that should colapse sooner than laer. Import tarif from Chinese products are in order. Sweat shop. Bad work conditions. Slavery. Polution, aggresive geopolitics. F China.
      Banning tiktok is a good start. HIGHER mport tarifs for China should follow.

    • @milantoth6246
      @milantoth6246 14 дней назад +1

      wages in america didnt increase because of government regulation, and that also wont fix the situation in europe.

    • @HeruEviscerated
      @HeruEviscerated 14 дней назад +2

      @@milantoth6246 you're right, wages in America simply didn't increase. Except for executives and IT, which is stagnating

  • @levifowler7933
    @levifowler7933 14 дней назад +118

    I can't speak for the whole Union, but in France, it's an insane amount of regulation that keeps innovation and wages down. You can't open a business without going through a fistfight with the local government, you can't hire someone without the same thing. If wages are to rise, you have to let people be economically productive

    • @haboubia
      @haboubia 14 дней назад +4

      What regulation keeps wages and innovation down ?

    • @joaquinescotoaleman4320
      @joaquinescotoaleman4320 14 дней назад +22

      ​@@haboubia 50% to 60% of your income going to the State is not healthy in any society. In top of that there are too many regulations to open a bussiness.

    • @setht593
      @setht593 14 дней назад +20

      ​@@joaquinescotoaleman4320The fastest economic growth in American history occurred when taxes were that high. I don't think the connection is as significant as many think. In fact low taxes on the wealthy can quickly result in economies slowing due to under investment by the Government.

    • @jahonain
      @jahonain 14 дней назад +9

      Same here in Germany, you get the feeling that government is working against you. Instead of helping, motivating and guiding ordinary ppl to increase their personal wealth it seems legislators create ways to make it more difficult. Every year the words"You will own nothing and be happy"echo more loudly.

    • @haboubia
      @haboubia 14 дней назад +11

      @@joaquinescotoaleman4320 50 to 60% isn't going to the state unless you're making millions

  • @retcbn9894
    @retcbn9894 14 дней назад +92

    As an Swed i respect you have a Göteborg T shirt

    • @UchihaAditya
      @UchihaAditya 13 дней назад +2

      I see that Göteborg 1995 refers to the athletics world championship in 1995. What's the significance??

    • @Tomten0
      @Tomten0 10 дней назад +1

      @@UchihaAditya got me wondering too

  • @slynskey333
    @slynskey333 14 дней назад +199

    They've been too low for a long time

    • @K1989L
      @K1989L 14 дней назад +5

      Basically my whole carreer there has been very little if any pay raises.

    • @JmKrokY
      @JmKrokY 14 дней назад

      True

    • @LaFonteCheVi
      @LaFonteCheVi 13 дней назад

      Hate to burst that bubble but it will only get worse. Scarcity of goods will only rise as conflict increases and demographies collapse. Higher wages won't manifest into anything tangible.

    • @slynskey333
      @slynskey333 12 дней назад

      @@K1989L same

    • @wojtulacehoe5089
      @wojtulacehoe5089 7 дней назад

      @@LaFonteCheVi unless ClA releases the free energy tech

  • @SageThyme23
    @SageThyme23 14 дней назад +158

    nice to see someone with influence finally realise the death spiral austerity has put us on. The common person needs to be at the centre of our economies not corporations

    • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
      @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад +1

      So why dont we free the common person from the tax madness?

    • @iwiffitthitotonacc4673
      @iwiffitthitotonacc4673 14 дней назад +11

      ​@@tobiasphilippwittlinger8753The common person, as in the poorest 51%? I agree, the poorest 51% should not pay income taxes, this will help them have more disposable income and move up the economic ladder.
      The richest 49% do not constitute "the common person" and should thus continue to pay an income tax.

    • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
      @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад

      @@iwiffitthitotonacc4673 I agree as well!

    • @_o..o_1871
      @_o..o_1871 14 дней назад +1

      @@tobiasphilippwittlinger8753Ask the corpos

    • @XIIchiron78
      @XIIchiron78 13 дней назад

      Demand creates the economy. Supply side economics is a cancer.

  • @pistolen87
    @pistolen87 14 дней назад +104

    Most important part of the video is about the difference between EU and USA borrowing cost. No other country can borrow as much as the US without being punished by global capital markets.

    • @user-kh8mv2be8t
      @user-kh8mv2be8t 14 дней назад +25

      The ease of doing business cannot be compared either. The process just to incorporate in most major EU countries is absolutely Byzantine and full of pointless extra steps benefiting entrenched bureaucracy. It is full of delays and reviews and costs thousands of euros. Meanwhile you can file in the US from your phone in 5 minutes for a few hundred dollars at most. And this is the easy part and not even considering any operations or doing anything crossing national borders. Everything at every step of the way is easier and more efficiently done in the US. Particularly in the early stages, you can run a business for years and not face any kind of bureaucratic stress until you are actually making real money, or possibly never if you are just operating a small business with a few employees.

    • @panter82
      @panter82 14 дней назад +3

      true, but Europe/Euro denominated debt is a close second to the US.

    • @tylerclayton6081
      @tylerclayton6081 14 дней назад +3

      The US also has a much larger GDP and total wealth than any other country as well, so they have more money to work with. Both China and the US invest a lot into themselves by borrowing money
      Especially China, their total debt to GDP ratio is already at above 300%. And they’re not even a developed country yet. That’s even Higher than the USA’s 250% total debt to GDP ratio. Japan’s is over 300% as well
      Europe needs to invest more money into their economy and corporations. Companies from the US and China get huge subsidies to help them. That’s why almost all of the biggest companies in the world are from those two countries

    • @helloim3j
      @helloim3j 13 дней назад

      US borrowing ease won't be true indefinitely.

    • @pritapp788
      @pritapp788 13 дней назад +2

      @@tylerclayton6081 Exactly, it's massive debt and stimulation of the economy through deficit spending. The USA is happy to run deficits equivalent to 6% of its GDP (I'm not saying it's the right approach or that I enjoy it but that generates impressive macroeconomic figures). The EU on the other hand requires its member states to keep deficits beneath 3% of GDP and even threatens to punish those running above that threshold.
      So we're talking about a two-fold difference in the allowed deficit, off trillion-dollar/euro figures. These are not small differences.

  • @alileevil
    @alileevil 14 дней назад +103

    Once you have worked for American and Asian firms, a European firm feels like an old age home. They are slow to expand, slow to digitalize, and slow to incorporate new tech. Have all the higher wages you want, but I am not sure where all that money will come from.

    • @Kazyumi
      @Kazyumi 13 дней назад

      Stupid socialist ideologues screaming dumb shit without understanding basic economics.

    • @thearpox7873
      @thearpox7873 12 дней назад

      They're lefties. They want a bigger government to wave a magic wand and 'make things better'.

    • @hits_different
      @hits_different 10 дней назад +10

      A big reason for that is brain drain. The youth would stay if the wages were more competitive, making firms younger as a consequence

    • @Bsilux
      @Bsilux 10 дней назад +3

      I fully agree with you and I think the main problem for this is the lack of a robust european capital market. There is no to limit funding available for start-ups or smaller companies to expand. This means that in most states we are at a point where there is no competition anymore. It is just the same old oligopoly, if there was actually some competition european companies would be forced to addapt. Just look at VW as an example, started way to late into the EV race and while it is catching up it was extremely expensive to do so.

    • @ringsaphire
      @ringsaphire 10 дней назад

      @@Bsilux but when it starts rolling it will overtake Tesla in the long run lmao they are risk averse, yes but the upside is, they are more grounded and stable; they'll outlive and buy of theses young upstarts. Witch is part of the problem, even in UA or Asia imo; Almost no one can rise from the ground up to top tier anymore, they'll get eaten before that.

  • @_MrMoney
    @_MrMoney 14 дней назад +95

    A small sidenote: when Draghi talks about higher wages he isn't referring to a directly higher nominal salary, but rather a higher real wage taking into account discount rates, market competitiveness and overall purchasing power. Only directly raising salaries will do nothing but inflate the market.

    • @OncleSpenny
      @OncleSpenny 14 дней назад +11

      If rising nominal wages would strictly lead to inflation and not help, then why has not raising wages not stopped inflation, and why do lowering wages not lower inflation? It seems that inflation happens anyways, and the rise in inflation from rising wages is way overstated

    • @_MrMoney
      @_MrMoney 14 дней назад +26

      @@OncleSpenny because rising wages are not the only thing that contributes to inflation. Money printing, energy shortages, increased demand with no increase supply,... there are dozens of things that contribute to inflation, and rising wages is one of them. That doesn't mean is overstated. Rising nominal wages on a vacuum does literally nothing to increase actual purchasing power, this just leads to consumers artificially having more money at the expense of businesses, which means businesses will respond to it by automatically rising prices and/or firing workers. The only thing rising wages does is contribute to inflation, unemployment and in most cases, less competitiveness, especially for small businesses.

    • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
      @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад +5

      Finally somebody that understands the situation.
      Thank you, I really needed to read that!

    • @OncleSpenny
      @OncleSpenny 14 дней назад

      @@_MrMoney well thank God we don't live in a vacuum do we Mr homo economicus

    • @ayoCC
      @ayoCC 14 дней назад +1

      Supply needs to be increased on basic goods to fight inflation there, however, strong purchasing power is necessary to nurture tertiary industries.
      The key is to increase wages, but balance it with incentives to improve efficiency in basic goods, such as subsidising upgrades that would increase overall efficiency and lower costs through innovation.
      Only with internationally competitive purchasing power can standards of living rise, and industries grow.

  • @skaylab
    @skaylab 14 дней назад +28

    I’m a software engineer living and working in Italy, my wage is about 1/4 of what i would earn in the U.S. I am aware that my country is not the most competitive in the EU as far as wages but still, that makes you wanna re-consider your options

    • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
      @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад +3

      Come to Switzerland!

    • @aftp4i94
      @aftp4i94 14 дней назад +1

      Forget Australia as an option. I'm in Australia and I had a look at my pay over the last 10 years. Inflation average 2.6% p.a. vs wage increase 1.3% p.a.

    • @skaylab
      @skaylab 14 дней назад

      @@tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 i actually might!

    • @DarkZodiacZZ
      @DarkZodiacZZ 14 дней назад

      How easy is it to get a house in Rome with your wage compared to getting one in Boston with 4x wage?

    • @skaylab
      @skaylab 14 дней назад +2

      @@DarkZodiacZZ it’s probably a little bit harder to find one in Boston, or at least that’s what some friends there told me, but as far as yearly salary to house price is concerned, the math works out to be about 10x in Rome and 5x in Boston, (looking at apartments specifically)

  • @c3baker
    @c3baker 14 дней назад +70

    Not really sure why you are saying Draghi was a big architect of austerity, that was much more his predcessor at the ECB: Jean-Claude Trichett. Draghi was the "we will do whatever it takes" guy, I don't think you can blame him for the austerity fiscal policies which were pushed on the country levels.

    • @Boretheory
      @Boretheory 14 дней назад +15

      He was more the 0 interest rates guy which saved the ass of Southern Europe

    • @c3baker
      @c3baker 14 дней назад +6

      @@Boretheory Yeah he wasn't the austerity guy. The austerity guys also wanted higher interest rates, not sure why the guy making this video is claiming Draghi was on the side of austerity.

    • @miguel5785
      @miguel5785 13 дней назад

      They don't say he was "a big architect". They just say mention the austerity "he oversaw".

  • @apc9714
    @apc9714 14 дней назад +9

    Draghi wasn't really an architect of austerity. He is actually the men who started very exoansive monetary policy, stimulating the economy.

  • @michelbruns
    @michelbruns 14 дней назад +81

    main reason for brain drain imo, especially in the tech industry. apart from london, zurich and maybe amsterdam tech salaries are very low in europe

    • @tomasvrabec1845
      @tomasvrabec1845 14 дней назад +32

      All salaries are very low... That the point.

    • @adriandelatorreebro9555
      @adriandelatorreebro9555 14 дней назад +13

      All salaries are low in Europe, especially when compared to the US. A plumber in the US earns much more money than an engineer in Europe.

    • @fhujf
      @fhujf 14 дней назад +17

      ​@@adriandelatorreebro9555 I'll take a low European salary with a proper safety net and welfare state over a US high salary, low- taxes & no safety net, sink or swim attitude any day.

    • @DaDARKPass
      @DaDARKPass 14 дней назад +20

      @@fhujf I wouldn't. A high salary is pretty much always preferable since I get to actually decide what to do with that money. Also makes it much easier to start businesses.

    • @Hasanaljadid
      @Hasanaljadid 14 дней назад +2

      @@fhujfThere is Safety net but nit as good as most european countries

  • @FlosBlog
    @FlosBlog 14 дней назад +50

    Especially Germany saw decades of wage suppression to keep the coveted title of exporting world champion

    • @jahonain
      @jahonain 14 дней назад

      the fact that Govt.. official statistics say around 21% of ppl are afflicted by poverty is good proof. I suspect another 20% are probably on the verge of poverty. The German constitution stipulates " Human dignity is inviolable. Respecting and protecting it shall be the obligation of all state authorities. Funny how the German authorities convieniently forget about the indignity of poverty and the exploitation of the workforce by big business.

    • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
      @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад +17

      Germany is an insane tax and fees apparatus!
      That is the root of the problem.

    • @accountnumber1234567
      @accountnumber1234567 14 дней назад

      Sounds like Germany and China had exactly the same strategy, but at opposite ends of the cost/quality tradeoff. Now that China is threatening Germany's auto industry, they're caught between free trade ideology and economic reality.

    • @karols9660
      @karols9660 11 дней назад

      @@tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 Germany has a corruption problem. It's heaven for tax evasion and old money.

  • @bo0blik
    @bo0blik 14 дней назад +163

    European agricultural protectionism through enormous subsidies is second to none

    • @tomasvrabec1845
      @tomasvrabec1845 14 дней назад +41

      Probably why the topic was clearly about Industries, not agriculture...

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t 14 дней назад +32

      Agriculture is a tiny sector now. Industry, energy, and services are the concern here.

    • @jasperschlief
      @jasperschlief 14 дней назад

      @@Ruzzky_Bly4t This is why it is so idiotic that there are large subsidies going there

    • @bo0blik
      @bo0blik 14 дней назад +15

      It certainly is tiny but CAP accounts for about a third of EU budget, that is mostly direct cash to farmers

    • @thedutchfoxxx
      @thedutchfoxxx 14 дней назад +36

      Europe's agricultural policy is not really protectionism, but rather a question of sovereignty.
      We cannot be dependant on third-countries for such a strategic and essential element that food is.
      Keeping our agriculture competitive allows us to keep food imports to the minimum.

  • @ilikelampshades6
    @ilikelampshades6 14 дней назад +37

    Nurses and doctors in the UK haven't had a payrise since 2008 and we've effectively had about 35% of our salaries taken away from us. So yes, I have significantly less money to buy things I don't need and stimulate the economy a lot less.
    We also dont have children aged 32 because we cant afford them and the governments are confused why we have declining birth rates

    • @chrimbus71
      @chrimbus71 14 дней назад +1

      so what was the wage in 2008 and what is it now?
      You're talking BS

    • @boborappa
      @boborappa 14 дней назад +8

      @@chrimbus71 What were wages after inflation is included? You're way too confident for someone who knows so little.

    • @ilikelampshades6
      @ilikelampshades6 14 дней назад +10

      @chrimbus71 we have had 16 years of consecutive paycuts when inflation is factored in. Housing inflation is never included in official inflation figures. If housing costs were taken in it would probably mean we are working for about 25% of our 2008 salary depending on where you live.
      Don't comment on things if your smooth brain can't comprehend the information

    • @bloodwargaming3662
      @bloodwargaming3662 13 дней назад

      No it's your fault. You guys elected tories years after years. (Now you can tell me about how you didn't vote Tory but majority of others in your country did vote right)

    • @ilikelampshades6
      @ilikelampshades6 13 дней назад +2

      @bloodwargaming3662 I couldn't hate the Tories more if I tried lol. The problem we have is labour betrayed the working and middle classes with immigration so I won't vote for them either. Politically homeless

  • @M1_wastaken
    @M1_wastaken 14 дней назад +12

    One thing you missed about the US's ability to remain isolated is that it already is. US foreign trade as a percentage of GDP is lower than almost every country on Earth. Europe, quite the opposite, has countries with trade-to-GDP ratios over 100%.

    • @LyricsQuest
      @LyricsQuest 12 дней назад +3

      The USA has most of the resources it needs internally, including oil, gas, timber/lumber, corn, wheat, soy, and much more. Europe, on the other hand, needs to import almost all of it. Britain is the only european country outside of Russia that has oil/gas, but it's not enough to enrich all of the EU let alone matching them economically with the USA.

    • @M1_wastaken
      @M1_wastaken 12 дней назад +5

      Resources make up almost nothing of the US's economy (same with Europe). This is actually about demand being internal. European companies ship products abroad whereas American ones sell internally.

  • @brendanwiley253
    @brendanwiley253 14 дней назад +17

    We've all needed higher wages since the 70s

    • @wojtulacehoe5089
      @wojtulacehoe5089 7 дней назад

      Speak for yourself. Here we needed higher wager since 1945.

  • @AlbertCloete
    @AlbertCloete 14 дней назад +10

    I knew austerity was a mistake back during the EU debt crisis. And I'm not an economist. It's hard to see people in power who are supposed to understand these things make these mistakes with such great cost to massive amounts of people.
    You should never just blanketly reduce spending. You should make sure you spend on the right things. The problem isn't spending, it's spending on the wrong things. So pivot instead of slowing down.
    You need to spend more and invest more in factors of production so that production is cheaper in the future. Creates more abundance in future.
    Austerity is the nation level equivalent of putting money under your mattress.

    • @thewingedhussar4188
      @thewingedhussar4188 14 дней назад

      The problem though, that should be asked Is how those wages are going up. It's not the average worker's wage going up. But the 1% who are getting more money.

  • @vitordeoliveira6139
    @vitordeoliveira6139 14 дней назад +34

    I am very impress they NEVER talk about reduce taxes from our wages.... we pay 45% in taxes, and to be franc the public services is not even good.

    • @mathimed
      @mathimed 13 дней назад +2

      Let me guess... belgian?

    • @ringsaphire
      @ringsaphire 10 дней назад +1

      you should try public services elsewhere with a less than 20% tax rates as a median or lower income individual for your arguments to be slightly worth more than random rants do ;)

    • @SkyrimCZtutorials
      @SkyrimCZtutorials 2 дня назад

      @@ringsaphire Like Switzerland?

  • @AnymMusic
    @AnymMusic 14 дней назад +66

    I live in the Netherlands. And whilst I am glad with all the social safety nets we have, the generally cheap(er) education, clean drinking water, good roads, etc., I can't say that I wasn't pissed with how our country has handled wages and labour. In the past 23 years (Balkenende and Rutte), we have cheaped out on education, have semi-privatized healthcare, to this day attempt to privatize public transport, have become a mascot of the housing crisis thanks to all the private sector rental, and have become one of the biggest tax havens on the planet for the top of the societal food chain. We tax the middle class out the whazoo up to 49.5% above 69k, whilst giving subsidies to oil companies and quietly trying to hush scandals. Our wages have barely risen at all, meanwhile housing prices have gone up and up and up thanks in large part to the buying and renting out of available housing. I don't care what anyone says, I want a global slam down on these mega corporations and their greedy taking and taking and taking. In an ideal world we wouldn't need overreaching regulation to stop the greedy from just taking everything, but we have seen that that doesn't work.

    • @ervinm.5065
      @ervinm.5065 14 дней назад +3

      As an Italian, they offered me a job in the Netherlands about a year ago and I declined because even if Italy is suffering from a lot of these problems, I have my family here and I have more economical stability (or at least I had). Do you think I made the right call or do you think I should have moved?

    • @RobSpartanR16
      @RobSpartanR16 14 дней назад +2

      ​@@ervinm.5065housing costs is a major factor. If you have no immediate housing you will have a very difficult time. Especially in the bigger cities renting is very expensive. The wages might be slightly higher than Italy but that won't do you any good if you have to spend it all on housing. I left the Netherlands just because of this reason. And the weather 😅 really not a fan of all the rain and overcast skies.

    • @ervinm.5065
      @ervinm.5065 14 дней назад

      @@RobSpartanR16 the company was in Eindhoven and there was scouting agency helping me to rent a flat

    • @undefined6341
      @undefined6341 14 дней назад +4

      @@ervinm.5065 Dutch here: if your NET was under 5500 euro, then you made the right call. You need about 5000-6000 euro per month NET, for a decent life in the Netherlands if you have a family. You can get away with 4000 net if you are single. Anything under 4000 net is slave/starvation/poverty wage.

    • @AnymMusic
      @AnymMusic 14 дней назад +3

      ​@undefined6341 to add to this, that's the "shitty zone". At 1200 - 2000 a month you usually get all sorts of rebates and financial aids and social housing opportunities. With 4000 being fine if you're single since you can afford the additional costs. But like 2500 - 3500 is crap cause you earn too much for financial aid, and too little to really be able to afford the additional cost

  • @Canonfudder
    @Canonfudder 14 дней назад +58

    The problem is way deeper. Europe just doesn't generate the value, that justifies these wage increases. Most regions have no great software industry (except north and eastern europe) and no growth potential there. Almost all milestones when it comes to new tech, come from the us..

    • @117ao
      @117ao 14 дней назад +28

      exactly. europe should focus more on innovation and progress, less on limiting everything

    • @dariusalexandru9536
      @dariusalexandru9536 14 дней назад +9

      China generate value but still their worker are svererely underpaid ,no corelation

    • @wafercrackerjack880
      @wafercrackerjack880 14 дней назад +3

      @@dariusalexandru9536 so the Chinese deserve higher wagers more than Europeans. And who's to say the Chinese dont get it? The richest cities of China are the size of European tiny countries, and their GDP is on par if not more than European small countries.

    • @JackDespero
      @JackDespero 14 дней назад +18

      Software is a flashy economy for market capitalization, but market capitalization is not the economy.

    • @FlanPoirot
      @FlanPoirot 14 дней назад

      ig europe generate no value, europe doesn't produce some of the most sophisticated lenses on the world, vital for producing CPUs, europe doesn't produce cars, doesn't export culture, doesn't make research papers, all that matters is shitting out tiktoks, instagrams and other low value detrimental crap that exploits people thru data mining and psychological manipulation so that u can increase "engagement" and sell eyes to advertisers, that indeed id the utopia we all wanted.

  • @thedude7319
    @thedude7319 14 дней назад +18

    I agree, in US I could get 100k for my job and my company still make profit from my labour

    • @Bleilock1
      @Bleilock1 14 дней назад +4

      And how much do you pay for medical bills?

    • @wardy6224
      @wardy6224 14 дней назад +7

      Holidays? Sick days? Maternity leave? Free social services?

    • @Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejer
      @Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejer 14 дней назад

      @@wardy6224 You're not profiting from that if you have a high-paying job.

    • @DaDARKPass
      @DaDARKPass 14 дней назад +7

      @@Bleilock1 The job's probably going to cover insurance.

    • @Bleilock1
      @Bleilock1 14 дней назад

      @@DaDARKPass yea but in the us medical bills arnt part of your bruto, like in europe
      In the us you pay out od your pocket for it, in europe you dont
      In the end the us and the western europe even out

  • @xDaniik
    @xDaniik 14 дней назад +39

    I agree tbh, highly skilled work here is paid incredibly low for what it is

  • @hungo7720
    @hungo7720 14 дней назад +22

    In retrospect, what propels the american economy is almost its energy independence. Europe never have the abundance of fossil fuels 3:23 such as the us. On top of that, the US uses the world reserve currency which incentivizes 4:34 the investors to pile capital into america's thriving economy.

    • @nicoles9077
      @nicoles9077 14 дней назад +7

      @hungo7720 that’s a simple way to state advantages the US has but it doesn’t propel the economy. Most Americans are employed by small businesses and it’s a consumer based economy. Low taxes, willingness to take risks of failure and innovation all contribute to growth and then Consumerism propels that growth. China does not have a reserve currency and is a net importer of energy but it has the second largest economy. Their economy is propelled by exporting. Plus, the US was a major economic power at the end of the 19th without having a reserve currency.

    • @ervinm.5065
      @ervinm.5065 14 дней назад +1

      We could totally work on renewables and organic gas If we wanted. Not just by energy production but also but lowering energy cosumption because we have the infrastructures to do it. It's just that people hate to be inconvinienced and lowering our comsumption requires giving up to a lot of commodities

    • @accountnumber1234567
      @accountnumber1234567 14 дней назад +1

      Small correction to "Europe never have the abundance of fossil fuels" - Europe used to have plenty of coal, which drove industrialization in the 18th and 19th centuries. Currently, Germany, Poland, and Ukraine combined hold 9% of the world's coal reserves.

    • @undefined6341
      @undefined6341 14 дней назад +2

      on top of that, we made an enemy out of our biggest and cheapest supplier of energy, so... that's not helping much.

    • @Dendarang
      @Dendarang 14 дней назад

      Actually the main thing that propels the US economy and the second largest reason (by far the largest is exchange rate) for divergence between the US and EU GDP's since 2000 is population growth - which is much higher in the US than in EU. There's very strong correlation between GDP growth and population growth in the last couple of decades.

  • @xeanderman6688
    @xeanderman6688 14 дней назад +8

    Me, a Czech: "Well that'd be lovely, wouldn't it?"

  • @guydreamr
    @guydreamr 13 дней назад

    One of the most concise and accurate analyses about the failures of austerity that I've seen to date. Thanks for the video.

  • @aaronleontaris9862
    @aaronleontaris9862 14 дней назад +3

    love your videos. in the map 6:08 is mistake, croatia has also the Euro

  • @griegomas
    @griegomas 14 дней назад +15

    I looked at moving to Europe from the U.S. and it was shocking how much of a pay cut I would have had to take. For people with good jobs in the U.S. (and the associated good insurance/benefits) the standard of living is much higher in the U.S. than Europe - you guys really do need to raise wages to remain competitive.

    • @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn
      @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn 14 дней назад +4

      Pay in the US for graduate jobs is higher, though I´d still say we live better in Europe, on average. European countries tend to have better schools (not always, but on average they are better), you can´t get fired for stupid arbitrary reasons in the same way you can in the US (in the Western EU at least, at-will employment doesn´t exist) and university tuition is either miles cheaper or free.
      There are other things that really suck about the US, I hate modern US urban planning for example and it´s a shame as the US was a world leader in this in the 1900s. Urban public transport (depending on city) is often terrible, you have vast neighbourhoods with barely any shops and there is an addiction to driving (in the EU we´re far from perfect but the US takes it to absurd levels).

    • @Just_another_Euro_dude
      @Just_another_Euro_dude 14 дней назад +4

      Universal healthcare and free education. Half of Europe got higher MEDIAN wealth per adult citizen than USA. 60% of USA citizens don't have even 1000 dollars in the bank. Even the poorest Europeans got thousands and thousands of euros in the bank.

    • @Hasanaljadid
      @Hasanaljadid 14 дней назад +3

      ​education system is better in USA

    • @Just_another_Euro_dude
      @Just_another_Euro_dude 14 дней назад +2

      @@Hasanaljadid Especially geography. 😆👍

    • @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn
      @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn 14 дней назад

      @@Hasanaljadid The USA isn´t necessarily terrible at everything re education, some states are much better than others. On the whole though schools are probably better in the Western EU.

  • @alfredburman6956
    @alfredburman6956 14 дней назад +1

    Loving the Göteborg t-shirt😍

  • @jasemalhammadi4228
    @jasemalhammadi4228 14 дней назад +2

    Thank you for bringing such topics which is a diversification from the usual videos of partisan politics.

  • @biber9979
    @biber9979 14 дней назад +3

    We dont need very high salaries. We need German salaries...they are high enough. We don't need more than that. What we need is cheaper housing...
    In Germany even in cities with 100k people price of new construction is 10k per sqm. That is crazy.
    Brand new 2 bedroom apartment in centre of Toulouse(and every other city except Paris,Lyon and Nice) can easily be found for 300k euros. That same apartment would be 600k in Germany even in cities like Ulm, Aachen,Bonn...and of course in other bigger cities it would cost even more.

  • @MaycroftCholmsky
    @MaycroftCholmsky 14 дней назад +143

    Dragi: "Europe needs higher wages to drive it's growth"
    Me, a non-EU-european watching this video during a break on my full-time IT job for which I only get 850$/month: "yeah, right"

    • @noozle3884
      @noozle3884 14 дней назад +9

      As a fellow full-time IT'er and out of sheer curiosity, which country do you work in? What kind of IT work do you do?

    • @ZacharyPackard0976
      @ZacharyPackard0976 14 дней назад +28

      Bro get a job for an American company make american wages and live in your lower wage country and live like a king.

    • @P.H.226
      @P.H.226 14 дней назад +29

      And minimal wage in your country is how much?
      What can you buy for that money?
      You do understanr that if you are making over 800$ a month but spending like 400$ to sustain yourself then in fact you are making more than person getting 1000$ but spending 800$

    • @tomasvrabec1845
      @tomasvrabec1845 14 дней назад +108

      ​@@ZacharyPackard0976 You believe that an American Company pays American wages abroad? Lol. Naive much.

    • @tomasvrabec1845
      @tomasvrabec1845 14 дней назад +17

      Meanwhile the minimum wage in some EU countries is 600USD per months.
      So your comparison doesn't always work. You may be 100/150USD behind some people in your industry for some EU countries.

  • @TheArthurkan
    @TheArthurkan 14 дней назад +1

    “Here we go!”

  • @MartimCorreia10
    @MartimCorreia10 14 дней назад +30

    As a Portuguese i can agree, we are misable, only central Europe has decent wages and Switzerland and Luxembourg have good wages

    • @FYTJ
      @FYTJ 14 дней назад +12

      Most of those good wages go into housing in those countries anyway so all in all they end up being not as juicy as they may seem from a Portugal POV. Still good! But not as juicy…

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t 14 дней назад +8

      Have you seen the prices in Switzerland? Those higher wages mean the people who make your stuff also get a lot of money. And you're the one who bears the costs.

    • @dragon14927
      @dragon14927 14 дней назад

      As a Spaniard I agree with you

    • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
      @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад +1

      I am Swiss, any idea why this is the case?
      Because we know that socialism is a problem.
      Higher wages mean higher prices, what you need, what almost all of Europe need, are tax cuts and a halt to forced fees for socialistic stuff!

    • @R_velle
      @R_velle 14 дней назад

      ​@@tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 That's such a gross oversimplification of an economic system it's actually laughable lol to attract educated workers from abroad you need to guarantee a satisfactory life, which includes good social (not socialist) conditions as well 😂 Switzerland is not the capitalist haven you make it out to be

  • @PhilippBlum
    @PhilippBlum 14 дней назад +13

    This is soooo true. If you want to have highly skilled and creative knowledge worker, you have to pay them fairly. Otherwise, they move to the USA, and they have done that in the past.

  • @BlueFrenzy
    @BlueFrenzy 14 дней назад +82

    In Spain we increased the minimum wages a real lot during the last decade, and now we are the fastest growing european country. Market doesn't work if people doesn't have money. I thought this was already something stablished. But, of course, we have the Empresaurus class who just want to hoard and makes us believe that salary and condition cuts is good for the economy.

    • @_braileanul
      @_braileanul 14 дней назад +16

      Como que España es la economía que más rápido crece?? 😂😂 esos países están en el este. España tiene un crecimiento lento. No hay que olvidar que fue el país que se recuperó lo más tarde del covid.

    • @GabrielCazorlaPersson1
      @GabrielCazorlaPersson1 14 дней назад +4

      Es muy complicado realmente, tener salarios más altos significa más consumo y mayor demanda de servicios, por lo tanto resulta en una mayor ganancia para las empresas que revierte de nuevo al empleado. Pero al mismo tiempo, si los salarios son más altos, se contrata menos porque la oferta se reduce. O bien, el coste adicional se traduce en un coste de vida más elevado.

    • @wotermelon_
      @wotermelon_ 14 дней назад +21

      "fastest growing"?? bro's living under a paeya.

    • @WhichDoctor1
      @WhichDoctor1 14 дней назад +5

      i wish it was commonly known here in the UK. We've had 14 years of austerity now and everything is falling apart and the government is going broke. The only solution to this put forward by either main party is more austerity, and the media all act like there's no other option so never questions them on it. Recently when inflation was really bad and wages for normal people were falling faster than they had in 100 years the head of the central bank told us we need to get used to getting poorer, while the sales of luxury watches and top end sports cars were still booming because the rich are getting richer faster than they know what to do with

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 14 дней назад +1

      😂😂😂😂😂

  • @fruustles
    @fruustles 14 дней назад +2

    the göteborg 1995 shirt looks weird. the fonts are wrong compared to the original merch.

  • @hochifeen
    @hochifeen 10 дней назад

    Love the Gothenburg t-shirt!

  • @nassiled
    @nassiled 14 дней назад +22

    European leaders should have listened to the people when they tried to tell them this all these years. Note sure they can do something about it now. Nice try to boost an electoral campaign though.

    • @pittsboy2008
      @pittsboy2008 14 дней назад

      No wonder they are not releasing the report until after elections...

    • @Jonas_M_M
      @Jonas_M_M 14 дней назад

      Austarity worked.

  • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
    @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад +3

    The lack of knowledge about economical dynamics is mind blowing!
    In a nutshell for you guys; the state is the problem, not the private sector!

  • @ncrtrooper7648
    @ncrtrooper7648 14 дней назад +2

    you can't force higher wages through. the low wages are a symptom of the economy being in shambles. if you raise the minimum wage now, companies will just raise the prices for the products and services.

  • @miloslavpetras713
    @miloslavpetras713 14 дней назад +45

    Well then, pay me more 😂, i wont get angry

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t 14 дней назад +4

      They'll also pay the people who make your products more. And companies will put that extra cost on the customer.

    • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
      @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад +1

      It does not work like that!
      The raise must come by cutting taxes and fees!
      The state is the problem, not the private sector!

  • @vidpetrovic8907
    @vidpetrovic8907 14 дней назад +8

    When showing a Eurozone map, you still don't show Croatia as being in the Eurozone... Cmon guys, it's been 2years now, you can update the map.

  • @MattY-ed1ep
    @MattY-ed1ep 14 дней назад +19

    Europe has a tough time keeping it's industries from relocating elsewhere to begin with, paying people more only accelerates this unless there are appropriate counterbalances.

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t 14 дней назад +1

      Well, there is a way in the long-term. But workers will not like it.

    • @Terrorkarel
      @Terrorkarel 14 дней назад +12

      Some key industries are relocating due to lack of skilled workers. Not due to costs. High wages would improve retention and counter brain drains.

    • @tru7hhimself
      @tru7hhimself 14 дней назад +6

      the world has changed in the last 20 years. with more trade restrictions and protectionism, outsourcing is becoming an increasingly bad business decision.

    • @brampelberg9335
      @brampelberg9335 14 дней назад +5

      With protectionism on the rise, it will become more attractive to relocate back inside the EU than outside, even if there is a wage increase.

    • @MattY-ed1ep
      @MattY-ed1ep 14 дней назад +5

      @@tru7hhimself That only applies if EU is willing to actually protect and/or invest in its local industries.
      Higher wages in the EU without corresponding local protections/investment only gives incentive for companies to move to lower-cost countries. This could be China, India, Indonesia, LATAM...

  • @xeviusUsagi
    @xeviusUsagi 8 дней назад +2

    as an Italian I can't talk much about European wages.
    but we definitely need a change, house cost too much, life costs too much, costs keep increasing and salary stagnates,
    your career could very well be stuck in place (teachers for example, 0 years vs 40 years of experience is about ~200€ of difference)
    we are starting to necessitate to group up so that the wage of 3 to 4 people can cover all expenses since alone its basically suicide.
    to explain on better terms: (living alone)
    Average necessary wage is 1500€ a month minimum for mediocre-bad life quality.
    ideally you want 2500€ to live somewhat comfortably --> 3500-4000€ is where you can stop worrying about money (if you don't spend like crazy)
    you still can't afford villas or sports car, you are middle class now not rich.
    average salary is 1000€ or under, 1200€ is "good pay".
    you see the problem?

  • @alial-fatlawi5565
    @alial-fatlawi5565 14 дней назад

    Love the Göteborg (Gothenburg) shirt!

  • @mladenmiletic3718
    @mladenmiletic3718 14 дней назад +3

    Smart man.

  • @Yanousecq
    @Yanousecq 14 дней назад +11

    We got 0,02% raise this year in our company, despite 4% inflation... There is a way to go. If we didn't have to migrate to Germoney or NL to get decent life, we would stick in Poland ahah
    As a bilingual app support I gain less than a warehouse employee in NL or BE, while food prices almost match now with Poland.

    • @tru7hhimself
      @tru7hhimself 14 дней назад

      it isn't much better in central europe. i've now had three wage agreements below inflation in a row in austria. (5% raise with 10% inflation, yay…)

    • @baron_mijail7752
      @baron_mijail7752 14 дней назад +2

      Salaries in the Netherlands are decent, but the housing market is crazy, so if you don't have a house already, then you are not going to live that much better. And by "having" I mean one that is already paid or where you have a morgage.

    • @laszlomeszaros247
      @laszlomeszaros247 14 дней назад +2

      7% pay rise, 18% year-on-year inflation here, so -11% real pay reduction...

  • @FortuneCookieLies
    @FortuneCookieLies 14 дней назад +1

    Higher wages with internal incentives to bolster the internal demand like subsidized loans for business development. If you increase tariffs on the US or China as a means for business development there could be retaliation and an economic cold war. I think when Russia is done the EU could also benefit from the development of Ukraine and building it back up if they have the resources. Inflation and growth are the two factors. Best monetary location for economic growth and internal business development (Opposite of the yield curve inversion) is where the 10 year is twice the 5 year in interest rate. 9 times out of 10 the economic growth will be in the next year and then the following year interest rates will need to be raised. New Zealand's 2% worked because they were able to grow GDP at 3% and if you focus on the net and know the sweet spot of GDP then you know you can manage it well. I would say for long term growth 0.5% after inflation is a fair goal per year or 1%. Anything over 10% is unsustainable in GDP growth. I think the global economies saw what New Zealand did and thought that the 2% inflation target worked best. The key is to get the normal distribution on your side and manage them both to where inflation is around 2% and GDP growth is around 2.5% if you can. If wages grow too fast too soon, then what you have is inflation that will spiral out of control and the only way out is through raising rates and decreasing the money supply like what we are seeing now in the US and world.

  • @MyLittleMagneton
    @MyLittleMagneton 8 дней назад +1

    It's depressing that people in a America with the same engineering job as me (I mean literally under the same company) make almost TEN times as much.

  • @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn
    @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn 14 дней назад +30

    The essential problem is wealth inequality and it´s that which is screwing people over rather than immigration etc. The people in charge want you to think that it´s immigrants taking your jobs and lowering your wages, rather than them wanting to take an even bigger slice of what you produce with your labour.

    • @mikel9138
      @mikel9138 14 дней назад +12

      What if its a combination of immigration and wealth inequality? Because if its just wealth inquality then it can be addressed but if its combined with endless amounts of immigration then it will be almost impossible to fight it without enforcing a full stop immigration policy.

    • @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn
      @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn 14 дней назад +10

      @@mikel9138 "What if its a combination of immigration and wealth inequality? Because if its just wealth inquality then it can be addressed but if its combined with endless amounts of immigration then it will be almost impossible to fight it without enforcing a full stop immigration policy"
      What if indeed. Well, the internal logic of your argument is bad, r.e immigration, even if we grant the premise it isn´t a case of "either it has to be completely stopped or allowed to continue".
      As it happens, the empirical research that has been done on this topic, by the Oxford migration lab amongst others has shown that immigration doesn´t affect wages that much. There´s some evidence of a tiny negative pressure on the lowest paid jobs, but it´s very small (0.1%) and remember those people too are benefitting from lower prices and more nurses and doctos etc.
      What we know for a fact is that in many countries wages have been stagnant for a long time, since the 70s at least. We also know that cutting taxes for the rich, privatisation etc has contributed to worse outcomes for anyone not in the top 10%.

    • @JSK010
      @JSK010 14 дней назад +1

      Cool conspiracy theory bro.

    • @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn
      @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn 14 дней назад +2

      @@JSK010 It´s not a conspiracy theory, it´s an actual demonstrable fact, shown by statistics over the last 50 years.

    • @JSK010
      @JSK010 14 дней назад

      @@Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn none of what you say “the people in charge blablabla” can be proven or disproven by statistics. Just stale marxism

  • @tbthegr81
    @tbthegr81 14 дней назад +33

    Världsmästerskapen i friidrott 1995 t-shirt... That's not something ya see every day

    • @zeevallin
      @zeevallin 14 дней назад

      Yeah damn, I was taken aback.

    • @Jefflurr_
      @Jefflurr_ 14 дней назад +2

      Undrar starkt var han fick den tröjan ifrån. Blev lite tagen av att se en sån tröja, speciellt på en sån här video

  • @tidbit1877
    @tidbit1877 10 дней назад +1

    So when modern economists said we should "spend our way out of this recession," in 2008 they were CORRECT! It's almost as though Keynesian economics have been proven right yet again for the umpteenth time, yep!

  • @Tusiriakest
    @Tusiriakest 14 дней назад +1

    I earn an average medium salary in my country. At the end of the month, I spent money on rent, on groceries on supermarket nearby, on basics (water, electricity, internet, phone) and maybe have a dinner out twice a month. And thats it. There are like 5 companies that earn money from me. How does an economy survives this way? I'll await this report with curiosity

  • @danycashking
    @danycashking 14 дней назад +20

    higher wages also means more tax revenue which will be important to sustain the ageing population, as long as the salaries of the fewer younger people can keep up the social security programmes should be secure

    • @kendalson7100
      @kendalson7100 14 дней назад

      Yup.

    • @undefined6341
      @undefined6341 14 дней назад +3

      we could probably get a lot more out of a thorough audit and review of WHAT taxes are actually being spent on. The amount of money that is being mismanaged, and outright stolen could actually fund many useful projects.

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t 14 дней назад

      But it also means proportionally higher costs for European goods and services, so what's the benefit?

    • @Terrorkarel
      @Terrorkarel 14 дней назад +4

      ​@@Ruzzky_Bly4t an increased incentive towards investment to improve production instead of a shrinking industrial and public sector. Inflation right now is driven by this, not by there being too much demand.

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t 14 дней назад +1

      @Terrorkarel Explain this, how will higher labour costs make European industry more competitive? It's getting outperformed in almost everything by cheaper labour in third world countries, hence why everything now is produced in South East Asia and not Europe or the US. Only high-end industries are still going, and you would increase the demand for their products, but also sabotage them through more expensive labour. The buying power of EU citizens stays the same due to higher costs. So what's the gain here?

  • @bucyrus5000
    @bucyrus5000 14 дней назад +3

    Putting money in the hands of people who will spend it is a great way to put some health into an economy.

  • @atasaygili2549
    @atasaygili2549 10 дней назад +1

    Draghi isn't the one who incentivized the austerity. Actually the opposite, he made one of the most expansive measures named QE. In order to do that he has gone against the northern states such as germany and netherlands. But thanks to him, he kept the interests on debt low in mediterranean countries given their high share of debt to its gdp

  • @supersoldierrcp
    @supersoldierrcp 14 дней назад +1

    I normally love TLDR videos like the last three videos, I can't help but be like " I can't believe this is news as experts have been saying this for years".
    So I studied political science. That's what I got my bachelor's in, I currently work for an economic development firm that does work internationally.
    For the last 10 or 15 years, economic experts have been calling for increased wages in Europe via bilateral trade partnerships with its North American partners.
    The proposal said that as the US and Canada produce more oil it should be prioritized and shipped to European partners.
    As Mexico looks looks to become the new China or a powerhouse in global manufacturing.
    Increased bilateral trade between the European and North American continent is only more necessary.
    If the US and Europe jointly came to large-scale investment agreements on the topics of " Green energy, biofuels, telecommunications, ship building, and Aviation" it would substantially increase wealth on both continents.
    By heavily investing in wind, solar, water, and nuclear continents could become energy self-sufficient.
    Biofuels could easily replace plastics and other necessary petroleum products, thus reducing both countries, dependencies, and actually increasing agriculture and manufacturing exports.
    Increasing telecommunications just means that the will be able to conduct commerce more easily
    Increases in aviation and ship building will allow them to increase their militaries, decrease shipping cost, have more control over global supply chains, and increase innovation.
    Global experts have been calling for this for years, but countries don't want to enact on it because most populations see it as somebody else is getting a better deal than they are when they don't realize the long-term gains.
    I believe it was 2019-2020 when the last study was done and it predicted that if the US and the EU agreed to about 1.1 to 1.4 trillion over 10 years to Target these industries. It would lead to massive long-term growth.

  • @ferhatdikmen3762
    @ferhatdikmen3762 14 дней назад +26

    A top skilled single German for example earns 6000 bruto € the money he gets after taxes is arround 4000€ 💀 Thats the biggest reason why the top skilled ones leave Germany and go to US.

    • @ardi08
      @ardi08 14 дней назад +3

      2000€ cut 💀

    • @mikel9138
      @mikel9138 14 дней назад +1

      @@ardi08 Thats like 33% tax

    • @tru7hhimself
      @tru7hhimself 14 дней назад +4

      there are two ways to raise the bottom line. higher wages going in is the better option. if we lowered taxes we'd soon have crumbling infrastructure and homeless people on the streets like the us. no thanks.

    • @lore00star
      @lore00star 14 дней назад +6

      With 4000 euros you're considered rich in italy. Germany is considered on the top 💀

    • @Bleilock1
      @Bleilock1 14 дней назад +4

      With 4k a month you have more than 4 times average croatian wage

  • @ChangesOfTomorrow
    @ChangesOfTomorrow 14 дней назад +11

    Potentially, enforcing 4 day workweek with the same pay, will technically increase the hourly pay and leave more time to spend the money

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t 14 дней назад +7

      And will reduce the work done by employees. It's just a trade-off.

    • @ChangesOfTomorrow
      @ChangesOfTomorrow 14 дней назад +15

      @@Ruzzky_Bly4t nobody is productive 8 hrs a day 5 days a week. It will mainly reduce idle time. There have been studies that showed productivity actually increased with 4 days workweek

    • @Bleilock1
      @Bleilock1 14 дней назад +2

      Spend money on what when you dont have enough for anything since everything is so expensive
      More free time for a second job more like...

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t 14 дней назад

      @ChangesOfTomorrow That would be great then, would be interesting to see how it would work

    • @ChristiaanHW
      @ChristiaanHW 14 дней назад

      @@Ruzzky_Bly4t there are studies and pilots from the past that have shown that a 4-day work week might actually be more productive than a 5-day work week.
      several reasons why this might be the case:
      - as mentioned no one is 40 hours a week efficient. at the start of the day most have to get into it, the last hours of the day are just wishing the day was over already.
      - if you have one extra day to spend on things you like to do, hobby's, being with family etc. it makes you happier. and happier people often deliver better work.
      and 2 things that might happen because of people having more free time:
      - people might fill (some of) that extra free time by being a volunteer, for example helping out at a retirement home or at the local animal shelter.
      this in turn makes the community a better place, and raises happiness even more.
      - if people work less they probably have less work related issues. which saves money in (mental) healthcare and social benefits.

  • @ZeroCGR2
    @ZeroCGR2 14 дней назад

    Well minimal wage in Poland has been growing but the same goes for production and employee costs. In the end smaller businesses are really likely to close down now. Of course I would like to earn more but I fear unemployment will rise due to closing of small companies

  • @logui113
    @logui113 14 дней назад

    Who could have ever thought that austerity measures would be a bad idea mmm

  • @JuanCarlosAraujoS
    @JuanCarlosAraujoS 14 дней назад +10

    Is not about wages, is about TAXES. When an entrepreneur in Spain gets half of the results from his/her work taken by the state in order to maintain a machine that doesn't work is quite enraging.
    European states, as Milei stated in italian TV, are way too big... which makes european economy quite slow.
    Smaller and leaner state is key. But politicians don't want you to talk about it.

    • @_F8.
      @_F8. 14 дней назад +1

      When you have an extreme imbalance of purchasing power of the uber wealthy and everyone else. You absolutely dont want to lower taxes.... that's throwing oil on a fire. You need to raise baseline wages with increases in minimum wage and raise progressive tax rates to offset inflation. More of the poorer people have more to spend with no changes in tax and the uber wealthy have less to spend on hyper inflating the assets and the stock market, which is whole other issue. And the idea that by paying less tax in Spain will not make the state work less well is moronic.

    • @JuanCarlosAraujoS
      @JuanCarlosAraujoS 14 дней назад +4

      @@_F8. As a venezuelan still living in Venezuela I can say by experience: The so-caled "wealth redistribution" is a myth.
      Big states are NOT the solution, they are the problem.
      Socialism doesn't work.
      Th so-called uber-rich have people that understand tax codes so well, they end up payng less taxes than the average small entrepreneur.
      Besides. You rise wages, you add to the cost of any product, the cost infltes the prices and you're back on square one.
      If you try to regulate prices, you'll generate shortages and black markets (look how things were in Venezuela between 2013 and 2017).
      The laws of the economy are like the laws of physics: Inevitable.

    • @TelvanniSpaceWizard
      @TelvanniSpaceWizard 14 дней назад

      As an American with no healthcare, the (American, at least) politicians that want to shrink the government do not want to do it in our favor. I personally agree with the spirit of the concept but it has to be done very carefully.
      Privatization in the '80s today means we have powerful monopolies on basic services and the working class has no ability to "vote with their dollar" to keep the costs or service quality in check. Just look to our $1000 ambulance costs, the energy company PG&E that is so irresponsible that it caused the largest fires in California history (and now makes their customers pay for it in price hikes and multi-day-long blackouts), and our nationally dreadful internet coverage and prices that are just finally starting to improve somewhat.
      There's a massive divide in service availability and quality between urban and rural areas. Even if you're in a city and supposedly have access to gigabit internet, it doesn't mean you're actually going to get reliable gigabit internet. Americans have high wages but waste it all paying for overpriced garbage.
      The US is finally trying to ban noncompete agreements (election year) that made it so that your previous employer could threaten you with thousands of dollars in court fees if you broke their irrational noncompete agreements, which could be as extreme as forbidding employment with a new company whose branches exist in the same states, for a years. Intentionally making it so that if you want to pursue other opportunities (higher wage, better benefits) you have to endure unemployment in your field for a prolonged period of time. Even unskilled labor like fast food and department store chains have noncompete agreements. It's all about stifling free market competition and forcing workers to put up with poor wages and working conditions.
      There's a theme here; *we are bound to honor the contracts we make with corporations, but they are not*. When American politicians say they want to shrink the government, part of what they mean is that they want to remove the government departments and services that allow us to hold corporations accountable to their contracts. They are not intending to make life for the average person better or even strengthen the economy in a holistic sense (they favor the creation of monopolies over encouraging competition). They still just want to rig the game even more in favor of the wealthy to recreate feudalism.

    • @JuanCarlosAraujoS
      @JuanCarlosAraujoS 14 дней назад

      @@TelvanniSpaceWizard I'm a venezuelan still living in Venezuela. I know health in the US is NOT a free market (is a cronies oligopoly) and I know, that socialism just doesn't work. Big States don't work.
      Long live freedom!

    • @RodrigoFerreira-bs6hd
      @RodrigoFerreira-bs6hd 14 дней назад +2

      That theory falls apart once you look at Europe pre-2008. The state was even bigger back then, and we managed to grow faster than the US.
      It's very simple in my opinion. We are doing nothing as we watch all of our industry go down the drain. How many tech giants are there in Europe? How many of them formed in the last decade? 0? It's probably 0. How can we expect to generate the same value as the US does?

  • @happy_thinking
    @happy_thinking 14 дней назад +13

    I mean that's a stupid thing to say. The question is not whether we need higher wages, but how to get there. Less regulation and more cooperation would help us get there.
    Stuff like different laws, taxation, and languages are a huge barrier to doing business at the EU level.

    • @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn
      @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn 14 дней назад +3

      Less regulation wouldn´t, there´s no evidence of this, also the US is regulated in quite a lot of ways actually, it tends to be very protectionist for one.

    • @happy_thinking
      @happy_thinking 14 дней назад +3

      @@Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn The USA is very regulated and their life is garbage in those areas.
      On the other hand, it's much easier to do business in the USA than in most of Europe.
      It's hard to say what Europe needs to do because Europe is many different countries that need different adjustments.
      In general, it should be easy do to business and you shouldn't be punished with insane taxes if you do.
      Switzerland is probably a good example of how Europe should be structured.

    • @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn
      @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn 14 дней назад +2

      @@happy_thinking well, Switzerland is one country and it´s not insanely hard to do business in most of the Western EU, that´s an exaggeration.
      Certainly just massively cutting regulations won´t do a lot. If that were the issue then third world African countries would be the richest places on the planet.

    • @happy_thinking
      @happy_thinking 14 дней назад +1

      @@Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn Like I said Switzerland is a good example.
      Many EU countries do quite well when it comes to business I never claimed the opposite they just fall short when you compare them to more successful places.
      I think your imagination when it comes to cutting regulations is too simplistic.
      Instead of removal think more in terms of simplification. (Removal is also necessary in some countries)
      African countries have a plethora of issues they need to address first.
      Corruption in these countries is also mainly a result of too many regulations and heavy bureaucracy, but they have many other issues and it would take me hours to explain.

    • @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn
      @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn 14 дней назад +3

      @@happy_thinking Corruption isn´t a result of too many regulations, that´s just not a causal explanation.
      African countries in practise have no regulations quite often. I.e they in effect have no labour regulations, as there is no body to enforce any of them.
      I don´t think I ever said either that regulations can´t be smarter or more simplified.

  • @red464
    @red464 14 дней назад +1

    eyy nice shirt! comming from a sweed in Göteborg

  • @notmyname6484
    @notmyname6484 14 дней назад +2

    Countries with Eastern European wages and Western European prices need a change. The differences within the EU are bonkers.

  • @roymichaeldeanable
    @roymichaeldeanable 14 дней назад +12

    The UK needs lower taxes especially for the bottom 30%

    • @Twin.motors
      @Twin.motors 13 дней назад

      The UK already has lower taxes for lower incomes. UK is one of the few countries in Europe that has a scaling taxation system and it's awesome for those that want to grow and evolve

    • @pritapp788
      @pritapp788 13 дней назад +1

      @@Twin.motors It's not, because as soon as you rise up the tax brackets very punitive tax rates kick in. It's actually been rated as one of the most unfair in the world, a perfect example of poorly executed progressive taxation.

    • @Twin.motors
      @Twin.motors 13 дней назад

      @@pritapp788 can't speak for everyone but back when I lived in the UK the low taxes helped me out enormously when I barely had many to survive and once I got going yes the taxes were high but overall I felt it was benefcial for me

    • @esanahka9284
      @esanahka9284 13 дней назад

      ​@@Twin.motorsall of Europe have progressive/scaling taxation except Russia

    • @Twin.motors
      @Twin.motors 13 дней назад

      @@esanahka9284 Romania doesn't have that

  • @morsa_tryck37
    @morsa_tryck37 14 дней назад +5

    Sick t-shirt

    • @morsa_tryck37
      @morsa_tryck37 14 дней назад

      @@JG-MV Nothing, just says "Göteborg" on it

  • @SkyrimCZtutorials
    @SkyrimCZtutorials 2 дня назад

    Social system, high taxes and keynessian economics in need to maintain constant inflation are also large contributors.

  • @alicankarakaya2770
    @alicankarakaya2770 14 дней назад

    Thank you for the video.

  • @martinsingfield
    @martinsingfield 14 дней назад +7

    Higher wages without higher productivity will only result in inflation. Higher wages in the US compared with Europe are the result of higher productivity. This raises the question as to why productivity in the US is so much higher 5han in Europe? Perhaps this is because of less regulation in the US, a less risk adverse approach to change, lower energy costs due to fracking, a more homogenous market due to a single dominant language. A more competitive education system.

    • @Terrorkarel
      @Terrorkarel 14 дней назад +3

      The US has new industrial sectors (mostly Tech) and Europe killed what remained of it's productivity with cuts with austerity to safe a bunch of banks and pension funds.

    • @martinsingfield
      @martinsingfield 14 дней назад

      @@Terrorkarel Austerity wasn't used to save banks or pension funds (which was a worthwhile aim) but rather to stop Government debt increasing even further as a percentage of GDP after the financial crisis was over. Much of Europe maintained an expansionary fiscal stance for the decade after the financial crisis. I don't believe that it has been a lack of aggregate demand that has hindered Europe, but rather constraints on aggregate supply, many of which were imposed by governments.

    • @martinsingfield
      @martinsingfield 14 дней назад +1

      @@abdelghaniouchabane4277 Expanding the money supply beyond that associated with normal growth in GDP has little, if any, long term effect on the real economy (the "neutrality of money"). It can help when there's a liquidity crisis, as in 2008, or undermine real growth if it leads to a long period of inflation. A rapid expansion of US money supply would not account for a sustained period of real economic growth.

    • @martinsingfield
      @martinsingfield 14 дней назад

      @@abdelghaniouchabane4277 I know!

    • @martinsingfield
      @martinsingfield 14 дней назад +1

      @@abdelghaniouchabane4277 That sentence doesn't make sense!

  • @starseeker1334
    @starseeker1334 14 дней назад +146

    "Why US still misses basic worker's rights, public transport, healthcare and welfare protection"

    • @annoyboyPictures
      @annoyboyPictures 14 дней назад

      Funny how most immigrants want to go to the USA and not to Socialist Nanny States in the EU?

    • @dars1961
      @dars1961 14 дней назад +73

      Europe still needs higher wages though, just like the US shouldnt really go for a wage reduction.
      The actual issue for both continents is wealth concentration, they have the money, but they insist on funneling it all to the top, and then act surprised when everybody below is increasingly more frustrated.

    • @user-lr3uz5xv6c
      @user-lr3uz5xv6c 14 дней назад +8

      "cause we are not communist" lol

    • @floxy20
      @floxy20 14 дней назад +26

      Quite a series of broad statements there. Made to soothe hurt feelings because Europe is no longer where it's at?

    • @bruhbutwhytho2301
      @bruhbutwhytho2301 14 дней назад +10

      @@floxy20I mean it’s true though

  • @kauemoura
    @kauemoura 13 дней назад +1

    I live in Belgium and I have a decent salary, but I certainly won't say no to more money... But life here is also quite pricey.

  • @gus3000
    @gus3000 14 дней назад +3

    There are jobs which are too poorly remunerated (e.g. many vital workers) but there are also plenty of jobs with a remuneration way beyond what's needed for a comfortable life. If you want to increase the general purchasing power you should invest in those who are the poorest in each country, since they are the ones who have immediate spending-requirements. I.e., redistribute wealth from the rich and achieve a more fair and balanced consumption. And take out "excessive remuneration" (very high wages) in form of fewer work days, longer holidays, etc. We have an environmental issue to deal with too and it doesn't benefit from excessive consumption.
    Besides, nothing in Draghi's plans seems to actually protect EU industries from e.g. foreign buyouts (i.e. us losing control). If you don't want important industries to be owned and controlled by non-europeans then you'll simply just have to ban such ownership.

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t 14 дней назад +1

      That's one way to force every rich person to flee the continent, and for every entrepreneur to go to a country that will let them keep their wealth if they succeed.

    • @gus3000
      @gus3000 14 дней назад +3

      @@Ruzzky_Bly4t I don’t think it would cause people to flee. And those who left, it would be an acceptable cost..
      The wealth of the rich (just like any others’) are dependent on the welfare of the general society. If you remove or decrease the purchasing-power of the general public then you end up hurting everyone else, including the rich. That’s a core-point of why austerity-policies are such a through-and-through failure. If you don’t have enough purchasing-power in the public then the economy won’t work. You need to redistribute wealth, circulate capital. Preferably that would happen naturally by sufficient remuneration, but in our society it is also aided through e.g. taxation which is spent on benefits (e.g. education and child-support), on investments in infrastructure, etc. I figure we should remember that e.g. the US was at its greatest while their taxes were at their highest - which encouraged e.g. more investments in the companies and higher wages.
      Wealth gradually accumulates with capital-owners (capitalists). It’s a fundamental 101 of capitalism. This is also a fundamental failure of capitalism. At its logical peak with all the capital accumulated with one capitalist society will come to a stand-still followed by an implosion, albeit that the implosion is likely to happen way before total accumulation is achieved.
      Also then, does it really matter if the capitalists leave? The goal is to increase the public’s purchasing-power and increase European control over industrial sectors. It essentially means shifting profits over from the capital-owner to workers and it means stricter rules regarding ownership. Assuming that we have stricter rules then why would the capitalist move? It would mean that they lose ownership of the company. The entire point is that if the capitalist rich leaves then they should lose their wealth, their capital in the form of e.g. a company - it's protectionism, protecting Europe and ensuring European control at the expense of other non-europeans, may it be at the expense of a country such as the US or may it be at the expense of a US capitalist born in Europe. Transfer the ownership (buy them out) to a more useful, loyal local capitalist or why not the workers themselves (hence further increasing the public's purchasing-power). As for entrepreneurs and investors - I don’t think we’ll lack them as long as rule-abiding capital is protected. I’d rather assume that locally-owned small and medium-sized industries would benefit the most from the local population having an increased purchasing-power.

    • @tru7hhimself
      @tru7hhimself 14 дней назад +2

      another way is by nationalising key industries. otherwise the profits are siphoned off into tax havens.

    • @MattY-ed1ep
      @MattY-ed1ep 14 дней назад

      ​@@gus3000Europe's existing attitudes towards new business and accompanying investment has already caused plenty of entrepreneurs to head to the US. E.G Stripe was started by two Irish blokes but went to the U.S for their IPO, and this is far from the only example. That's a good amount of potentially high-paying jobs and accompanying institutional capital that which could've been in the EU but went to the US instead.

    • @olamilekanakala7542
      @olamilekanakala7542 14 дней назад

      @@Ruzzky_Bly4tguess who won’t leave the union. Several millionaires in the entertainment (especially sports) industry.

  • @ForTemporaryUse-oq4on
    @ForTemporaryUse-oq4on 14 дней назад +23

    Under 100 views gang

  • @jumbomuffin1316
    @jumbomuffin1316 13 дней назад

    A lot of people in the states live pay check to pay check.. higher wages just increases costs so it really doesn’t do much

  • @ImAltair1
    @ImAltair1 14 дней назад

    Although the title of the video focuses on the wages part, the other two topics discussed are also really important. The EU as a whole spends 3x more than Russia does on defense, yet we are wildly unprepared for confrontation if it happens. If the EU as a whole started doing joint procurement we could probably spend less money than we do now, which means using that money for other things like infrastructure or social, and still end up with better defense than we have now.

  • @nickt2822
    @nickt2822 14 дней назад +16

    i am amazed that it took "the experts" 15 years to understand something that me, a normal idiot, understood the moment the crisis happened. smh.

    • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
      @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад

      Problem is you dont!
      Just as 99% of the population!

    • @nickt2822
      @nickt2822 14 дней назад +3

      @@tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 right... Because austerity worked wonders right? On the other hand Obama spending almost a trillion worked so.. I think you don't know what you are talking about.

    • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
      @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад

      @@nickt2822 I know very well what the problem is(!) and the people that cause it are utterly incompetent!
      It has to do with statehood, not with the private sector!
      The raise in wages must come by tax cuts for low incomes by 100% middle incomes minimum 50% and high incomes by at least 10%.
      Consume taxes differ greatly but should not be highter than 5%.
      In a nutshell for you the state aquires too much money!
      Do you even know what would happen if wages would be raised by say 35%?

    • @melissacorbett4180
      @melissacorbett4180 14 дней назад

      ​@@tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 ummm the 2008 financial crisis was caused by the banking sector. Countries like Spain got massively into public debt buying up the bad debt of the the banks (which are in the private sector).

    • @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753
      @tobiasphilippwittlinger8753 14 дней назад

      @@melissacorbett4180 Correction it was caused by the American banking sector which gave loans incentivized from the state that lowered the requirements for loans in order to make more people hown owners.
      Yess they did bale them out but not with tax money, the toxic positions were just transfered into the balance of the central bank.
      However what has this to do with the fact that states tax heavily?
      Anyway the real question in regard to your point is should national banks bale out private banks?
      I think no!
      They never learn it if they get baled out everytime they mess up!

  • @DudeWatIsThis
    @DudeWatIsThis 14 дней назад +2

    I have a small software company. USA clients come to me _BECAUSE_ they know they can pay us less. You can't really change this, they'd go to India instead.
    Honestly it's not so bad. Just move away from the big cities and you're fine. Who wants to live in London? Or Paris? Or Madrid? Those places are gigantic and expensive.

    • @Slippin_Jimmy1012
      @Slippin_Jimmy1012 14 дней назад

      If you don’t mind me asking, but where do you operate your small software company?
      As for Madrid, London and Paris, you can’t really blame people wanting to live in those cities as the countries the cities are located in have centralised their job opportunities in just one place.

    • @DudeWatIsThis
      @DudeWatIsThis 14 дней назад +1

      @@Slippin_Jimmy1012 A small city of less than 500K people.
      But I've seen so many people saying "pLeAsE GiVe mE FuLl ReMoTe JoBs" while living in Munich or Copenhagen. Get it together, you can live somewhere cheap and _then_ get the remote job, derp.

  • @farhankhimani1845
    @farhankhimani1845 14 дней назад

    I automatically start lipsyning the intro when Jack is hosting.😅

  • @xzzy
    @xzzy 14 дней назад

    Very good video and well explained...finally some Eu leaders started to see the same things that I used to bla blaing for a long time.

  • @gandiashop9391
    @gandiashop9391 14 дней назад +7

    High taxes + demanding high wages. Small business are going to be destroyed😢

    • @mikel9138
      @mikel9138 14 дней назад +4

      Small businesses should be taxed the least, i cant understand why they tax them so much.

    • @Kaizzer
      @Kaizzer 14 дней назад

      @@mikel9138 that's why in Italy half of the revenue is kept away from taxes (aka "black market")

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    @eugen-pr6lg 10 дней назад +253

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    • @DennisCc-xw6lj
      @DennisCc-xw6lj 10 дней назад

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      @Andrea-hy8df 10 дней назад

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      @islams-yb3vq 10 дней назад

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      @islams-yb3vq 10 дней назад

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      @Gloryjerem 10 дней назад

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  • @butterflysrage
    @butterflysrage 8 дней назад +1

    Austerity didn't work? I'M SHOCKED!

  • @nijadbahnam9859
    @nijadbahnam9859 14 дней назад

    In 1920 , the major source of institutional economics crisis was most of the middle class, and workers couldn't afford the goods and services they created . I can see this today with companies seeing it as a personnel insult to pay its dues to employees and contractors .
    Middle class and worker class consumption help a lot the economy when they are able to spend for their families and community then Ultra-Richs buying a second Yacht or personnel airplane .

  • @Chris3s
    @Chris3s 14 дней назад +6

    How about instead of inflating everything, we accept slow growth or even stagnation?

  • @thedude7319
    @thedude7319 14 дней назад +4

    So lower taxes ? That isn't going to work goverments are addicted

    • @AnymMusic
      @AnymMusic 14 дней назад +1

      it wouldn't work anyway since you'd have less money to pay for social projects

    • @pritapp788
      @pritapp788 13 дней назад +1

      @@AnymMusic Taxation revenue doesn't necessarily from income taxes.

  • @charlie8458
    @charlie8458 14 дней назад

    My company in France hired me end of 2022.
    Inflation rate in 2022 and 2023 were both around 5%.
    I got a wage increase of 3,5% in 2024.

  • @baronvonjo1929
    @baronvonjo1929 14 дней назад +1

    Wages are low for many of us in the US as well.

  • @anonbefallen4807
    @anonbefallen4807 14 дней назад +6

    As an American, I find myself continually frustrated by my country's protectionism. I think we should foster American industry, but I also think that trying to be completely self-sufficient is a terrible idea and won't work, even for us. What we should be doing is increasing trade ties with our allies in Europe. There are things Europe makes that we want. European evs are objectively way better than the shit boxes Tesla and American ev manufacturers make. Not to mention, European beauty products are insanely popular here. In my experience, most good reliable shampoos and soaps are French in origin, not American. I love the EU, I think structurally it's a great idea, and I want to see it succeed, America should be willing to help. Thats my two-cents on the matter.

    • @KosmicK
      @KosmicK 13 дней назад

      What protectionism? Europe exports over $100Bn more in goods to the US than the US exports to the EU. That it decided that certain key industries are interests of national security doesn't mean that it is some closed economy. Europeans are pretending that losing a few billion in export surplus is the cause of their economic woes when it is long standing structural issues.

  • @ellingweme
    @ellingweme 14 дней назад +7

    Over time, inflation will increase again

    • @phantomgaming563
      @phantomgaming563 14 дней назад +7

      Tldr on that weimar republic grindset.

    • @lmpeto94
      @lmpeto94 14 дней назад +2

      So? If wages rise by 10% on average. Does every thing cost 10% more? No. Wages haven't been the driving factor for inflation in the last years.

    • @ellingweme
      @ellingweme 14 дней назад

      Depends where you live@@lmpeto94

    • @Kursun28
      @Kursun28 14 дней назад +1

      Inflation is debt when you have more your value goes down it has nothing to do what you earn

    • @ChristiaanHW
      @ChristiaanHW 14 дней назад

      it's the same problem as when women started to enter the job market en-mass.
      we all thought that we (a family) would end up with twice as much money, because now we have two people working.
      but because of the prices of everything rising at least as much, we are now worse of than then.
      but hey lets make more of those mistakes, what could go wrong.

  • @diametheuslambda
    @diametheuslambda 14 дней назад

    Govt spending / GDP is a terrible measure for the purpose without accounting for state and local spending.

  • @angrychortle4013
    @angrychortle4013 14 дней назад +1

    This assumes that increased government spending does, in fact, increase wages. If the spending causes inflation or currency depreciation to quicken, it could end up lowering real wages instead.

  • @Storgaaard
    @Storgaaard 11 дней назад +4

    This is ridicolus. Wages cannot decoupled from productivity. Europe's problem is not too little spending but too little innovation, too little productivity and insane amounts of bureaucracy that kills start-ups. Starting the printing press will not solve anything

    • @thevoid5503
      @thevoid5503 10 дней назад

      Focussing on productivity without focussing on purchasing power. Yeah.. That's going to work "clown face". Who is going to buy it then?