Tuesday 30th of April 2024

Achtung!

economies...

... the full story is more interesting than any caricature. In the last decade, Germany has succeeded in some important ways that the United States has not. The lessons aren’t simply liberal or conservative. They are both.

With our economy weakening once again — and with Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany visiting the White House this week — now seems to be a good time to take a closer look.

The brief story is that, despite its reputation for austerity, Germany has been far more willing than the United States to use the power of government to help its economy. Yet it has also been more ruthless about cutting wasteful parts of government.

The results are intriguing. After performing worse than the American economy for years, the Germany economy has grown faster since the middle of last decade. (It did better than our economy before the crisis and has endured the crisis about equally). Just as important, most Germans have fared much better than most Americans, because the bounty of their growth has not been concentrated among a small slice of the affluent.

Inflation-adjusted average hourly pay has risen almost 30 percent since 1985 in Germany, the kind of gains American workers have not enjoyed since the ’50s and ’60s. In this country, hourly pay has risen a scant 6 percent since 1985.

Germany also managed to avoid a housing bubble, unlike the United States, Britain, Ireland, Spain and other countries. German children have stronger math and science skills than ours. Its medium-term budget deficit is smaller. Its unemployment rate is like a mirror image of ours: 6.1 percent, well below where it was when the financial crisis began in 2007. Our rate has risen to 9.1 percent.

I’m not saying that the United States should want to become Germany. Americans remain considerably richer. We have the innovative companies — Wal-Mart, Google, Apple, Facebook, Twitter — that make other countries swoon. We remain the world’s immigration mecca.

Yet for all the strengths of the United States, almost nobody claims that the economy is in especially good shape. It so happens that our current out-of-town guests could teach us a few things.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/08/business/economy/08leonhardt.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print

wars can end...

Plenty of pomp at the White House today, as President Obama formally welcomed German Chancellor Angela Merkel amid reports of discord between the two nations and their leaders.

"Chancellor Merkel is one of my closest global partners," Obama said during this morning's ceremony.

"At a time when some have asked whether the rise of new global powers means the decline of others," he added, "this visit reaffirms an enduring truth: Our alliances with nations like Germany are more important than ever. Indeed, they're indispensable to global security and prosperity."

Obama also said that, after a century of two worlds and a four-decade Cold War, the U.S.-German relationship shows a still-troubled world what is possible: "Wars can end. Adversaries can become allies. Walls can come down. At long last, nations can be whole and can be free."

The first African-American U.S. president also told the first female German chancellor: "It's obvious that neither of us looks exactly like the leaders who preceded us."

http://content.usatoday.com/communities/theoval/post/2011/06/obama-welcomes-merkel-to-white-house/1

welcome on credit...

US President Barack Obama has said the European debt crisis cannot be allowed to threaten the global economy, following White House talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The leaders that the euro zone troubles "cannot be allowed to put the global economic recovery at risk," he said.

The pair discussed Nato operations in Afghanistan and Libya, the Middle East peace process and economic issues.

Later, Mr Obama was to award Ms Merkel the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-13685707

--------------------

A bit rich for Obama to mention the "Yourpean debt" (those lazy Greeks and Portugese... you know) when the US owes the word about a fifth of an entire yearly world GDP output — and growing... But good on Obama to pin the medal of freedom on Merkel...