Challenging the Narrative of European Decline
2 days ago
- #Productivity Paradox
- #US-Europe Comparison
- #European Economy
- The conventional narrative of European economic decline relative to the U.S. is challenged by analyzing productivity measures, emphasizing that 'productivity' may not mean what many think it means.
- Comparing U.S. and European economies shows that while the U.S. has more material goods, Europe enjoys more leisure time, social security, and longer lifespans, making quality-of-life comparisons subjective.
- An apparent paradox exists: constant-price productivity growth is faster in the U.S., but PPP-based comparisons show Europe maintaining its relative output value per hour, indicating no decline in living standards.
- The paradox is explained by the U.S. dominance in the IT sector, where rapid productivity gains are passed to consumers through lower prices, benefiting all economies including Europe.
- European policymakers should worry less about misleading productivity trends and more about geopolitical risks, such as potential cutoffs from advanced technologies due to U.S.-China tensions.