Posted on 03/12/2005 8:04:52 AM PST by Alex Marko
BRUSSELS - The US economy is 20 years ahead of that of the EU and it will take decades for Europe to catch up, according to an explosive new study published on Friday (11 March).
The survey, unveiled by pan-EU small business organisation Eurochambres, is intended as a sharp "wake-up call" for EU leaders as they gather on 22 March for a summit on how to boost growth and jobs in the EU economy.
The EU's current performance in terms of employment was achieved in the US in 1978 and it will take until 2023 for Europe to catch up, the report shows.
The situation is scarcely better when it comes to income per person. The US attained the current EU performance in 1985 and Europe is expected to close the gap in 2072.
But the bleakest picture comes when comparing the two economic blocs in terms of research and development. Europe is expected to catch up with the US in 2123 and then only if the EU outstrips America by 0.5 percent per year in terms of R&D investment.
Presenting the survey, Arnaldo Abruzzi, the Secretary-General of Eurochambres, said, "the current EU levels in GDP, R&D investment, productivity and employment were already reached by the US in the late 70s/early 80s".
"Even the most optimistic assumptions show it will take the EU decades to catch up and then only if there is considerable EU improvement", he concluded.
Furthermore, the survey points out that enlargement will make the EU's mountain even harder to climb.
"Data clearly suggest that including the 10 new member countries in the comparison would further deteriorate Europe's position compared to the US for all four major indicators", says the report.
The survey was conducted using a method called the "time distance measure", pioneered by Professor Pavle Sicherl at Ljubljana University.
Eurochambres called for EU leaders to focus on concrete actions to revive the EU's economy and for a communications strategy to lay out the economic challenges facing the EU.
The group represents 18 million enterprises across Europe.
Ah. So it's pure jealousy. I've long suspected that was why so many Europeans are anti American.
Make that 25 years!
.. and the gap will get bigger and bigger. Socialism doesn't work. Dear EUweeenies, try it on dogs first, but there is already example of Soviet Socialist Paradise.
Won't the Kyoto Protocol they all signed make it even harder to catch up?
No, they cannot allow it.
Any deference to this report would undermine their Socialist agenda that is currently supported by bashing America, and making (multipolar) deals with every Communist and and murderous dictator across the planet.
They will discredit it without fail.
Yeah.... But, doesn't that assume that the US becomes stagnant? I mean, they STILL have to overcome 30 years worth, AND keep up with our economy...
remains = reminds me
And why is it "one of the stupidest statements"? Besides the US being technologically advances, per capita income highers, GDP higher and the US being teh worlds single most productive state... whats so stupid?
Read the sentence again. The EU is "20 years" behind the US economy and it will take them "decades" to catch up.
For the mathematically challenged, 20 years = 2 decades.
The department of redundancy department strikes again.
Cry me a river.
Yeah, nothing is wrong with that comment.... If the US economy stalled,so to speak, it would take the EU 20 years to catch up...however, the US economy will most likely not stall and keep advancing...the EU economy would have to surpass US levels economically to catch up in the long run..which would take DECADES...not just 2.
If this all true, then why is their currency so strong?
Since when does socialism ever "catch up" to capitalism?
Their currency strength is not an inidication of economical status. If that were the case... Countries like Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UK and others that have currencies set higher than 1 to 1 ratio of the dollar would mean that their economy is stronger than the US and that is not the case.
Then what is it an indication of? That Central Banks are hedging their position?
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