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Europe's Utopian Hangover (Or How France Lost 14,000+ To A Heatwave)
Forbes.com ^ | Sept. 25, 2003 | Paul Johnson

Posted on 09/25/2003 1:30:18 PM PDT by conservativecorner

One thing history teaches, over and over again, is that there are no shortcuts. Human societies advance the hard way; there is no alternative. Communism promised Utopia on Earth. After three-quarters of a century of unparalleled sufferings, the Soviet Union collapsed in privation and misery, leaving massive Russia with an economy no bigger than tiny Holland's. We are now watching the spectacle of another experiment in hedonism, the European Union, as it learns the grim facts of life.

The EU is built on a fantasy--that men and women can do less and less work, have longer and longer holidays and retire at an earlier age, while having their income, in real terms, and their standard of living increase. And this miracle is to be brought about by the enlightened bureaucratic regulation of every aspect of life.

The EU is a French concept and is still largely run according to French ideas. And France is the archetypal EU country. If you have a regular job in France, your life is, in theory, lyrical. You work 35 hours a week. You generally get four weeks of holiday in August, plus a further three weeks throughout the year, in addition to 11 state holidays. Full medical care is provided, even in retirement. Retirement age varies, but it is now typically 55. Pensions may be two-thirds to three-quarters of a person's salary at the time of retirement.

Tarnished Image All this is wonderful, but it is dependent, even in theory, on the European Union's expanding continuously, its economy running at full throttle, its productivity steadily increasing and a profound peace cocooning the world in a nest of luxurious tranquility. But in the real world, things are different. The EU has discovered, since the autumn of 2001, that it has little ability to determine events because its armed forces are small, underfunded, obsolete and ill-trained. Apart from making trouble at the UN, France and Germany--those two former military giants that once made the world tremble--have been mere spectators. Now France, followed by a still more reluctant Germany, is being obliged to take defense seriously for the first time in many years, thus upsetting all its budget calculations.

France received a shock this summer, when more than 10,000 of its elderly citizens died in distress during a heat wave--some while supposedly under medical care in hospitals. Thanks to the 35-hour workweek and the long August holiday, these institutions were short-staffed. The families of those who died were on holiday, too.

Yet another shock--and at the same time--the French government discovered that its unemployment-benefit plan for part-time workers in the entertainment industry, though generous, was underfunded and in danger of imminent collapse. The government suddenly decided to cut the benefits radically. As a result, the workers went on strike, and virtually all the great cultural festivals that are the pride of France's tourist industry had to be canceled.

Reality Bites These are all symptoms of a painful disease, a continental depression born of the realization that EU prosperity is a house built upon sand. While the American economy is picking up, the EU's remains in stagnation, bordering on recession. The 35-hour workweek is splendid, provided you have a job. But what of the growing millions who are out of work and whose social security payments are now threatened with reduction or cut-off dates? Unemployment, already high, is rising in France and Germany.

In virtually every industry there are plans to shrink the work force. People have become too expensive, especially in France and Germany, where social security payments cost an employer almost as much as wages. In a desperate attempt to get its economy moving, France is set to cut income taxes, though this will raise its deficit to a level strictly forbidden by the rules governing the common European currency (the euro). France thus risks having enormous fines levied against it or, more likely, a collapse in confidence in the euro.

The truth is that the EU has been living beyond its means, and its bills are coming due. The biggest bill of all--the cost of generous state pensions, which in most EU countries are underfunded--is looming. It's true that most advanced countries are having difficulties meeting pensions because people are living longer and work forces are expanding more slowly (or not at all). Britain is running into a pension crisis. Most of those who banked on a healthy private pension for their old age are going to be disappointed, partly because returns on investments are so low and partly because the Labour finance minister, Gordon Brown, has been raiding the till by abolishing tax-free pension dividends. This is the issue that will lose Tony Blair the next election, as the pain of Labour's "pension raid" is felt. But at least Britain has a properly funded public pension plan. And the British economy is moving forward, perhaps not as fast as America's, but at a healthy and accelerating rate.

The omens for continental Europe, however, are sinister. The entire plan for perpetual improvement upon which the EU depends is based on continuous economic expansion. There is no provision for stagnation. As we see in Japan, once stagnation sets in, it can last many years. Americans should count their blessings, above all the supreme blessing of having an economy that is run by businessmen not bureaucrats, or that--under wise governance--runs itself.

Paul Johnson, eminent British historian and author, Lee Kuan Yew, senior minister of Singapore, and Ernesto Zedillo, former president of Mexico, in addition to Forbes Chairman Caspar W. Weinberger, are now periodically writing this column.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: france; heatwave; pauljohnson

1 posted on 09/25/2003 1:30:19 PM PDT by conservativecorner
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To: conservativecorner
I thought it always been a socialist goal of exterminating those that did not produce or were incapable of producing. The elderly, handicapped, and sick. Maybe that explains why so many died and why their health care sometimes throws pregnant women in the pangs of birth out of hospitals.
2 posted on 09/25/2003 1:34:08 PM PDT by Naspino
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To: conservativecorner
So do we let them starve or be eaten by Muslims or do we bail the sorry little pukes out,...AGAIN.
3 posted on 09/25/2003 1:35:12 PM PDT by .cnI redruM (Success will not come to you. You go to success.)
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To: .cnI redruM
Cheese-eating.... er... make that soon to be pet food- eating surrender monkeys!
4 posted on 09/25/2003 1:40:55 PM PDT by Camerican
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To: conservativecorner
Socialism is a disease; these are but further symptoms. The collapse of socialism in Europe will usher in World War III, but its hard to predict whether that will happen before France has its next violent revolution due to an ever-growing Islamic population.
5 posted on 09/25/2003 1:43:35 PM PDT by 45Auto (Big holes are (almost) always better.)
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To: conservativecorner
Some heavy hitters wrote that article and it seems pretty spot on. Too bad American liberals are so blind, because Old Europe is what they envision for America. However, Europe gave up it's capitalist roots shortly after the turn of the twentieth century. The U.S. has retained its free market economy to this day (as all FReepers know :).

I imagine that Europe is like a guy standing on a beach as giant Tsunami comes roaring at him. There's little he can do at this point but stare. The Europeans won't accept radical change and only radical change can save them at this point.

6 posted on 09/25/2003 1:45:03 PM PDT by jjm2111 ((R)nuld should bow out for the good of the party.)
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To: conservativecorner
" Vive la France" my a**!!!!!!!!
7 posted on 09/25/2003 1:45:56 PM PDT by Mears
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To: Naspino
We call that "progressive", not "socialist".
Get your terminology right.
8 posted on 09/25/2003 1:50:08 PM PDT by steve8714
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To: conservativecorner
But, they were just old French people. They had so little value that even the French didn't give a s**t about them.
9 posted on 09/25/2003 1:53:29 PM PDT by Tacis
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To: conservativecorner
In a desperate attempt to get its economy moving, France is set to cut income taxes, though this will raise its deficit to a level strictly forbidden by the rules governing the common European currency (the euro). France thus risks having enormous fines levied against it or, more likely, a collapse in confidence in the euro.
Reaganomics debate, anyone? The French need revenue, not mechanistic linear thinking. If you are going uphill and slowing down, do you shift to a higher gear, or a lower one? The Euro will not be helped by fantasies but by revenue.
The truth is that the EU has been living beyond its means, and its bills are coming due. The biggest bill of all--the cost of generous state pensions, which in most EU countries are underfunded--is looming. It's true that most advanced countries are having difficulties meeting pensions because people are living longer and work forces are expanding more slowly (or not at all).
That's a problem everywhere there are baby boomers, and a 55-year retirement age brings the problem sooner rather than later (and more rather than less).

10 posted on 09/25/2003 2:00:55 PM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion (The everyday blessings of God are great--they just don't make "good copy.")
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To: Thud
ping
11 posted on 09/25/2003 2:18:22 PM PDT by Dark Wing
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To: Tacis
Hey! A lot of those old people were French veterans of WWII!

They were the ones who made the big sacrifices - you know, racking their brains trying to think of every Jew thaey could hand over to the Nazis, putting lots of extra elbow grease into shining Wehrmacht jackboots, having to sip subpar coffee at shabby cafes on unfashionable streets.

You know, the French version of the "Greatest Generation."

12 posted on 09/25/2003 2:31:55 PM PDT by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: .cnI redruM
"So do we let them starve or be eaten by Muslims or do we bail the sorry little pukes out,...AGAIN."

Bail them out? Have you seen the size of the US buget deficit? We are suffering from many of the same problems as the Europeans.

Our bills will come due after theirs but when ours come due in about 10 to 20 years, as the baby boomers begain to retire, Our troubles will make theirs seem like a walk in the park.

We can't aford to bail the sorry little pukes out.


13 posted on 09/25/2003 2:38:04 PM PDT by monday
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To: .cnI redruM
So do we let them starve or be eaten by Muslims or do we bail the sorry little pukes out,...AGAIN.

I vote starve/eaten. I'm a laissez-faire fautre capitalist envers France.

14 posted on 09/25/2003 3:15:10 PM PDT by wizardoz (Bomb France.)
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To: 45Auto
...its hard to predict whether that will happen before France has its next violent revolution due to an ever-growing Islamic population.

Well, one prediction might be that stoning replaces guillotines...

15 posted on 09/25/2003 3:17:14 PM PDT by wizardoz (Bomb France.)
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To: conservativecorner
Good.
Let the anti-USA French endure their self-inflicted just deserts.
Let them pray to God for mercy, for I have none for them, and I sincerely hope neither does POTUS.
Protect our borders now!Illegal French invaders will be coming here soon through both Canada and Mexico to leach off the citizens of USA, while they continue to hate us and root for our defeat.
16 posted on 09/25/2003 4:20:34 PM PDT by sarasmom (Pray for Terri Schiavo.Pray harder.Please!)
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To: sarasmom
I figure that having 15,000 pensioned elderly die all at once might just help their balance sheet. Non?
17 posted on 09/25/2003 6:53:38 PM PDT by ClaireSolt
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To: ClaireSolt
Hardly a dent,really, when compared to the financial losses France suffers from with Saddam no longer in power in Iraq.

Waiting for the exact details to be published.Should not take too much longer.I expect to see a serious expose in the spring of 2004.
18 posted on 09/25/2003 7:26:55 PM PDT by sarasmom (Pray for Terri Schiavo.Pray harder.Please!)
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To: conservativecorner; Molly Pitcher
California in a few years.
19 posted on 09/27/2003 1:54:31 AM PDT by The Raven (<==see my home page!)
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