Titre : | Economic growth and competitiveness : a Franco - German tale | Type de document : | texte imprimé | Auteurs : | STEFAN COLLIGNON, Auteur | Editeur : | BRUXELLES [BELGIQUE] : Büro Bertelsmann Stiftung | Année de publication : | 2012 | Importance : | 23 p | Langues : | Anglais | Catégories : | Europe
| Index. décimale : | F.00 Généralités - Théories économiques | Note de contenu : | For years France’s economy outshined Germany’s. Only recently did that change. France must now take German competitiveness as a benchmark, while Germany could learn a thing or two about sustaining productivity growth. Friendship is a two-way street.
German authorities should embrace French demands for stimulating growth in Europe.
Germany has always had a tendency to suffer from structural stagnation. Germany’s product portfolio is about to become out-dated and its supply-side advantages are eroding.
Indeed, the German economy relies much less on comparative advantages than it does on demand from within the Euro Area.
Thus, if the Euro Area disintegrates, Germany’s trade surpluses will dwindle and it will lose out.
The Germans could actually benefit by following France’s example in sustaining productivity growth, which Paris has done much better than Germany in the past. Indeed, Germany’s comparative advantage might erode as a result of the high influx of cheap euroflight
capital. This though might even aid the European recovery process as a whole and ultimately Germany, too. In the end, it is in Germany’s interest to do more to help the south overcome its present difficulties instead of burdening it with ever more debt.
France, on the other hand, has to take German competitiveness as a benchmark, but not the German model as such. It must accelerate growth because it must create more jobs, especially for young people. Yet at the same time it has to reduce its budget deficit.
For that it has three options: A quick solution would grant generous tax deductions for investment in equipment and housing, somewhat similar to what Germany did immediately after unification to redress East Germany. The danger is that this may support demand for the
non-tradable sector without improving competitiveness and end in an
unsustainable asset bubble. The second option would, therefore, focus on the difficult task of restoring competitive levels of unit labour costs by fostering productivity combined with moderate wage restraint. A third option is a delicate balance of the two. | En ligne : | https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:mKp_ySm-TBMJ:www.bertelsmann-stiftung [...] |
Economic growth and competitiveness : a Franco - German tale [texte imprimé] / STEFAN COLLIGNON, Auteur . - BRUXELLES (Résidence Palace, Rue de la Loi 155, B - 1040, BELGIQUE) : Büro Bertelsmann Stiftung, 2012 . - 23 p. Langues : Anglais Catégories : | Europe
| Index. décimale : | F.00 Généralités - Théories économiques | Note de contenu : | For years France’s economy outshined Germany’s. Only recently did that change. France must now take German competitiveness as a benchmark, while Germany could learn a thing or two about sustaining productivity growth. Friendship is a two-way street.
German authorities should embrace French demands for stimulating growth in Europe.
Germany has always had a tendency to suffer from structural stagnation. Germany’s product portfolio is about to become out-dated and its supply-side advantages are eroding.
Indeed, the German economy relies much less on comparative advantages than it does on demand from within the Euro Area.
Thus, if the Euro Area disintegrates, Germany’s trade surpluses will dwindle and it will lose out.
The Germans could actually benefit by following France’s example in sustaining productivity growth, which Paris has done much better than Germany in the past. Indeed, Germany’s comparative advantage might erode as a result of the high influx of cheap euroflight
capital. This though might even aid the European recovery process as a whole and ultimately Germany, too. In the end, it is in Germany’s interest to do more to help the south overcome its present difficulties instead of burdening it with ever more debt.
France, on the other hand, has to take German competitiveness as a benchmark, but not the German model as such. It must accelerate growth because it must create more jobs, especially for young people. Yet at the same time it has to reduce its budget deficit.
For that it has three options: A quick solution would grant generous tax deductions for investment in equipment and housing, somewhat similar to what Germany did immediately after unification to redress East Germany. The danger is that this may support demand for the
non-tradable sector without improving competitiveness and end in an
unsustainable asset bubble. The second option would, therefore, focus on the difficult task of restoring competitive levels of unit labour costs by fostering productivity combined with moderate wage restraint. A third option is a delicate balance of the two. | En ligne : | https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:mKp_ySm-TBMJ:www.bertelsmann-stiftung [...] |
|