Why Austerity is Returning to Europe

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  • čas přidán 30. 04. 2024
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    The latest Eurostat data didn't make for happy reading with most of the EU running a deficit and 11 members in violation of fiscal rules. In this video, we'll explain Europe’s debt crisis; what the EU can or should do about it; and how it might be fixed.
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    //////////////////////
    1 - ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/pro...
    2 - www.ft.com/content/5125db1e-a...
    3 - www.lemonde.fr/en/les-decodeu...
    4 - www.icij.org/investigations/c...
    5 - www.ft.com/content/378ab955-e...
    6 - rightcasa.com/all-of-the-taxe...
    7 - taxfoundation.org/blog/spain-...
    8 - www.ft.com/content/5125db1e-a...

Komentáře • 670

  • @supernoodles908
    @supernoodles908 Před 16 dny +725

    Time to listen to my daily dose of economic problems via a soothing voice

  • @Rui301
    @Rui301 Před 16 dny +525

    Imagine calling us lazy and irresponsible back in the debt crisis and now only 2 countries are doing better than Portugal debt wise. Lmao.

    • @FlanPoirot
      @FlanPoirot Před 16 dny +29

      ya, eu também ri quando vi esse gráfico hahaha

    • @luismadeira3101
      @luismadeira3101 Před 16 dny +18

      I don't remember calling us lazy,but heavy spenders it was kinda true before but not now

    • @paulomartins1008
      @paulomartins1008 Před 16 dny +8

      A dica do Medina de orçamentar e não executar a dar frutos diplomáticos.

    • @Jonas_M_M
      @Jonas_M_M Před 16 dny +3

      You have followed austarity closer than we..

    • @Xtrems
      @Xtrems Před 16 dny +28

      As an eastern european I feel empathy for southern europe when I hear such prejudiced opinions. Though negative stereotypes about us are completely different than about you - we are never assumed to be lazy and you are never assumed to be drunken dummies - both are equally detached from reality.

  • @kevinrichard100
    @kevinrichard100 Před 16 dny +89

    The EU changed the fiscal rules in 2023.
    It's more flexible now.
    This video addresses the old fiscal rules.

    • @brownbear1657
      @brownbear1657 Před 16 dny +24

      How convenient....

    • @paul1979uk2000
      @paul1979uk2000 Před 16 dny +11

      @@brownbear1657 He's right thought, there's been a lot of complaints about the system for well over a decade with how inflexible the older system was.
      Maybe a more flexible system was needed to give countries more room to breath, as long as there is pressure to brings debts under control.

    • @jal051
      @jal051 Před 16 dny +7

      Sounds like USA's debt ceiling

    • @JSK010
      @JSK010 Před 16 dny +3

      @@paul1979uk2000 "Maybe a more flexible system was needed to give countries more room to breath, as long as there is pressure to brings debts under control."
      So lower the "pressure to bring debts under control", so that there is a flexible system in which... there is "pressure to bring debts under control"? Escalate to deescalate

    • @grimaffiliations3671
      @grimaffiliations3671 Před 16 dny

      The us debt ceiling isn't real because they controls their own currency, the EU countries do not

  • @RLDPI
    @RLDPI Před 16 dny +120

    Last week „wages are to low“ today „austerity” make up your mind Europe

    • @NorroTaku
      @NorroTaku Před 16 dny +79

      Fuck austerity
      Tax the rich if you are really concerned about debt
      Gotta spend money to make money

    • @jonasastrom7422
      @jonasastrom7422 Před 16 dny +41

      ​@@NorroTakuWow what a great idea, I wonder if it's been tried and failed for the last 70 years in europe..

    • @inbb510
      @inbb510 Před 16 dny +26

      @@NorroTaku , Europe is already the most taxed continent in the world.
      Anymore reckless increase in tax will just kill innovation and make Europe an extremely unattractive place to do business.
      Also if you want public services to be funded better in the long-term, you'll need to address your low fertility rates.

    • @Betweoxwitegan
      @Betweoxwitegan Před 16 dny +15

      ​​@@inbb510Europe is also the best continent in the world, correlation? I think not. I would advocate for a corporate tax reduction, import tax and low bracket income tax. Ireland has a healthy corporate tax rate and VAT for example and I would increase in RCGT, LVT, CAT, VAT in many nations. Corporate taxes are a highly inefficient form of taxation and only really serve a few functions, 0-15% is ideal I would say.
      Everyone needs to stop acting like Europe is a terrible place to do business or that it's stifling innovation due to their welfare state and more liberal policies. It's the complete opposite, Sweden, Finland, Denmark and Norway are all more innovative than The USA in qualitative metrics like startups per capita, international patents filed per capita, research papers published per capita, etc. Stockholm is just behind San Francisco for example.
      Furthermore, Ireland has a fertility rate above The USA slightly but it's still under the replacement rate and is something to address.

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox Před 16 dny +18

      @@inbb510 The most taxed (in the "developed" world) sure but that has little do with how those taxes are distributed. And I'd argue most places are severely undertaxed.
      Also a lot of money to be made from consumers is attractive to business. Taxing business and investing in social services leads to more consumption overall. It's not that simple.

  • @tomybartok99
    @tomybartok99 Před 16 dny +31

    Funny how Hungary has one of the biggest deficits and the yearly budget has already been spent. Not to mention the highest tax rate in the region. But the government invests mostly in propaganda. Any other public institutions are kept on a bare minimum budget

  • @Jordan-fd6cx
    @Jordan-fd6cx Před 16 dny +24

    In the UK it feels like we've been in a perma-crisis ever since 2008. When's the last time we had a 'good' year?

    • @grimaffiliations3671
      @grimaffiliations3671 Před 16 dny +7

      Before Tory austerity

    • @terryj50
      @terryj50 Před 15 dny +3

      @@grimaffiliations3671 since when did the tories run europe

    • @terryj50
      @terryj50 Před 15 dny +1

      what has that got to do with this this is the eu countries

    • @MathewLewit
      @MathewLewit Před 15 dny +1

      From macroeconomic view, 2016 was last OK one, then large companies freaked out due Brexit uncertainity and reduced investments. Rest of EU had good time until 2019. Since then, all Europe is in some sort of mess with no end in sight. Some minor rebound here and there, but my wallet says "No".

    • @grimaffiliations3671
      @grimaffiliations3671 Před 15 dny +2

      @@terryj50 the comment I was replying to is about the uk

  • @underratedbub
    @underratedbub Před 16 dny +160

    Another day, another economic problem in Europe

    • @sewur5034
      @sewur5034 Před 16 dny +4

      But we have rainbows!

    • @czechguy665
      @czechguy665 Před 16 dny +1

      We just live in pain

    • @The_Jester
      @The_Jester Před 16 dny +9

      That's what analysts and economist do, they find problems to discuss solutions indefinitely... if you don't talk, then you have no problems like China, nothing to talk, everything is perfect 🤣

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox Před 16 dny +1

      Well I think the graph at 1:25 puts things a little into perspective. In fact Europes fiscal balance % GDP remains one of the highest in the world.

    • @Dendarang
      @Dendarang Před 15 dny +1

      Yeah, it's pretty funny. EU's been "falling apart" every week since 2002 and we're still here.

  • @MegaSavvis
    @MegaSavvis Před 16 dny +32

    Thank you for providing links to your sources. I'm from Cyprus so my interest was piqued when you said that the Cyprus budget surplus in 2023 was due to Russian money laundering. You cite two articles that were published in 2023, but they actually detail Russian money laundering in Cyprus from before the Ukraine invasion, with some brief mentions of the impact of the outbreak of the 2022 Ukraine invasion. I am not denying that Russian money laundering was the bedrock of our economy the past couple of decades, but I'm not sure whether it's accurate to say it was responsible for the 2023 government surplus, it's not clear to what extent Russian money is still being laundered in Cyprus.

    • @nettcologne9186
      @nettcologne9186 Před 15 dny +1

      TLDR research is always poor, don't worry

    • @MegaSavvis
      @MegaSavvis Před 15 dny +3

      @@nettcologne9186 I’m still a big fan, I think it’s a good channel to get an overview of current affairs. I like how they condense and simplify information and cover a broad scope of news, hence their name, can’t blame them for occasionally making errors.

  • @albevanhanoy
    @albevanhanoy Před 16 dny +88

    The fuck you mean "Returning" ? Like it has ever stopped since 2008 lmao.

    • @nadie8093
      @nadie8093 Před 16 dny +12

      They have been spending like crazy since 2016

    • @gaborrajnai6213
      @gaborrajnai6213 Před 16 dny

      No we didnt.@@nadie8093

    • @pax6833
      @pax6833 Před 16 dny +3

      this is obviously wrong if you even just watch the video

    • @albevanhanoy
      @albevanhanoy Před 16 dny

      @@nadie8093 Government spending a lot doesn't mean the average person sees a dime. Most of this spending goes to pensioners.

    • @stefamart7
      @stefamart7 Před 16 dny +3

      ​@@albevanhanoythe fact that it goes to the pensioners is, again, the electorate fault because it doesn't vote to cut pensions, but it still isn't austerity. In the same way that you can be "austere" and give a bit of money to those who really need it in the right way, you can be a heavy spender and give it to people who don't need it.

  • @thijmstickman8349
    @thijmstickman8349 Před 16 dny +52

    Slow growth and a high tax burden, but rent keeps rising. Maybe tax the land owners?

    • @houseplant1016
      @houseplant1016 Před 16 dny +6

      And the multinationals, who not only made huge profit because of corona, but also although inflation is decreasing still keep the high food prices

    • @andymurdoch2776
      @andymurdoch2776 Před 16 dny +1

      “but also although inflation is decreasing still keep the high food prices“
      You obviously don’t understand inflation.

    • @looseycanon
      @looseycanon Před 16 dny +5

      That won't help. Landowners have the right to set their prices and the need for housing is extremely price inflexible. The landlords would simply forward that tax increase to tenants.

    • @thijmstickman8349
      @thijmstickman8349 Před 16 dny +5

      @@looseycanon Thats the opposite of how an inflexible (supply-inelastic) market works.
      The supply is constant, so in a P Q diagram the S curve is a vertical line. The equilibrium is solely determined by demand. Taxing would keep the price constant, only decreasing the supply surplus.
      Google georgist economics for a more comprehensive breakdown.
      Land taxes are the most liked taxes by economists across the political spectrum for a reason.

    • @grimaffiliations3671
      @grimaffiliations3671 Před 16 dny +2

      Land value taxes are the only taxes that cant be passed on to a consumer, because ant increase in rent will open you up to an identical increase in taxes

  • @ramasarrow2845
    @ramasarrow2845 Před 16 dny +22

    I just saw thru the window. Even the sun is going down. What a crisis.

  • @Crusader-tu9gb
    @Crusader-tu9gb Před 16 dny +7

    CYPRUS MENTIONED LETS GOOOO

  • @danielvalcarcel8062
    @danielvalcarcel8062 Před 16 dny +2

    It's funny that we talk about how we aplied austherity when tons of conutries have chronic deficits.

  • @davidray6962
    @davidray6962 Před 16 dny +34

    Austerity is the same as "false economy" - shortsighted penny pinching which will end up costing more in the future. The slow growth and increased spending on defense currently in Europe is at least mostly to blame on past austerity - missed opportunities and inadequate maintenance in the past costs more now. Doubling down on austerity will only exacerbate the problem.

    • @yoroshikuonegaishimasu8649
      @yoroshikuonegaishimasu8649 Před 16 dny +5

      Wrong, high spending is shortsighted. Austerity is spending less so it cant end up costing more, is impossible by definition

    • @davidray6962
      @davidray6962 Před 16 dny +15

      @@yoroshikuonegaishimasu8649 quick economics lesson: If you try to save money on your car by not getting oil changes or replacing worn tires, you soon won't have a car. Spending on maintenance, whether infrastructure or military or healthcare, is cheaper than repairing or replacing it later. A lot of the current rise in government costs is having to replace things like militaries and infrastructure which were allowed to fall into disrepair or disarray under previous austerity measures. Further austerity won't help replace them, and despite what libertarians, neo-liberals and anarchists say they are considered necessary by modern societies.

    • @pax6833
      @pax6833 Před 16 dny +2

      @@davidray6962 this. Austerity only makes sense if governments were wildly overspending/printing money (IE hyperinflation) which is pretty rare. Otherwise it's bad policy.

    • @panzerofthelake506
      @panzerofthelake506 Před 16 dny

      ​​@@davidray6962 The vast majority of expenses of these European countries are not just merely maintenance. It takes very little to maintain infrastructure, even healthcare when managed properly isn't all that expensive.
      You literally can't keep spending money you don't have without consequences, inflation and interest payments will destroy you. Austerity is only necessary when governments keep making short sighted decisions, deficit spending to gain quick political wins.

    • @oifikd1
      @oifikd1 Před 16 dny

      ​@@pax6833That's exactly what they did.

  • @Miamcoline
    @Miamcoline Před 16 dny +39

    Its actually crazy that not more is being done to rethink budgets. It is a moral and existential must for us to deal with cost of living, housing, climate, Russia at an absolute minimum, so we have to spend more, but we are already absolutely drowning under debt.
    We have to reinvent ourselves. Austerity was a disaster in countries like the UK and ended up being counterproductive. On top of that we have to massively rebuild and modernise our infrastructure, and reinvest in our healthcare, transportation, immigration, social housing, and utilities systems. We can do all of it like we've done before but its going to take a monumental effort and amount of money. Its far past the time.

    • @danielwebb8402
      @danielwebb8402 Před 16 dny +13

      In UK "Austerity" has meant "Spent a higher % GDP on public sector every single year than in any year from 97-07".
      So not austere at all

    • @stevestevenson3791
      @stevestevenson3791 Před 16 dny +2

      Thats great champ but we need to focus on making the special line go up /s

    • @jacobjones630
      @jacobjones630 Před 16 dny

      The US pushes austerity to keep you weak and unable to threaten American hegemony.

    • @yoroshikuonegaishimasu8649
      @yoroshikuonegaishimasu8649 Před 16 dny

      You are wrong, european governments need to spend less

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 Před 16 dny +1

      @@yoroshikuonegaishimasu8649 Europe needs to spend more but also to grow more. Taxes and regulations need to be cut, as well as some public services need to be concessioned in order to increase efficiency. The pension systems also need to be reformed given the demographic context.

  • @dookdevries8848
    @dookdevries8848 Před 16 dny

    Love that you've put David Cameron's 'For the Record' on display in EU news

  • @Zzzooooppp
    @Zzzooooppp Před 16 dny +7

    If Poland didn’t have to spend 4 percent on its Military because of its Geopolitical situation, it would be almost exactly where Ireland is 🤔

    • @2mek99
      @2mek99 Před 16 dny +2

      No. Poland spends at least 2 % long term. So the real difference is only 2%. With 5,1% debt in 2023 it would come close to 3% deficit in 2023.

    • @Zzzooooppp
      @Zzzooooppp Před 16 dny +1

      @@2mek99 if you’re going to say the long term spending is 2% you need to compare it to long term deficit. It’s dishonest to change only on half of the equation.

    • @2mek99
      @2mek99 Před 16 dny

      @@Zzzooooppp Deficit is deficit. Long term the goal is to balance the revenues and expenditures.

    • @Zzzooooppp
      @Zzzooooppp Před 16 dny +2

      @@2mek99 you don’t understand what is being said

    • @MichaelE.L
      @MichaelE.L Před 16 dny +2

      Poland also receives a ton of money from the EU, so without it the situation could be the same as Italy.

  • @ahmedtoufahi5198
    @ahmedtoufahi5198 Před 15 dny +5

    Austerity is the government saying: The structural problems of the system are bringing closer its end, but as we won't implement radical changes that will make some people less rich, you're gonna be poor for some time, it won't last long (wink wink).

    • @appstratum9747
      @appstratum9747 Před 10 dny

      You hit the nail right on the head. Austerity doesn't work and hasn't ever worked. It merely perpetuates and deepens inequality and kills economic investment, growth and productivity (which makes us all yet poorer). And as you allude to, austerity doesn't begin to address the elephant in the room: the effective economic enslavement - and we're not being over-dramatic here - of the vast majority of the population to a tiny but incredibly wealthy fraction of the population who can afford to exist entirely detached from the miserable reality that the rest of us occupy.
      The transfer of wealth from those of working age (particularly the young) and those in employment to those who are rent-seekers and economically inactive (and giving tax benefits to encourage and facilitate this trend) is strangling the life out of society. The inequality has always existed but is now really noticeable, even to those who are firmly well up the middle classes yet still starting to struggle. For those bumping along the bottom it is incredibly hard to see any way out of this perpetual misery.
      Which simply invites ever worsening political stability, populism and - eventually - results in democracies in existential crises. And that's particularly true when amplified by the corrosive effect of social media. Where fostering rage amongst the downtrodden is the most lucrative way for large big-tech social media platforms to make money. There's a huge profit motive in leveraging poverty and outrage that - as with Brexit - turns up at the ballot box and causes yet more havoc.
      You can understand some people who want to "burn the system to the ground". Because honestly, in their position why wouldn't they?

    • @ahmedtoufahi5198
      @ahmedtoufahi5198 Před 10 dny +1

      ​@@appstratum9747
      I agree 100% with your analysis. I hope that we can see in our lifetimes systems that put the well-being of people as its sole goal , not growth, not capital, not meaningless indexes and stats, just the well-being of people and the quality of their lives.

    • @appstratum9747
      @appstratum9747 Před 9 dny

      @@ahmedtoufahi5198 Indeed. Totally agree. And we're going to have to because with automation and AI (what I do for living) being able to replace people like never before in a wide range of (up until now lucrative) professions (including my own), the whole concept of distributing wealth in exchange for labour goes right out of the window. That leaves all the money in the hands of a tiny few who own all of that automation (or the infrastructure that it runs on). The rest of society becomes redundant from these owners of said capital.
      But the bottom line is that the rest of us will not accept starving to death and having no education and healthcare. And will lash out, self-destructively if necessary.
      So we really are going to have to have a major rethink of society putting people, quality of life and happiness/wellbeing/satisfaction right at society's core. Because all the traditional measures that you've mentioned become meaningless if they're relevant only to half a dozen global trillionaires (and even then in the abstract because that wealth is so obscene that it becomes meaningless to them, too).
      As we know, the growth figures say one thing and people's experience is already quite another, because that growth in GDP isn't shared equitably across the population. The stats have already become meaningless drivel for the majority of ordinary people. And they know and feel it. And are voting for destabilising populists because they feel powerless, are getting to the point of desperation and willing to vote for anything that upsets the apple cart and (they hope) gives them a chance.
      We cannot continue down that road. We just can't. It's a shame that politicians (at least for the most part) have their heads stuck in the sand. They're so addicted to the concept of growth (to make their lives easy, because traditionally economic growth leads to political success) that they don't really think much about the situation when that scenario no longer applies and/or when growth no longer happens at all (at least per capita) as processes and workflows reach as close as possible to 100% efficiency.
      Most politicians don't understand that the concept of economic growth is historically a very recent thing (from the industrial revolution onwards) but that always was going to be limited by maximum attainable efficiency and finite natural resources to consume.
      The bottom line is that we've all become fixated on the numbers and stats rather than what really counts: living a happy, fulfilling, emotionally satisfying and stimulating life and for us all to be able to do that sustainably and securely wherever we live in this world. Ultimately the economy is just a toolbox to facilitate that. The tools are not the be all and end all in themselves.

  • @victorgomez4107
    @victorgomez4107 Před 16 dny +39

    Austerity never left the chat.

    • @stefamart7
      @stefamart7 Před 16 dny +4

      There's almost never been such a thing as "austerity" in Europe, expecially in the south, come on. Running deficit after deficit and never cutting spending isn't austerity

    • @elomial724
      @elomial724 Před 12 dny

      ​@@stefamart7he is a commie

  • @oskars1419
    @oskars1419 Před 15 dny +3

    eu need trade with china and usa, and be an economic link between China and the USA

  • @steffen6987
    @steffen6987 Před 13 dny +1

    0:21 "European budgets" No, that's just budgets in the EU.

  • @paul1979uk2000
    @paul1979uk2000 Před 16 dny +3

    Considering how things have gone with Covid, the energy crisis, plus all the other commitments, they are actually holding up quite well, but it was never going to be easy during a transition which is what is going on in Europe right now, especially on the energy sector and military.
    Is it that big of a deal? Not in the short term, but changes will have to be made with reforms to kick-start the economy, after all, remember, we are in a transition that's impacting Europe far more than the rest of the world, especially when it comes to energy, but that's a short term problem, the long term problem is that Europe and especially the EU needs to start being a lot more competitive with high-tech.
    In any case, having debt isn't a bad thing if it's managed debt, and honestly, looking at the overall numbers, they're not that bad but could be better.

  • @GustavSvard
    @GustavSvard Před 16 dny +3

    Returning?
    It never left :(

  • @CryptoC4T
    @CryptoC4T Před 8 dny +1

    Poland and Estonia would meet Maastricht Criteria if they would spend around 1% of GDP on defence like most of EU.

  • @NorroTaku
    @NorroTaku Před 16 dny +4

    Good dept is so much more important then "osterity"
    If you cant build the road you cant reap the benefits of the factory
    Tax the rich if you are concerned about the the black zero

    • @esanahka9284
      @esanahka9284 Před 15 dny

      Rich are already getting taxed. EU has the worlds highest taxes

  • @thepax2621
    @thepax2621 Před 16 dny +40

    At some point, its useless to have a rule regarding debt at all, if everyone and their mother runs a "debt deficit" 😅
    Whats the point? 🙈

    • @Joey-ct8bm
      @Joey-ct8bm Před 16 dny +3

      What's the point? I'm voting out of the EU next time. Italy freaking again. For home improvements!? They need to be put on economic quarantine.

    • @nekdo_kavc
      @nekdo_kavc Před 16 dny +1

      Some of us follow the rule, the others should be punished!

    • @HahaDamn
      @HahaDamn Před 16 dny

      @@Joey-ct8bmbro they literally have some of the best growth rates in Europe, Germans are the idiots for their debt break rule which has literally crippled their infrastructure over many decades and left them out of EV markets

    • @HahaDamn
      @HahaDamn Před 16 dny +9

      @@Joey-ct8bmand the historical weakness of the Italian and other southern European economies literally helps German exports by weakening the Euro lmao - there’s a reason Germany wanted the Euro…

    • @thepax2621
      @thepax2621 Před 16 dny

      @@nekdo_kavc And are they? I think we both know better... 🙄
      These days Europe decided to "share" the debt 🙈

  • @simon2493
    @simon2493 Před 16 dny +1

    Poland is exception here with high debt dude to military spending.

  • @Cicero_de_fato
    @Cicero_de_fato Před 15 dny +1

    We could easily abandon the green transition and the military aid for Ukraine…

  • @theconqueringram5295
    @theconqueringram5295 Před 16 dny

    I never knew it stopped.

  • @viktornovomestsky3999
    @viktornovomestsky3999 Před 16 dny +10

    Sorry, but the Czech republic has introduced serious measures, partly higher taxes on some products, partly decrease of subsidies and mainly a pension reform which has been 20 years overdue...
    We are therefore expecting our debt to amount to 2,2% in 2024 only, and it might even be much better, as we are expecting serious foreign investments, mainly from South Korea and Taiwan..
    It has even been reflected in our credit ratings, as all agencies have given us the best rating out of all the former USSR countries...
    That all with our defence spending raising to 2% of GDP...

    • @looseycanon
      @looseycanon Před 16 dny

      Yeah, problem is, these effects did not come to pass just yet. You know, how things work around here... we try something and it always ends poorly...

    • @viktornovomestsky3999
      @viktornovomestsky3999 Před 16 dny +1

      ​@@looseycanon All the measures mentioned above are effective as of January 1st this year...
      Only the pension reform needs to be passed, but I have no doubt it will, thanks to the majority within our current government..
      You're right, that the pension reform will come into effect on the 1st of January 2025, but that will only lead to a further improvement of our budget deficit of 2,2% this year..
      Plus there will be economic growth of course, as the inflation caused by te Russian war is back to 2%..

  • @williambailey1712
    @williambailey1712 Před 16 dny

    There are massive depts within the target payment system which gives unlimited free credit.

  • @Amelos1494
    @Amelos1494 Před 16 dny

    Can you do a TDLR about the UN Security Council meeting yesterday?

  • @ChroniclesOfCallum
    @ChroniclesOfCallum Před 16 dny +3

    'Fiscal Funk' is the name of the Tory Party's house band.

    • @terryj50
      @terryj50 Před 15 dny

      can you tell me what eu country the tory party runs

  • @dankspain
    @dankspain Před 10 dny

    Denmark should be an example administration efficiency and fiscal policy for the rest of Europe.

  • @monicahoward7443
    @monicahoward7443 Před 16 dny +1

    Not mentioning the insane numbers of jobs lost in Italy, Spain ect since many multinational companies have relocated those positions in Portugal. Shamed! Productivity and revenue from countries while jobs removed in lisbon ( horrible houses, expensive rent, etc). Air liquide, Samsung, Airbus, Essity, and millions more! Utterly unfair.

    • @elomial724
      @elomial724 Před 12 dny

      If company moves from one place it means that it will be more profitable somewhere else (which also means more needed).

  • @natedcarr6148
    @natedcarr6148 Před 14 dny

    Part of the reason for economic woes could be the massive borrowing and printing of money during the pandemic, which of course causes inflation and larger debt.

  • @moron0000
    @moron0000 Před 16 dny +3

    Yay austerity. Can't forget the time the UK did austerity for like 10 years and surprise surprise, it did not help the economy whatsoever 🥳🥳🥳 Just, you know. The NHS going 💥💥💥💥💥

  • @thedude7319
    @thedude7319 Před 16 dny

    00:50 how ? Decimation and restarting

  • @steffenberr6760
    @steffenberr6760 Před 16 dny +5

    I think institutions like the EU really need platforms like this that edecuate people on stories like this and to get a better sense of the bigger picture.
    Thank you TLDR for all you do 🙏

    • @Loostyc
      @Loostyc Před 16 dny +1

      The EU needs its own BBC

    • @elomial724
      @elomial724 Před 12 dny

      EU should be abolished

    • @Loostyc
      @Loostyc Před 12 dny

      @@elomial724 That would cause an unprecedented economic and political collapse.

    • @elomial724
      @elomial724 Před 12 dny

      @@Loostyc Ecomomical one would only last few months but it is neccesary to relieve Europe from the monstrous eurocommunist regime. What do you mean by political collapse? Also I am not in favour of abolishing EEA/EFTA so I am pro free markets without customs, though Schengen must be abolished too for the time being for solving migration and multiculturalism

    • @steffenberr6760
      @steffenberr6760 Před 12 dny

      @@elomial724 funny joke go get a life and a brain while youre at it

  • @gamecubekingdevon3
    @gamecubekingdevon3 Před 16 dny +2

    The title is assuming austerity left in the first place lol

  • @hchzoz90
    @hchzoz90 Před 15 dny

    It seems worth mentioning that government spending is a part of the GDP. So a comparatively large US deficit and their stronger GDP growth are intrinsically linked. Growing moderately but without a big deficit may - depending on t he country and its economic situation - be the wiser choice. There is demographic change and younger generations have to pay the interest on that debt.

  • @Zzzooooppp
    @Zzzooooppp Před 16 dny +1

    Is Wegovy really pronounced with a German/Polish W?

  • @RightCenterBack321
    @RightCenterBack321 Před 2 dny

    She sounds like that woman from the "Rainbow Six" series who briefs you before every mission.

  • @G_Kchrst
    @G_Kchrst Před 16 dny +1

    It never left Greece aside from the 3 covid years of 2021-2023.

  • @chickenfishhybrid44
    @chickenfishhybrid44 Před 10 dny

    Its funny how one of the main contentions in the comments is if "Europe" was ever even practicing Austerity in the first or on the other hand if it ever stopped.

  • @demran17
    @demran17 Před 9 dny

    romnaia is making some huge energy infrastructural projects atm that will benefit the whole of europe... ofc the debt is high now, but it will pay off in the future so i don't see what the problem is

  • @tommske
    @tommske Před 8 dny

    maybe do the reforms and austerity in economic prosperous times and stimulate the economy during hard times. but i guess politicians and administrators just can't handle money. Maybe government should be stripped down to the bare essentials and let the people themselves decide what their money is for.

  • @cosimoserpolla5710
    @cosimoserpolla5710 Před 16 dny +11

    Austerity has already proven to be the wrong solution.

    • @TheIrishny
      @TheIrishny Před 16 dny

      Has spending more and more been proven to be the right solution?

    • @class9jeeaspirant
      @class9jeeaspirant Před 16 dny

      Why can't EU decrease spending on bureaucracy rather than benefits to citizens ​@@TheIrishny

    • @TheIrishny
      @TheIrishny Před 16 dny +1

      @@class9jeeaspirant Bureaucracy is needed to administer the ever increasing benefits for those citizens.
      They're not separate.

    • @cosimoserpolla5710
      @cosimoserpolla5710 Před 16 dny +1

      @@TheIrishny It's got us out of recessions multiple times

    • @TheIrishny
      @TheIrishny Před 16 dny

      @@cosimoserpolla5710 Saying it "gets us out of recessions" is like saying "Morphine fixes broken legs".
      It doesnt. It makes things seem nice for a while and piles up more problems down the line.

  • @mikkelv7020
    @mikkelv7020 Před 16 dny +15

    Running a deficit is not inherently bad.. If your country does it every year for 10 years, sure there could be some underlying problems. It all depends on what the money is used for. I would guess a lot of the money spend now is on military, which is a bad thing (economically), but that doesnt mean its been bad all the years.

    • @namelamus8476
      @namelamus8476 Před 16 dny

      If country is growing, debt automatically becomes easier to control. If you have debt in your currency, you are in charge of the situation as you can always help yourself by "printing".

    • @neodym5809
      @neodym5809 Před 16 dny

      Well, you guess wrong. Most of the money is spend on social welfare, infrastructure and pensions.

    • @inbb510
      @inbb510 Před 16 dny

      The EU barely spends its money on the military.

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox Před 16 dny

      @@neodym5809 The new spending is in large parts military. Though even that arguably feeds back into the economy to a degree both through soldiers wages and the arms industry. Just not nearly as effectively as many other things.

    • @pedrorequio5515
      @pedrorequio5515 Před 16 dny

      @@XMysticHeroxOr US Weapons

  • @alexciocca4451
    @alexciocca4451 Před 16 dny +1

    Does it really matter cause there ain’t no money anyhow just move the decimal point on paper that’s money

  • @nicholaswaple7801
    @nicholaswaple7801 Před 12 dny

    I didn't know it had left ?

  • @LordXamon
    @LordXamon Před 16 dny +2

    Returning? It never left

  • @caseclosed9342
    @caseclosed9342 Před 16 dny

    Whenever Georgia presents half the comments are how everyone loves her and the other half are people arguing about what she’s presenting…

  • @TheInternetcord
    @TheInternetcord Před 16 dny +3

    "What the EU can or *should* do"
    Stick with can do and remove the word should. This is better for impartiality.
    Love the channels, also this new reporter! Keep it up.

  • @GrotesqueSoulthorn
    @GrotesqueSoulthorn Před 13 dny

    "Austerity in the 2010s" never happened. Instead of austerity, public spending in Greece grew from 53% of GDP on 2010 to 60.2% in 2020.

  • @3zObafouzr
    @3zObafouzr Před 16 dny +1

    what's the rational behind 3%? feels like it's just a random number some economist removed from their rear end

    • @pedrorequio5515
      @pedrorequio5515 Před 15 dny

      Politicians, this was negotiated by politicians, there is no rational basis, they had to put the limit some where and that was that, however it is the point where a modest growth of 1%, and a 2% inflation(assumed as target in the long term) do converge to make your Debt to GDP not grow significantly.

  • @navisoul-oi8mo
    @navisoul-oi8mo Před 12 dny

    Gvnt needs to get more efficient and stop wasting money. Easy fix.

  • @pistolen87
    @pistolen87 Před 16 dny +2

    What will probably happen. EU will increase its spending through deficits, increase inflation target to 3 or 4% to decrease the burden of the debt. Let the population pay through increased inflation.

    • @neodym5809
      @neodym5809 Před 16 dny +2

      Keep up. Inflation is almost down to 2% again.

  • @sydneylaroche8276
    @sydneylaroche8276 Před 15 dny

    Did austerity ever leave? We had austerity my entire adult life in the UK (and most of this time was whilst we were in the EU before anyone tries to discredit what I'm saying). I'm 31. Guess what? The deficit grew. We suffered for no reason at all.

  • @MaxiMonkU2B
    @MaxiMonkU2B Před 16 dny +29

    Everything is a crisis eheh

    • @legtendgav556
      @legtendgav556 Před 16 dny +2

      Really make you question the leadership or the reporting
      Or both

    • @MaxiMonkU2B
      @MaxiMonkU2B Před 16 dny +1

      @@legtendgav556 Or the incentives made by platforms to force them to do this amount of click baiting... Or even human nature for being so exploitable by tragedy. Who knows....!

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox Před 16 dny +1

      Hardly. Europe fiscal balance % GDP remains one of the highest. If this is a crisis the entire world has been in an economics crisis for decades.

    • @legtendgav556
      @legtendgav556 Před 16 dny +2

      @@XMysticHerox haha wow haha... that would be an unfortunate discovery..............
      haha...

    • @Anonymous-hp1tg
      @Anonymous-hp1tg Před 16 dny +1

      Thats just how social media algorithm works today. Negative sells.

  • @drjustin84
    @drjustin84 Před 16 dny

    Cause it worked SO WELL the last time!

  • @user-nc2qj2jc5q
    @user-nc2qj2jc5q Před 16 dny +2

    Only if the conservatives and far right wing in EU elections. Like last time.

  • @danielmartinezdowsett4776

    Did it ever leave??

  • @dominiksvagr7531
    @dominiksvagr7531 Před 8 dny

    How about releasing most restrictions on small businesses?
    It'll create a lot of productivity and thus will allow for higher taxes, states won't have to pay so much on social programs because people will have their own resources to get, most of the times, better services which will lead to decreased spending.
    Add a bit more hierarchical free economics (e.i. right wing liberalism) and things will get better faster.

  • @mladenmatosevic4591
    @mladenmatosevic4591 Před 14 dny

    It is not introduction of austerity, it is doubling down on it.

  • @alko_xo
    @alko_xo Před 10 dny

    Debt! Debt! Debt! Debt!

  • @josephhesse2634
    @josephhesse2634 Před 16 dny +1

    Weak gdp growth = lower taxes for the gov.
    I don’t understand the logic here.
    Weak growth means growth right?
    Even if the evonomy stagnate and if tax rate remain the same, ceteris paribus, tax revenue stay the same. No? 😶 I’m genuinely confused.

    • @looseycanon
      @looseycanon Před 16 dny

      that is the problem. Ceteris paribus is a strong requirement, which is almost never met. That same 15% VAT means something else in one year and the other, for instance, because of total yearly expanded discretionary income (income after taxes, housing, utilities and expenses to hold down a job). If this is higher, then you earn more on VAT, but if economy is not growing as fast, this discretionary income can even fall year on year despite economic growth, people start saving for worse times and you'll end up paradoxically with lower tax revenue year on year.

    • @grimaffiliations3671
      @grimaffiliations3671 Před 16 dny

      Weak growth means high unemployment which means larger deficits to support the unemployed

    • @MathewLewit
      @MathewLewit Před 15 dny +1

      Governments tend to plan for increase in mandatory spending (for instance pensions and healthcare as population ages). If economy will not keep up with this growing spending demands in the future, they will have an issue. Money markets know that and incorporate higher risk premiums already today, making things even worse. Hence so much panic when growth is weak.

    • @josephhesse2634
      @josephhesse2634 Před 14 dny

      Okay. Got it.
      So essentially it is because “ceteris paribus” is a fantasy scenario only used during theory study.
      Make sense.

  • @grinsgefal
    @grinsgefal Před 15 dny

    1:39 Is there any list where Denmark doesn't come out on top?

    • @960john
      @960john Před 10 dny

      I believe low taxation, if it can be seen as a good thing.

    • @grinsgefal
      @grinsgefal Před 10 dny

      @@960john Low taxation has a price as well: public services must be paid for individually. Which of course is paradoxical since these services ought to be public.

  • @coreymcmahon5144
    @coreymcmahon5144 Před 16 dny

    It left?

  • @_ata_3
    @_ata_3 Před 16 dny

    Why nobody's looking into rich people's pockets? There's the money countries need to finance and invest on public and private spending.

  • @thelusogerman3021
    @thelusogerman3021 Před 16 dny +1

    Idk about other countries but austerity worked wonder here in Portugal. Of course it helps that we are usually ruled by the corrupt socialists and during the crisis we elected the also corrupt but not as much social democrats who are also more fiscally responsible (the socialists being populists spend a LOT on things the people like but that we don't have enough money for)

  • @jivkoyanchev1998
    @jivkoyanchev1998 Před 16 dny

    Increase taxation, lower social spending and end the stupid green new deal and you'll see how most countries will start running surpluses.

  • @petroskyriacou560
    @petroskyriacou560 Před 15 dny

    It's astonishing how quickly TLDR's accusation of "Laundering Russian money" has managed to eclipse Cyprus' commendable economic discipline in FY24.
    This overlooks the stringent EU-wide sanctions prohibiting any involvement with Russian funds. Such a statement seems unfairly dismissive of Cyprus' efforts.

  • @Ticklestein
    @Ticklestein Před 16 dny

    There is a fully untapped market for an armed populus. It would grow the economy and improve the national defense status whilst 90% of the cost will be consumers spending to purchase arms.

  • @ddp4244
    @ddp4244 Před 6 dny

    So let me summarize what you said : WE ARE FUCKED
    Nice period of time to live in, the weather burn literelly the economy is burning literelly and the geopolitical is chill until gonna start to burn literelly. Nice anything that i missed ?

  • @augustiner3821
    @augustiner3821 Před 14 dny

    It must just be governed correctly: better education, controlled immigration, increasing share of women in work, better playing field for innovations, attracting foreign investment, higher productivity, better budget management, reduction of tax evasion, taxing global (tech-) companies at the source of revenues, ....

  • @ramon475
    @ramon475 Před 16 dny

    State debt is not that much of a problem, no austerity measures needed

  • @ksj1526
    @ksj1526 Před 16 dny +2

    How about the uk?

    • @PaulJohn01
      @PaulJohn01 Před 16 dny +1

      Not in the EU 🤔

    • @ksj1526
      @ksj1526 Před 16 dny

      @PaulJohn01 I know so that's why I'm asking a video of the economic outlook of the uk.

    • @PaulJohn01
      @PaulJohn01 Před 16 dny +1

      @@ksj1526 Maybe they covered that on their sister channel TLDR UK ?

    • @ksj1526
      @ksj1526 Před 16 dny

      @PaulJohn01 I have subscribed that channel as well, but it seems tldr hasn't made a video for the uk yet, so I hope they can make one.

    • @PaulJohn01
      @PaulJohn01 Před 16 dny

      @@ksj1526 Well if it's negative news about the UK they definitely will 🤣🤣
      I think they removed the "UK" part from their logo but kept it on the channel name unlike all their other channels.

  • @TheRoyL
    @TheRoyL Před 16 dny +1

    Increase productivity?…na

  • @Jones7095
    @Jones7095 Před 16 dny

    The sooner we negotiate a deal with Russia the better. Ukraine is costing far too much money and not that strategically important.

  • @helmutkohl8336
    @helmutkohl8336 Před 16 dny

    Maybe i overlooked it in your video but there is also the thing with EU deficit rules, that there is no real scientific evidence for the numbers and rates given. For example why 3 percent for new debt per year is okay and 3.5 percent are not or that public should not be higher than 60% of total gdp and not 90%. Don't get me wrong, debt-rules are useful and important but following them stoically can cause problems like crippling public investment resulting into crumbling infrastructure, schools, etc. which I would call "structural" or "technical" debt

    • @pedrorequio5515
      @pedrorequio5515 Před 16 dny +1

      You have to put a line somewhere. You are not fined for having more than 60%, but you have to show a path to that 60%, there are very few EU countries below the 60% threshold. The Maastricht Criteria is more complexo involving primary surpluses, Budget deficits and Structural deficits that measures future commitments.

  • @funnelhacking
    @funnelhacking Před 8 dny

    You know the US is in a horrendous debt situation right

  • @Jokur-km4id
    @Jokur-km4id Před 16 dny +3

    Lol, that smile when she said “weak growth”😏

  • @clarkhunt4014
    @clarkhunt4014 Před 14 dny

    Well if austerity comes back to Europe again it can kiss good bye to growth for another decade good luck

  • @AnonymousAlcoholic772
    @AnonymousAlcoholic772 Před 15 dny

    The solution is obvious. We, the Greeks, owe a debt to our neighbors for showing us the way and the benefits of austerity. Thank you for helping us reform. Now, let us help you get rid of your irresponsible and profligate ways. Least we could do. AUSTERITY! AUSTERITY! AUSTERITY!

  • @posthocprior
    @posthocprior Před 16 dny

    It wasn’t mentioned, why is Ireland the exception? That is, why does Ireland have a budget surplus?

    • @cesare4926
      @cesare4926 Před 16 dny +8

      Because it is a tax haven for corporations and last few years the tax receipts were huge. It's what's called a windfall tax, which is basically a one off payment

    • @cormacdonnelly365
      @cormacdonnelly365 Před 16 dny +4

      Strong economic performance boosted by corporation tax receipts, as well as two very capable finance ministers. Last Irish budget also included the creation of a sovereign wealth fund similar to Norway's, storing billions in corporation tax and placing statutory restrictions on accessing it.

  • @raphym.3666
    @raphym.3666 Před 16 dny

    I may be a total dumbass in economics but... default on debt ? I mean... it would give more money for the budget, while reducing the risks of economic problems, no ? Sure, it can create some recessions, but there is already one, I don't see how it is so impossible to do. But again, I'm an absolute idiot in economy.

    • @matthewhungerford1861
      @matthewhungerford1861 Před 15 dny

      if you default once that goes on your track record and you'll be dealing with higher interest rates for the next 60 - 90 years. As people will demand a higher return. Europe and US have lower interest rates on their debt vs other countries with similair debt burdens. Russia defaulting in the 90s still haunts it till this day it had a 8 percent till 2022 interest rate on debt even though it had no debt.

  • @phooogle
    @phooogle Před 16 dny +2

    I know Norway isn't in the EU but you could ask them for their spare pocket money they carry around in a money clip to help out - that'd solve the entire crisis

    • @houseplant1016
      @houseplant1016 Před 16 dny

      Countries like Norway are the ones that leeched us because of the energy prices. Norway expects us to help them when Russia attacks them, but they didn't even help Europe in the energy crisis

  • @jal051
    @jal051 Před 16 dny

    Well, at least this time Spain isn't at the very bottom. Still not approved, but close. It's better than nothing.

  • @Augustus_Imperator
    @Augustus_Imperator Před 16 dny +7

    Green transition is unsustainable

    • @TTTT-sj3vz
      @TTTT-sj3vz Před 16 dny

      no if you keep nuclear running if germany kept their working nuclear reactor on they would have 100 clean energy but they choose to follow stupid greens ideas

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 Před 16 dny

      Actually that's false, clean energy these days is cheaper than fossil fueled energy. What's unsustainable is the disastrous "green policies" that some countries have done that ended up doing the opposite effect.

    • @TTTT-sj3vz
      @TTTT-sj3vz Před 16 dny

      @@diogorodrigues747 if it is cheaper why do developing nations install fossil fuel plants rather than solar even if they have better natural conditions?

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 Před 16 dny

      ​@@TTTT-sj3vz Because corruption and lobbies. Also most of those countries aren't democratic, there is neither a discussion about what is being done nor a control of what is done. By the way, that generalization of developing nations is also wrong - South American nations depend a lot on renewable sources of energy like hydro, for example.
      The thing is that, in Europe, countries that have a bigger production of green energy (nuclear, solar, hydro, wind, etc.) have much cheaper energy than the countries powered by coal or natural gas. Just compare the energy prices of Norway or France with the ones of Germany or Italy. And there are even more striking examples to compare.

    • @Augustus_Imperator
      @Augustus_Imperator Před 16 dny

      @@diogorodrigues747 there is nothing cheaper than nuclear, gas and coal. Europe thrived on it, now that cheap russian gas and oil are tight we're seeing the effects. infrastructure to get green energy to totally replace fossil fuel it's just not doable

  • @paulomartins1008
    @paulomartins1008 Před 16 dny +5

    "Acquired rights" is the real issue at play.

  • @phooogle
    @phooogle Před 16 dny +3

    I REALLY wish TLDR would learn to use EU and European properly - these are not interchangeable descriptors and your continual lack of accuracy is irritating.

  • @ala.ba7394
    @ala.ba7394 Před 4 dny

    Everything is well deserved. People in Europe have lost their work ethic a long time ago. They just vape and drive around in SUVs

  • @punitapillai5091
    @punitapillai5091 Před 16 dny

    Thank the US and Von Der Layen for this crisis!!!!!😢

  • @_MrMoney
    @_MrMoney Před 16 dny +4

    Gee who would've thought that spending more money than what you get will AGAIN generate a huge deficit.
    Don't start crying again when the whole thing crumbles down and we're forced into austerity again.

  • @univeropa3363
    @univeropa3363 Před 16 dny +15

    That's what we get for following America like trained poodles.

  • @user-uw5ps6nr8g
    @user-uw5ps6nr8g Před 16 dny +1

    Another day,another crap disaster

  • @HahaDamn
    @HahaDamn Před 16 dny

    The EU the countries with the largest growth rates, have the biggest deficits…

  • @rgrgraterol
    @rgrgraterol Před 16 dny +4

    Mixed messages. I’ve just watched news at DW saying that EU economy is out of recession and growing as Germany is recovering.

    • @LEONSKENNEDY91
      @LEONSKENNEDY91 Před 16 dny

      same

    • @cow_tools_
      @cow_tools_ Před 16 dny

      Running defecits is good for growth.

    • @yoroshikuonegaishimasu8649
      @yoroshikuonegaishimasu8649 Před 16 dny

      ​@@cow_tools_deficits always destroys the economy on the long term, by debt or inflation, its what happens in venezuela and argentina

    • @cow_tools_
      @cow_tools_ Před 16 dny +2

      @@yoroshikuonegaishimasu8649 Many of the world's growing economies have run deficits most of the time.

  • @Tola5657
    @Tola5657 Před 16 dny

    Denmark way too go