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@vladtheimpalerofd1rtypajee31610 ай бұрын
Here is an idea for a new economic indicator. The number of desperate Indians migrating to a country should be used as a measure of a country's development levels. The more the rate of migration, the more the development and vice versa.
@Jack-md2uf10 ай бұрын
Economics Explained has a terrible reputation among academic economists. Essentially, unless you're Australia (where he's from), your country is currently or about to fall into an economic death spiral. Ever since watching that absurd video on the UK's economy, which was full of inaccurate claims, I've been highly sceptical of every video released.
@cirentXD10 ай бұрын
Please review Canada again. The economy is so trash over here and I don't know how to improve it
@jasonnierenburg161710 ай бұрын
Why was there no leaderboard?
@vladtheimpalerofd1rtypajee31610 ай бұрын
Here is an idea for a new economic indicator. The number of desperate Indians migrating to a country should be used as a measure of a country's development levels. The more the rate of migration, the more the development and vice versa.
@rylucia9 ай бұрын
I'm an Australian living in France with a job, wife, kids, etc. The job protections and work life balance are comforting (and sometimes even confounding) even if wages are lower. Couldn't the work/life balance and job protections be used to draw in skilled workers from less balanced economies? It is a huge reason why we continue to live here.
@inbb5109 ай бұрын
The rigid job protections is a double edge sword. Applying "too much" protection could stifle innovation within companies as these enterprises have little to no incentive to innovate as efficiency more often than not leads to needing less workers to produce the same output. This has created problems for youth unemployment where companies have a bias against younger workers as many companies that do pay well don't want to take risks of hiring the "wrong" worker or someone that is inexperienced. It is extremely hard to fire people in French companies even if the person is not fit for the job. Also, the birthrate problem is starting to bite France like every other European country and was partly why Macron raised the retirement age. In the most honest terms, a welfare state, despite its humane advantages is pretty much structured like a Ponzi scheme. Young workers and children are the key ingredients for such society to be viable. But a mixture of cultural and economic issues is bringing the French Social Security system to breaking point, like a slow car crash.
@TR4R9 ай бұрын
Bonjour! J'ai appris français et allemand, mais pour moi la France a été toujours comme une deuxième option parce que le marché de travail est très competitif. Vraiment je pense à émigrer à l'Allemagne et utiliser le français comme un plus et seulement s'il est necessaire. Est-ce que vous pensez la même chose? Je suis microbiologiste (en realité mon métier est laboratoriste clinique). Je rêve en habiter en Europe.
@rylucia9 ай бұрын
@@TR4R Well done on learning french! I agree in that it is competitive. Everyone is highly educated compared to Europe and imo employers tend towards highly specialized candidates rather than candidates with divers yet applicable experience. Don't really know much about German work culture, but I have a few friends that emigrated there from France to work, so you wouldn't be alone ☺️
@BeyDex9 ай бұрын
@@TR4R comme tu parles français et allemand ça peut être intéressant d'essayer la Suisse comme ce sont les deux langues les plus utilisées dans le pays, tu auras un coût de la vie élevé mais les salaires sont vraiment beaucoup plus élevés que dans le reste de l'Europe. Sinon oui l'Allemagne me paraît plus intéressante dans ton cas que la France
@ni92749 ай бұрын
France already has a lot of skilled worker and is producing a lot of high tech technology, like France is the only country in the world with the US capable of producing a nuclear aircraft carrier
@ibnk97529 ай бұрын
I'm french and I study economics. I have never been convinced by economics explained but now they made a video on a subject I know quite well, my doubts are confirmed. It's just a stack of clichés about France that have been seen hundreds of times and as many times disproved. Where are the sources of the video in addition ?
@Chronically_ChiII9 ай бұрын
Could you please provide an example of disproven clichés that you find the most outrageous?
@lizziemallow9 ай бұрын
@@Chronically_ChiII I might add, and this one I am not sure about, but I heard this "wage price spiral" isn't as common nor harmful as it seems.Nor as unstoppable. Type "wage price spiral debunked" into google and see for yourself
@Elmais319 ай бұрын
Yea ty, i thought exactly the same. And the last line "but now it's just getting outcompeted by places that are willing to work harder in ways that are more economically competitive" is just poorly written. This channel is from the US or GB probably, they only know ultracapitalism and judge everything with bias.
@Bubblegob9 ай бұрын
Oooh so this is the Whatifalthist of economics!
@fernandojosegp9 ай бұрын
Thanks, completely agree as someone who lives in France. Also saying low unemployment is a big problem in France is just nonsense, historically France's unemployment has been higher than its peers. The whole video is a bunch of bs to be honest
@MasterChaoko10 ай бұрын
Thesis of the video: economic well-being and sustainability is a function of productivity & competition Quote from the closing statement: "but now it's just getting outcompeted by places that are *willing to work harder* in ways that are more economically competitive" This odd touch of catty-ness is super unnecessary to the point where it's self-undermining. I don't use the word "objectively" often, but this is a situation where the script would have objectively worked better had someone crossed out that bit in the editing room: "but now it's just getting outcompeted by places that are that are more economically competitive" I encourage others to consider the counterfactuals; Japan's "hard" work culture which has yielded little, if any, substantial economic productivity gains. Perhaps I've gone and unfairly twisted the original intended meaning of the script... but if anything I think that underscores the problem: "working hard" is a values judgement with no concrete basis in economic science.
@nandishhiremath143910 ай бұрын
Oh my God you just voiced what I was thinking about you are right working hard is an economic value. I was thinking why is there so much emphasis on productivity and competition but it’s kind of interesting looking at it and seeing France also developed in Japan also developed but the work cultures are so significantly different From a guy who lives in India. This is very interesting because we are developing economy right now. so thanks a lot for voicing this. This was literally the problem I had with the video❤
@dannydenison625310 ай бұрын
I loved the off and unnecessarily part. I had to point out that living beyond their means is so quickly said pointing towards retirement, and working class. And so rarely pointed towards those such as the previously mentioned luxury brand billionaire.
@theBear8945110 ай бұрын
Most measures of "productivity" are really measuring population growth. This is why Japan does so poorly.
@jonathanodude666010 ай бұрын
he means working harder as in businesses spending more on increasing output per worker. So, more like the US than Japan.
@szamszatan10 ай бұрын
yes or you could look hours worked per week. his argument does not have any basis in data
@FriedEgg1019 ай бұрын
I have a lot of respect for the French. I know this is an economics channel, but if you just examine France through the eyes of an economist, you miss a lot of what makes the country great. You touched on this tbf. They'll be fine; they have a variety of geography and climate, almost as much coast as the uk, and a huge amount of farmland. Tourism for days. And historically they've made some sensible choices on things like energy and defense.
@OK-ws7ti9 ай бұрын
hear hear
@john.88059 ай бұрын
He’s talking about productivity and relative productivity. Overall, productivity eats tourism and farmland/resources for breakfast. Just look at Russia. You can’t fake it and you can’t buy it. It’s the special sauce. It’s what made Germany, Japan and China nr. 2,3&4.
@leme56399 ай бұрын
@@john.8805 France is fine for 700 years... I doubt this will change in our lifetime.
@bugsygoo9 ай бұрын
And cheese.
@ishotuknok9 ай бұрын
They are absolutely crowded with migrants from third world countries Basically when judging france you could compare it more to central africa
@Burgerboss-rb7un9 ай бұрын
I have spent a lot of time in France and my brother in law lives there. All I heard is “Yes I can earn more but I get more time off here”. They aren’t loosing young people. They are proud of the way they live.
@trollmcclure26599 ай бұрын
France is the 2nd victim of brain drain in the world after India, they are losing young brains but attracting lazy young people, and no they don't like it, it's one of the most depressed and pessimistic countries in the world
@mameebox52328 ай бұрын
We are loosing very skilled workers. Personally I work mostly for clients outside of the country because money.
@Healthy_Toki5 ай бұрын
@Zero-kd1bd the cope is coming from the people who live in countries with trash work-life balances that run people into the ground by their early 40s. You'll see, lol.
@RealMrTea3 ай бұрын
We are not losing skilled workers, we don't make them anymore. When there was enough of them, there was a national push to make them. Nowadays politics only deal with it as "if needed we will make thé job attractive for foreign skilled workers" witch don't work so well. Don't change thé french way of life, just change thé politics for thooses that don't think hospital are a cost, but an investissement for exemple.
@auraguard021210 ай бұрын
EE said "The Industrial Revolution" so many times, I thought he was going to quote the Unibomber.
@kingslushie101810 ай бұрын
Oh my gosh 😂
@FictionHubZA10 ай бұрын
Plot twist, he is Ted. 😂
@JamalW23910 ай бұрын
Understanding Ted Kaczynski’s motives are a sign of maturity.
@Ryanowning10 ай бұрын
@@JamalW239 Understanding, sympathizing, but still rejecting his beliefs are signs of wisdom.
@FictionHubZA10 ай бұрын
@@JamalW239 He was a repressed femboy who wanted to blame society for his lack of social skills. Sure, he made some valid points about technology. But, a lot of his suffering was self-imposed.
@Angel24Marin10 ай бұрын
I think is a bit disingenuous to say dirigisme causes inflation in the 70-80s when every western country have the same inflation graph due to the oil crisis.
@Al3xandeer9 ай бұрын
It was a significantly contributing factor, but this is a monetised KZbin video
@nicknickbon229 ай бұрын
I mean in Italy it happened the same thing with basically the same approach to economy: I mean, it is true that the oil crises were the trigger, but inflation was high for nearly 20 years, even in periods where the oil price was low, ie the second half of the 80s. Now on one hand all major economies till the oil crises were in one way or another similar to France regarding the approach used, considering than since 1929 Keynesism was more or less the approach used everywhere in the west. Let’s say them at in the US and the UK the shift toward a contemporary approach to an economy was made earlier than in France or Italy (if it has been made at all 😅).
@melvrv909 ай бұрын
Just take what he says with grain of salt. Even is conclusion is flawed: what are the other advanced economies that does not spend beyond their means? Most do and with even more growing inequalities and decline of living standards.
@Gearparadummies9 ай бұрын
Oil crises bring higher prices, not inflation. Printing money to cope with increasing prices does bring inflation. Crises are temporary, inflation is not.
@Angel24Marin9 ай бұрын
@@Gearparadummies Inflaction is literally defined as the increase of prices.
@onewholovesvenison533510 ай бұрын
I don’t think you know how “C’est la vie” is used.
@FictionHubZA10 ай бұрын
Doesn’t that mean "see you later" or "good bye"?
@onelonejackal61310 ай бұрын
@@FictionHubZA It means "That's how it goes", basically
@vulpo10 ай бұрын
That's life.
@FictionHubZA10 ай бұрын
@@onelonejackal613 Ohhhhh. Thanks.
@henriquerabelo91119 ай бұрын
@@FictionHubZA It is what it is, *shrugs*
@lours69939 ай бұрын
I usually like your videos. I'm Australian, living in France. I have an executive role in a global company. Some interesting analysis. However, the title is apocalyptic and a number of comments are reckless generalisations and slights. In my experience of living in both, I think life can be better here than in Australia whose economy is a perpetual real estate and minerals bubble, at the mercy of the Chinese.
@humbugswangkerton997210 ай бұрын
An excellent example of the french national industries is covered in youtuber Perun's episode on French military procurement. Despite not being a super power, France manages to field equipment that is only reserved to actual super powers such as aircraft carriers, nuclear subs, nuclear weapons, it's own fighter aircraft, tanks, artillery, vehicles and more.
@imperator3110 ай бұрын
Yes, and it is linked to a really important notion for the french government (not explorer in this video) : soverainism
@jeffbenton618310 ай бұрын
@@imperator31Does that mean the country making all its own military equipment, the gov't doing if instead of the private sector, or something else entirely? I've watched Perun's excellent piece, but I generally know more about the German economy than the French one (at least as far as European economies go)
@oliviere12159 ай бұрын
UK has those too and is no more a superpower. Also, France is world's 3rd weapon exporter, almost on par with Russia
@Altrantis9 ай бұрын
@@oliviere1215 The UK and France are very comparable in almost every metric.
@TheBlackManMythLegend9 ай бұрын
De gaule basically say the world needs something else than USA or Russia in term of power they need something in the middle that why India will try to buy weapon from us and why Australia was stopped from buy French weapons. Now with Russia weapons proved to be some kind of a joke in that Ukraine war France will or should experience a growth in its relative importance due to a growth of military exports
@Jack-md2uf10 ай бұрын
Economics Explained has a terrible reputation among academic economists. Essentially, unless you're Australia (where he's from), your country is currently or about to fall into an economic death spiral. Ever since watching that absurd video on the UK's economy, which was full of inaccurate claims, I've been highly sceptical of every video released
@arthurboisseau139410 ай бұрын
as a french I did find this video pretty bad about my country, like this video was clearly made from stereotype and not reality, we have lot of challenges but saying that our first problem is the state having too much state own companies is bad because we don't have much state own companies since 50 years at least
@AuroraDawnxx9710 ай бұрын
Nobody asked troll
@RM-el3gw10 ай бұрын
nobody asked you either troll@@AuroraDawnxx97
@darkmater4tm10 ай бұрын
My favourite was when he tried to defend car-centric cities, rebutting most research with a couple of hand-wavy agruments which kinda resembled existing economic theories, but simply did not apply.
@peterpanini9610 ай бұрын
Hahaha... yeah he don't know europe... if France is collapsing rest of the eu is starving to death... we can still afford food... 😂
@arthurboisseau139410 ай бұрын
As a french I do think this video was pretty poorly researched and made out of stereotype unfortunatly.... state owned companies are not that much a thing anymore.... we have many challenges but reducing state companies is really not one of them, no one will agree with you here
@haboubia10 ай бұрын
Very much
@b_810310 ай бұрын
Anglos win everything including arguments at the end of the day. Do the opposite and only then there’s a glimmer of hope to thrive.
@quintessenceSL10 ай бұрын
Not to mention, in comparison to other countries, I wonder how France compares to the US. Point-in-fact the largest employer in the US: the federal government.
@ahoui9810 ай бұрын
Comme d'hab lorsqu'un anglo-saxon parle de notre économie. Il a quand même réduit notre economie à faire des sacs trop chère avec un peuple de fainéants qui vit sur ses acquis 😂
Something weird/terrible is happening in all the big economies it seems
@tonycrabtree341610 ай бұрын
It's almost like they are buying votes?
@jorgecuevas884310 ай бұрын
You're right. China, Japan, Germany, France, all struggling
@shaaravguha376010 ай бұрын
@@jorgecuevas8843 The UK and US too
@dhowe518010 ай бұрын
Troll alert. Growth is picking up a lot in the US
@matty4evr10 ай бұрын
@@shaaravguha3760US is famously outperforming right now, what are you on about
@kortyEdna8259 ай бұрын
People try to predict the economy not realizing it is not a capitalistic market, its a command economy, central planning! my concern is, instead of having much dollar in bank that could lose value to inflation, do I save in gold to reserve and grow wealth for now, or just hang on?
@carssimplified21959 ай бұрын
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@carssimplified21959 ай бұрын
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@Pamela.jess.2459 ай бұрын
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@driedmelon9 ай бұрын
Bot alert ^
@randomdude1899 ай бұрын
Capitalism doesn’t exist on earth right now. We have corporatism and lobbying. If there are any restrictions it’s not free enterprise, if they print money not backed by the gold standard and lobby government workers to gain soecial treatment it’s not true capitalism. That’s corporatism and how we have companies larger than nations now.
@aubintouzo392610 ай бұрын
According to the video, the major problem is state funded company. But the funded state companies represents only 3,1% of the employment in France. All along, there is almost no numbers given to put the content into perspective...
@arthurboisseau139410 ай бұрын
I agree with you, this thesis is nothing but bs
@Polyfron9 ай бұрын
When I saw the thumbnail and title, I thought to myself "this is gonna be some Anglo-liberal propaganda isn't it?". Looks like I was right.
@wtfatc45569 ай бұрын
You are missing some details i see
@nonmagicmike7239 ай бұрын
Pretty sure the numbers for overall public employment are much higher. Public-sector employees work less (produce less) per person and get paid more, exerting upward pressure on inflation.
@Albertletoride-hz7oj3 ай бұрын
@@nonmagicmike723 As of today there are 30 M workers and 5.7 M public sector employees. 19%
@EarlSoC10 ай бұрын
I think your arrangement of the flight of the Huguenots and the French Revolution(s) implies a conflation between the two. The bulk of Huguenots left France in 1685, more than 100 years before the French Revolution 1789, and long before France's industrial revolution in the 1830s. While the loss of the Huguenots represented a serious loss of human capital of France, none of them would have been the engineers, scientists, or specialists critical to the French industrial revolution by virtue of predating it by so much. Otherwise a very informative and intriguing video. Thank you very much!
@watchm4ker10 ай бұрын
But that's the thing. The industrial revolution began in the 18th century. Steam power allowed for substantial advancement, yes, but water-powered factories had been around long before then. Indeed, the reason for the first engines was to expand the capacity and reliability of *existing* coal mines. By 1830, the UK was already considering railroads and steamships. The mills and metalworks were already huge. They had to import coal and iron because they couldn't mine it fast enough. France had the potential for all that, *and more.*
@ljklj71910 ай бұрын
Yep that's a biased WASP take, EE disappoints in verifying his sources once again.
@noaccount410 ай бұрын
@@watchm4ker it's also worth noting that the UK already had canals and railroads in the 17th century. It's funny to think about, but the UK and Germany both had railways long before trains had been invented! So even before steam engines, as you say, there were already significant increases in coal output, iron output, textiles output and fertiliser outputs that set the stage for a true industrial revolution. And French hugenots did end up contributing greatly to the development of the UK's financial institutions and a few industries like silk weaving, wine making and cultery manufacturing
@rogink10 ай бұрын
Yes, but the point is those who left went with the skills and innovation for the next generations. Like he said, the Industrial revolution didn't happen overnight. In Britain, before railways we had canals and before cotton factories we had small scale textile makers. While we were producing skilled engineers and innovating using steam, the French were contemplating philosophy :)
@ixfr12310 ай бұрын
@@rogink To be fair, the English were developing a first-class philosophical framework during this same time period.
@Ves18910 ай бұрын
I think it would be interesting to compare Scandinavian countries, which also have very strong welfare systems and France and see what they are potenially doing better/worse than each other and where they could learn from each other. Naturally you often hear economists to demand to cut down on the social security and welfare systems to solve economic problems but i'm not sure if this is always the best solution. Also i think it would be nice to include a few more statistics to emphasize where exactly the problems of certain economies lie and in which way economic measures are hoping to change those.
@Kurus-pq7xw10 ай бұрын
Scandanavians have less invading illegals still. Don't worry it'll catch up.
@supcap1235410 ай бұрын
Quite simply; Norway is the sole country with a long-term sustainable welfare system, and that's only because of the disproportionate sovereign fund they amassed by hitting the natural resource lottery. Sweeden and Denmark both have a higher % of the population below the poverty line compared to France specifically, and higher even % at risk of falling below. Systemic changes are necessary, whether they'll happen naturally (progressive automatization due to rise of AI & other technologies) or by forced policy (and how?) is the actual question that merits a discussion.
@SuperSupermanX199910 ай бұрын
Sweden is a particularly interesting example because of the way that the welfare state has been used to create an extremely entrepreneurial culture. They have one of the highest rates of new start-ups in the world, and there are more unicorns in Stokholm than anywhere except Silicon Valley, and a bit part of the reason is the welfare state being designed to encourage it while ensuring that people are confident about being ok should things fall through. Of course, at the same time, the Swedish krona has historically been all over the place as a currency which suggests something quite serious going on under the surface of the Swedish economy.
@tonycrabtree341610 ай бұрын
Also very tight immigration rules. Any economy that thinks it can give away money to anyone who walks in will never survive.
@My_HandleIs_10 ай бұрын
@@epicurean1868one get that if one is fairly treated and have a social welfare that works for the citizens.
@alphamikeomega572810 ай бұрын
The video says that inflation and dirigism were at their peak in the '80s. What I see is a peak around the oil crises of 1974 and 1979 - exactly as happened in the US, where dirigism wasn't a factor. How did inflation in France compare to that in the US?
@MissBabalu1029 ай бұрын
What on earth is dirigism? I saw this word twice here...
@machintrucGaming9 ай бұрын
Heh, i'd disagree with dirigism being at it's peak in the late 80s. De Gaulle yes, but others following him ? It has gotten worse and worse.
@MissBabalu1029 ай бұрын
@@machintrucGaming Could someone tell me what dirigism is. I guess I could look it up.
@arty37389 ай бұрын
Inflation was high in both France and the US in 1981-82 but France did better in 1983 and afterwards.
@JinMeowsoon9 ай бұрын
@@MissBabalu102 Basically it means the state intervenes a lot in the private sector because it doesn’t trust the market ability to regulate itself while still maintaining the interests of the consumers, employees and small businesses.
@DannyBoy4439 ай бұрын
I have to admit, they have a pretty impressive version of silicon valley. They have a lot of good software developers and a strong creative gaming industry.
@pn496010 ай бұрын
I'm french and the public service is going downhill, especially health, education and energy
@Springfield179510 ай бұрын
C’est à cause de l’immigration non ?
@zaydalaoui93979 ай бұрын
I agree for health and education, but not energy. It's not perfect, but I'm pretty optimistic for the energy side in the long term as France is among the few that kept their Nuclear capabilities.
@melvrv909 ай бұрын
Comme tous les pays occidentaux car ils sont dirigé par des politiciens corrompus qui servent l'agenda du forum économique mondial et autres organisations globalistes pour asservir le peuple petit à petit.
@WalkingHeadPro9 ай бұрын
try experiencing healthcare, education, and energy in the US. Every country is under pressure, some more than most. Its relative and I believe the french should be proud that their system appears to be falling a lot less than most. Kinda stupid thing to say but its what I think outside looking in. Most french would feel like living in the US is farrr worse, unless they have a high paying tech job which is what the US is about, modern day feudalism where the rich experience a good life and the rest toil in the mud
@inbb5109 ай бұрын
@@WalkingHeadPro , grass is always greener on the other side regardless where one lives.
@ruta85919 ай бұрын
French here. Our system is not effective at all, and we have a deep problem with this effectiveness… That made that yes from a small company economy, we went to a big company economy. We don’t have enough small businesses. Every market has its own kind of “monopoly company” that control sometimes over 50% of the market shares. Just because at the end, if you want to create your business you have one of the highest tax rates in the world…
@budawang7710 ай бұрын
The assumption that private companies will always try to reduce their costs is questionable. The people running these companies may have motives other than increasing profitability like paying their board members as much as possible or satisfying the empire-building megalomania of certain executives. Where there is less than perfect competition this will often be the case.
@HemantKumar-id3jg10 ай бұрын
Good thing about private companies, they will get outcompeted by other private companies and collapse if they keep doing that. Unlike a state enterprise, it will fail without affecting the government or wasting tax payer money. That's one of the main advantages of (capitalism) private enterprises over state sponsored ones, it doesn't matter if some or many of them fail.
@budawang7710 ай бұрын
@@HemantKumar-id3jg Only if there's genuine competition. Many private companies operate as duopolies or oligopolies.
@HemantKumar-id3jg10 ай бұрын
@@budawang77 Didn't he say just that? What are you even disputing then? And although rare there is still a way to make companies (who are monpolies or duopolies) competitive. By laws or by breaking them into smaller companies. In a state enterprise there is no such option and the people who will lose employment if the enterprise collapses will keep political pressure on the government to let the inefficient companies running which means more waste of taxes.
@socialiste_sympathique10 ай бұрын
@budawang77 that’s not how late stage capitalism works, unfortunately
@ArawnOfAnnwn10 ай бұрын
@@HemantKumar-id3jg Every economist will tell you that perfect competition is a theoretical myth. A LOT of industries are highly concentrated. And no, before you say it, that's not just due to the govt.
@fairybuddy-angel203510 ай бұрын
I watched a recent video on this channel about the UK. It was broadly positive and gave the UK a pleasingly rosey future. I love in the UK. None of what the video presented tallied with my lived experience. I travel around France regularly. I wish my country was more like France. I'm not an economist but I know what I like.
@redcrown507010 ай бұрын
>The Uk >A rosey future
@DJPleasureSeekingMissle10 ай бұрын
UK is a shithole. France is lovely.
@walterbraun373110 ай бұрын
You need to wipe your behind when you go to the loo...@@DJPleasureSeekingMissle
@AdityaBharadwaj-wj2zg10 ай бұрын
@@walterbraun3731what?
@TheWolfXCIX10 ай бұрын
As an Englishman with a french partner, who regularly visits and has lived in both, France is significantly worse than the UK in almost every way except climate and food
@jrl553510 ай бұрын
I am a frenchman, I haven't watched the video yet, and seeing the title, I say to myself : "What is so terrible ? It's just monday." Edit : I wached the video, and yeah, it's just monday. Nothing unusual.
@CCMqueretaro9 ай бұрын
Try watching them as a Brit. Yeah, nah, all good but yeah. Monday then. Apparently Im fucked and love in a box now. News to me.
@gabrielbattais41859 ай бұрын
now it's wednesday night, you can relax until monday
@lioneldemun60339 ай бұрын
T as fait l école du rire toi.
@Waterfront97510 ай бұрын
The new largest companies like Google, Apple, Intel, Microsoft, are global and US has the benefit of a large home market and outside US most people know English so they can easily expand. France has a smaller home market and French is less used, of course many learn English but it is still a hindrance I think.
@EarnestWilliamsGeofferic10 ай бұрын
'Some fringe economists' being the most influential economists of the last 100 years ... This channel never fails to impress with the ignorance of the writers.
@Gash_Kobeth3 ай бұрын
All the services he mentioned could also be easily transactable through insurance companies because they are essentially insurance services. I swear to god it's like everyone who talks about economy instantly forget about insurance services.
@alexharden20889 ай бұрын
The most terrible thing happening to France is our public service going downhill even though there are so much taxes. The money is just not going where it should. It saddens me even more as an economist that attended a public university...
@mattguellec9 ай бұрын
It is more a political problem that an economic one and I think it involves the higher echelons of those sectors. A good scrubing of the public sector is in order.
@mattman39604 ай бұрын
@@mattguellecTHIS 🙌🙌 french people need to understand that some public services they DO NOT NEED (saying this as one of them)
@6visages9543 ай бұрын
@@mattman3960Can you go more on details ’cause I think I didn’t understand (you can speak in french too)
@mattman39603 ай бұрын
@@6visages954 i meant that some public services are just a waste of money that could be spent elsewhere (other public services that actually serve a purpose, reducing our ridiculous debt to GDP ratio or smth)
@6visages9543 ай бұрын
@@mattman3960 yeah sure, maybe. To be honest I don’t know enough to have a strong point of view on this topic. What I know tho it’s we are bless to have acces to a lots of publics services, education(from kindergarden to college), health mental, health, or retirement... And I truely belive it’s important to preserve it. But lots and LOTS of money are not going where it should. I am talking about frauds from inside and outside the gouvernement. Or people just straight up robing. People that abuse of the systeme because we are more and more paranoid (I talked to a doctor and she told that more and more people where going to the hospital for things that could be handle by doctor or people going to the doctor for nothing). I also belive that a lots of money is waisted on jobs that doesn’t deed to exist while others jobs that are very important are neglicted. I sure did forget to say other very important things. But in the end I think we should be more see through on where the money is spent and where it’s invested. And also doing a great good clean up.
@AtlantisArch9 ай бұрын
I'm french living in France. This video is so funny. They defintly don't know what they are talking about, finding another scapegoat for artificially created inflation in any occidental country. And soon CBDCs, people ... (well, if we don't have a civil war until then)
@sunrise_reverie10 ай бұрын
"Cest la vie" means "such is life", often about bad events. Maybe it should instead say "La vie en rose" which is actually about a good life.
@kurtisb1009 ай бұрын
I think your title should have read ‘la vie en rose is over’; cest La vie is a sort of shoulder shrug that’s said after something unfortunate happens. It’s a literal translation of ‘that’s life’ and is used the same. Something you’d say after you loose a wallet or your bicycle is stolen kinda thing. ‘La vie en rose’ on the other hand is sort of analogous to ‘looking at life through rose colored glasses’ although not exactly the same.
@OsamaBinKevo10 ай бұрын
A small note on hiring in government vs. private enterprise: managers in large corporations are often incentivized to hire and retain excess personnel in order to inflate their department's budget, or their ego (higher number of direct reports).
@Low_commotion9 ай бұрын
This....seems to be something that would eventually hurt competitiveness of that firm? Not to mention, many government positions are literally sinecures given for backing the winning horse, hence why so many of them could be cut temporarily during covid with no effect to government services (look up how much of the DOE essentially didn't work during lockdown).
@jbturtle9 ай бұрын
I think you’re right that to a certain extent managers in large corporations do act this way, but if you’re implying that this somehow creates more bloat than governmental organizations, that’s where I’d have to disagree. You can only bloat your department so much in a corporation before you have a down year and then layoff 20% of your staff
@sanguisbumb61389 ай бұрын
@@Low_commotionYou are correct which is a problem many of the largest corporations face. They hit the opposite side of economics of scale.
@BikeHelmetMk29 ай бұрын
If you look at KPIs of government workers/departments, they're often 20-30% of private enterprises. The government loves building complex systems (it's a bureaucracy) which don't help the workers to get things done efficiently... for the same amount of output, even a large inefficient private enterprise would probably only need 1/3rd the amount of employees - and it would pay them better. But you do need government to keep large enterprises from becoming natural monopolies. Occasionally a tiny company develops ways to be disruptively more efficient. They can't flourish without the shade from the big guys being pared back a bit...
@lgwhittaker10 ай бұрын
I wonder how punitive it is for small businesses to start and hire workers in France? Things like paid maternity leave, unemployment insurance, on the job injury insurance. It seems quit expensive for a small business to hire people here in Canada. What effects does that have on the over all economy of a country?
@daniellarson306810 ай бұрын
So odd that the economic system penalizes a nation for taking care of its people. Does the lack of healthcare in the US lead to jobs being lost in Canada and France? The world may be connected sometimes in unkind ways.
@36inc10 ай бұрын
punitive measures almost never work- just like youre in a bad place if your government has to save you from absolute death and homelessness- an economy simply cant run on debt forever. i think thats the pit fall- were obsessed with paying back- but paying back a debt actually has no value. banning late fees- seems like the obvious for instance- as its punitive and only works to reduce productivity. you turn a literate skilled human into a vagrant drain on the safety net. but we need to replace that gate with something less about debt and more about value. the ubi plus some debt forgiveness kickback for people under stressful collapsing personal finances a cap on profit margin that taxes beyond 300% or so of relevant inputs- and gives credit to those that comply or over adjust in favor of their workers- this credit can unlock a privilege they may seek like land development- less costs for things like permits yada yada. you know a positive flow rule set- that encourages them to do valuable things on their own. essentially you could still run the business like usual- you can cut costs, become more efficient lay off workers all thats stuff- but youll only grow if you developed a healthy workforce and showed some social responsibility as a company. im sure theres plenty of like this stuff in law all around the world- but i dont think we considered how its merely punitive measures messing us up. if youre always repairing a window- youre not making another one. this is true economically socially and politically.
@divingstag10 ай бұрын
Well I'm from France and for what it's worth I can say that 200 of my colleagues got laid off at my old work because their jobs were moved over to Portugal where minimum wage is half that of France and there's much much less corporate tax. Since both Portugal and France are in the EU, they still have access to the exact same free market without any drawbacks for doing this to lower costs.
@MichaelDavis-mk4me10 ай бұрын
@@daniellarson3068 There is nothing odd about the fact that encouraging people not to work as long leads to less production, even in socialism, communism or whatever system you use, it will always be a fact that less people working and less hours worked means less production. Until robots fully replace humanity, it will stay like that, and even then there are signs that the general population, technologically illiterate as it is, is unable to understand that robots aren't people, so you can bet they'll end up giving them weekend breaks or something. Edit : Having good healthcare coverage is not bad for production unless it is so generous and lenient you are better off sick and insane work hours actually can result in less production. It's all in the balance, a thing France is lacking currently.
@lajya0110 ай бұрын
I've heard stuff about France that seems particularly rigid and burdensome. Businesses have to think thoroughly before hiring because laying off afterward isn't so easy.
@user-xg6zz8qs3q9 ай бұрын
The wage price inflation is a boogeyman used to reduce wages (relative to inflation). Over the years, the proportion of people earning close to minimum wage is increasing. It wouldn't surprise me that a country like Poland or Hungary will have higher wages than France in less than 20 years. The other problems are basic liberalism: lower taxes to the rich, increase taxes for everybody else, the government is hemorrhaging money by cutting its tax revenue, oligopolies are stagnating wages, public workers are getting wage cuts and their benefits are slashed, privatization of public services etc... An advanced state of this trend would be mirrored in the USA.
@itsv1p3r9 ай бұрын
The proportion of people earning close to minimum wage is increasing because as minimum wage increases, those who would once be making a middle class wage are now making closer to what a burger flipper makes. The higher minimum wage gets, the more the middle class suffers and is dragged down by rising tides.
@skz-gaming10 ай бұрын
Another thing to consider is that if a government owned company is inefficient is a detriment to the taxpayer because it doesn’t exist in a vacuum. The resources have a cost of opportunity to be used elsewhere by government to provide other goods to its citizens. Tax money is not infinite as politicians think it is and there’s only so much debt a country can sustain.
@Martinit09 ай бұрын
Not only that but a government owned company makes it almost impossible for actual businesses to survive in a particular industry (cannot compete with an entity that cannot go bankrupt / is heavily subsidized or hogs all resources (airport slots or tracks).
@LuneUnion10 ай бұрын
The concept of a wage price spiral, presented here as fact, is far from being so. Even the Cato Institute (Libertarian) says it's bunk. "The idea that wage‐price spirals cause inflation - that higher prices lead to higher wage demands, which beget further higher prices and then higher wages again and again - is a long‐standing myth, and a dangerous one given it can lead to such misguided policy."
@ArturoSubutex10 ай бұрын
Some corrections: inflation in France was never driven by a lower-than-optimum unemployment. French unemployment has historically been higher than its comparable Western European counterparts (UK, Germany). Conversely, French productivity is also higher than that of those comparable countries. Whereas the brain drain in France is lower than in the UK or in the Netherlands, and barely higher than Germany or the US.
@MonCompteTubulaire9 ай бұрын
productivity per worked hour because in france people only actually work during working hour. no coffee/cigarette break for almost every job. but french people work about only 40h a week (35 for public servants, that's very low in comparision to usa, japan or china. in china 54h a week is very common)
@Sascha59 ай бұрын
@@MonCompteTubulaire The average USA working week is 34.1 hours. You should check your claims.
@JamielDeAbrew10 ай бұрын
After a certain point, what would happen if workers were given equity instead of higher wages? Would this prevent a wage price spiral? What if workers demanded better technology instead of higher wages? (And that improved productivity) What if workers negotiated increased occupancy health and safety standards instead of higher wages? (That might reduce the usage of paid ‘sick leave’ days off)
@FaustsKanaal9 ай бұрын
You indirectly have equity in most major businesses. Through your pension fund. And also your insurer if you for example have life insurance.
@JamielDeAbrew9 ай бұрын
@@FaustsKanaal that’s a good point. Having equity where you work puts you in a different position than just an employee shouting for a pay rise. This is especially true if the equity comes with full voting rights and the ability for you to pass on your equity in your will. Imagine wanting a company to cut staff expenses (and numbers) so that your shares increase in value, but at the same time wanting to keep your job and wanting your workmates to keep their job. Imagine how you would feel about people taking sick leave when they’re not sick. The culture would change to much more of a team culture.
@CaseNumber0010 ай бұрын
Basically, the govt has been ensuring a healthy lifestyle and work/life balance for its people for decades but EU and Global companies dont like what they are doing there because it will slightly eat into their profits and France is deciding to up lift and change their economy at the expense of workers and society.
@SetSenet10 ай бұрын
It would be good to hear your views on the tradeoff between national competitiveness and standards of living. Why is it such a bad thing to have a lower level of productivity if the standard of living is higher than other economies? And over the long term?
@baronvonjo192910 ай бұрын
I feel like the long term issue is that it's a fragile system where things need to go right to sustain the social nets. Plus if everyone is in a mindset that their needs are taken care of I can see how on surface level folks won't try to push for innovation.
@alphamikeomega572810 ай бұрын
Productivity is income _per hour worked._ It is impossible to have a good standard of living without good productivity (unless hunting-gathering is your idea of a good life).
@gauvaindf10 ай бұрын
@@alphamikeomega5728 However, working less is also good for productivity and having a vegetable garden (gathering), not needing childcare, in addition to being profitable for a household, is also profitable for France which would not have need to spend on care, sick leave, daycare, there are many more advantages than one would think, especially if from a capitalist point of view. There's no point working 50 hours a week, if it means that the French spend all the money on trips abroad, iPhones, Tesla, Amazons, etc. What destroyed the French economy is excessive capitalism protected by the government, Europe and the ability to always postpone what should have been done a long time ago and now it is much more expensive than 20 years ago, that's good we no longer have the money and technical means...
@Birdylockso10 ай бұрын
Globalization has pretty much made your wish impossible. Competitiveness on the global market is important to sustain the standard of living that you are talking about. You simply can't have your cake and eat it too. (It's also likely that the French sustained a high standard of living by feeding off the colonies in the past). The glory days are gone.
@bigjared894610 ай бұрын
The problem with that idea is math + globalization.
@ichifish10 ай бұрын
When you say "countries that are willing to work harder," I hear "in countries where the powerful exploit the workers more." I didn't know much about French economics before the video, and don't know much now, but one thing is true: it's not France that has a problem, it's the rest of the world.
@alfravier569210 ай бұрын
No
@agilemind624110 ай бұрын
It is also ignoring the fact that a majority of "productivity" is due to technology and mechanization not any amount of 'working harder'
@MrSupergigamoi10 ай бұрын
It so happens that I am French and I have a similar take. It is not so much that strong worker protections and services as well as dirigisme are "beyond our means" in and of themselves. After all, those were financially viable for decades and were far more developed at the time than they are now (with some inefficiencies for sure, but also great benefits). It is that, with globalisation, France came to compete with countries who would rather give the share of GDP spent on those to the rich instead. Before that, economic participants of the French economy more or less had to comply with whatever worker rights were voted in and that was it. Now they can relocate to avoid the cost, hence inducing a race to the bottom. There is no such thing as "the French economy" anymore. It is the global economy. Only in that sense is France living beyond its means. As I see it, what is happening in France is just part of a general global trend of fewer rich people getting even richer and an increasingly high number of poorer people getting squeezed even harder. France is only special in that it had better worker benefits so it is falling from a much higher place.
@ichifish10 ай бұрын
Yes, this. Capitalism doesn't need to be inhumane. It doesn't need to be rapacious. But the few at the top promote the all-or-nothing belief so they can perpetuate their own sociopathy.@@MrSupergigamoi
@Thanksforaskingme9 ай бұрын
@@MrSupergigamoi correct but globalization is coming to an end, and in this new future, France will actually have it a lot better than most other countries.
@Youcanatme10 ай бұрын
Around 13:30 Germany in its economic boom had what's called full employment. Nobody argues that this was bad. Nor was there hyperinflation. So why are you arguing that full employment causes it?
@warrenschrader748110 ай бұрын
Full employment doesn't mean zero unemployment.
@D4PPZ45610 ай бұрын
He provided a caveat that you may have missed. Full employment causes inflation if the productivity of workers is outstripped by their demand in wages, while also providing no alternative to employers. It's simply the case that the economic boom in Germany gave them more leeway to hire more people without having an inflationary effect.
@Youcanatme10 ай бұрын
@@warrenschrader7481 no but it was at a very low point even at one point being under 0.8%
@Youcanatme10 ай бұрын
@@D4PPZ456 shouldn't any highly developed economy then still not need to fear the effects of full employment? In Germany today if you look at the population without the migrants they too have almost full employment? So you're telling me that those migrants nowadays who are in welfare are saving Germany from massive maybe hyperinflation. Infact if they were to get a job it might be extremely dangerous to the German Economy? That is absolut rubbish. If people make new wealth in a job. It is better for the economy than if they were unemployed. If there is almost no unemployment and wages rise it will lead to a better allocation of labour as if there are more jobs than workers it should lead to better allocation of labor into the more productive and better compensated jobs. If there are always unemployed than there will not be the redistribution to more productive roles at the same scale. So in fact I believe that full employment strengths some of the strongest market forces!
@FictionHubZA10 ай бұрын
Thay full employment made them scout workers from Eastern, Southern Europe and Anatolia.
@RaniVeluNachar-kx4lu10 ай бұрын
Often the less skilled worker is less productive or they are older or very young. But that does not mean that they are unemployable. It means that they will seek entry level or semi-skilled labor work that may be part time or seasonal to augment full time permanent workers during business peak cycle times. They will usually get less pay, and they will save less of their wages because there is usually a minimum cost of living associated with housing, transportation and food in any place of business/city. France can have that system too, where there are more job openings, but the skill level is less and the pay is less. What is bad is when a person has been at a company three years, and has only received their annual cost of living raises but knows a lot more about the company and their job than new hires that can often be hired at a much higher initial starting pay than the person that was there for three years and may be effectively training them and making in some cases the same pay. There is no incentive to work for a company any longer than to learn skills and then sell those skills to their competitor if the company is not willing to train, and improve them and pay them more. That was often the case in Software.
@watchlover77509 ай бұрын
The frenches are totally right in putting thr people above the profit. In Italy we have salaries stuck to 2000 level and prices are far higher than in France.I often go to France for leisure, they have lower prices than Italy,,,and far higher wages
@jackwarren53809 ай бұрын
The comments show that within a globalized world, it’s more possible than ever to choose an economy that suits your own ethos for what is a good life. Being from the UK I’ve always preferred the European culture of working to live rather than vice versa but I probably wouldn’t think like this without access to basic needs like healthcare, food and housing. Still seems weird though that people chase wealth endlessly once you’ve accumulated more than you need, having time to swim in the med and visit the mountains seems more valuable than figures in a bank
@Hession0Drasha10 ай бұрын
At least france actively invests in its future, whether that's its people or infrastructure. The UK hasn't done that since the 2000s.
@RealLimerickman10 ай бұрын
Say thank you to the Blair government for that.
@jonescrusher110 ай бұрын
@@RealLimerickman Nothing to do with the govt that's been in control for the last 14 years?
@ouafallouz9 ай бұрын
France will come out on top when globalization hits full reverse mode, protectionism comes back, and all of a sudden everyone must depend on their own industry/resources/strengths in all fields to get by. You forgot to mention one very important thing: France is almost self-sufficient in food, most heavy industry, and electricity production.
@Mleo30129 ай бұрын
You're analysis of labor, miss the role of capital. You assume no changes in the profit of capital. France has increased the rate and profit of its biggest companies over the past years has grew exponentially. So basically more and more of the added value is given to capital (which only a tiny amount is reinvested in the economy) and relatively less to labour. Highering wages by taking on capital profit, would not lead to inflation.
@GhostOnTheHalfShell10 ай бұрын
The problem with standard economic theory of inflation is so much of standard economics is mathematically and behaviorally false. Because theory is like theory of lunar cheese variety, it’s solution policy is just not in touch with reality.
@TheStubertos10 ай бұрын
Is Frances economy really stagnating that much? I think it's dangerous to constantly think about improving the economy because if you focus on this then you end up with a country like the USA. Sure, it's economy is great but people have 10 days off work a year. Sometimes governments (and economists) forget what the real objective is, and that is to optimise the well-being of its citizens. If that means a productive economy then great, but not at the expense of its citizens' well-being.
@Milnip10 ай бұрын
Interesting thought. The point about having competition increases the chance of innovation which increases technology and profits. The opposite would be government run which may stagnation in advancements because they really don't have competition to be more profitable. There is the phenomenon where healthcare in the US is a private industry and although there is some competition, consumers are gauged like never before. Maybe this can be caulked up to corruption or profiting on someone's emergency (extortion).
@ptanham10 ай бұрын
Disappointing to see the “Wage Price Spiral” such prominence, when it is such a rare occurrence in the last 40 years. In competitive markets, those basket workers getting an extra 50c would put pressure on a) the profit margins b) executive compensation and c) the drive to innovate and automate, just as much as it would place pressure on prices
@ideologybot45929 ай бұрын
He didn't talk about it because it's happened a lot in the last forty years. He talked about it because it happened a lot prior to that, and countries including France have avoided wage-hiking policies because they know it will happen again. It's not a question that it happens. It's one of the most repetitive phenomena in economics. The question is, and has been, how to create growth without triggering it, and France is bad at it because of how they organize their institutions.
@ptanham9 ай бұрын
@@ideologybot4592 To qualify as "the most repetitive phenomena in economics" it would really want to be happening regularly in the last four decades, no? I think it is most likely to occur when labour is a substantial portion of overall costs, and wage increases would have heavy pressure on prices. Labour becomes a smaller portion of costs in an economy as it industrialises and modernises, so I don't think it's surprising that it was a big issue in the past but not such a big issue now.
@ideologybot45929 ай бұрын
@@ptanham Even in an industrial economy, the majority of major businesses have labor as their biggest expense if you look deep enough. Even if you look at something like a restaurant where labor isn't the biggest line item cost, the biggest item is food and the biggest cost for a food supplier will be processing and that comes back to labor. If you have something like a logistics company, they have to pay for equipment and maintenance which they can contract, but contracting is still a mostly-labor expense. They pay for people and diesel, that's basically it. The only expenses that don't come back to labor in some way are energy and various types of monopolistic rents. So labor is still the overwhelmingly important cost for nearly everything, and the link between increasing labor costs and inflation has given some modern economists reason to look back at the Phillips curve. It's not a secret that, in America particularly, wages have stagnated since the mid-1970's while inflation has been controlled since not long after. This isn't an accident. We've been managing a fundamental truth of economics well and paying the price in having a stagnating middle and working class. That doesn't mean the principle ceases to exist.
@SimWyatt9 ай бұрын
The whole concept of perpetual growth is entirely unsustainable. If increased personal wellbeing isn't the ultimate goal of a society, then what is? GDP growth at the expense of the worker inevitably leads to inequality and instability.
@Nr1GamerGringo9 ай бұрын
one thing alot of people dont talk about with the fine edge between profit and nonprofit in companies is the amount that CEO, shareholders and high salary effect on the margines. im sure that most companies could cap their payceeling at 100k euros a month and be more profitable. greed is the number one destroyer in the market.
@johnsmith-ol9qj9 ай бұрын
Also more economic output doesn't mean a better life. YOU have brought up that chart several times about how past a certain dollar amount your life doesn't really change. Maybe the message should be that we have done to much in the economy and just need to hold things stable until a new technology comes along that needs us to keep pushing.
@decreasing_entropy300310 ай бұрын
The theory expounded in the video is not necessarily pertaining to France alone, but a lot of other countries. It is, in fact, general consensus among people who have studied Economics. France is just one country which is grappling with the consequences among many others.
@elsebastiano646010 ай бұрын
I feel like this video implies so many problems, but does not really show hard data for the claimed problems. Maybe one or two concrete examples of some state enterprises and how they’re not optimally using resources would have been nice. Also the historic claims seem too vague and not grounded on proper historical analysis, but I may be corrected on those.
@MonCompteTubulaire9 ай бұрын
it's because it's all bullshit there are no big state companies in france anymore not more than in any country other than usa
@Londonererer9 ай бұрын
Would be interesting to overlay how a shared currency (across borders with very different countries),impacts the economy and the economic actions a country can take.
@iglooo64979 ай бұрын
Forbidden domain for mainstream economists, you won't get popular with TPTB that way :)
@joezim42549 ай бұрын
So the argument seems to be that France is turning into Argentina basically, right?
@melvrv909 ай бұрын
The thing is that the other advanced economies that you are mentioning are also living beyond their means (the US, the UK, other European countries or even some south American and Asian countries) and many of them more than France lol Therefore are they much better? Some of them have even more insane budget deficit that just fuels more inequality and transfer of wealth to the rich.
@TheEmbrio9 ай бұрын
I moved to France, love it here, have a much better quality of life and can experience so much more ( vacations close to home tourism, culture...) on a yearly income ghat would put me below poverty line in ghe USA. I own a house and large enough garden (to ot waste all my free time on it, enought to garden and hang out. 800m2) in a coasral town known for it’s history and dynamic sports and cultural life.
@lukehunnable8 ай бұрын
Where?
@KeepTalkingRomania8 ай бұрын
and what do you do for living? France, like many European countries has a very centralized economy with all the juiciest jobs in Paris. Outside Paris, without a strong inherited capital like a house you are basically cooked. If you came to France with half a million dollars yes, life is beautiful. If you instead found a job there with less than 50K gross/year, you are cooked.
@Mix1mum10 ай бұрын
Why does higher wages equal bad economy? The wage based inflation argument is absent any critique of the capital class. Why should only the workers lose money? Why cant the capital class just make LESS profits? Companies don't NEED to hire more employees. They dont NEED to expand. You are assuming perpetual growth is the only acceptable outcome while arguing for inefficiencies in public services. Does not compute
@jmlinden79 ай бұрын
It doesn't. Lots of high wage countries have good economies. However less productivity per worker equals bad economy. The main issue that France has is that people are demanding more goods and services than their economy can produce (due to aging workforce, government intervention, etc). Because their economy is less productive (for a variety of reasons), the supply can't keep up with demand, which causes inflation. You can't just force people to demand less good and services, because they'll complain that their quality of life is going down, and you can't force people to produce more goods and services, because they aren't slaves and they have the option of leaving to a country that's more productive and can pay them more.
@zarvalta3 ай бұрын
Misleading example. Greed from owners and investors to increase their profits. Is what usually leads to increase in selling prices. Not employees fighting for their wages
@GhostOnTheHalfShell10 ай бұрын
Per MMT, sovereign currency states fund themselves via deficit. Gov spending grows money supply (credit). Countries in the EU kinda can’t quite the same way the US , UK, Japan or China can.
@HowtoBuildaWorldBrain10 ай бұрын
I’m surprised MMTers aren’t all over EE. I remember you from Steve Keen &Friends. I was a guest in December on the show
@andrews29649 ай бұрын
"...a set of handcuffs for anyone who doesn't want to pay for their subscription to society..."😂 Well said.
@LupoGalante9 ай бұрын
I'm Italian living in France, I have seen your video on the end of Dolce Vita, now France is falling apart... Is the fiesta over for Spain too? Is Germany up Schnitzel creek? Is it nevermore for the Netherlands? I am mocking gently because I find your videos well made but I think your titles are too over dramatic and fear mongering. Yes Europe is in a Sea Change in terms of Demographics and Economics but if civilisation has taught us anything it's that we will adapt. I agree with the comments about France's over taxation and the need to modernise and streamline the bureaucracy, the real flaw at the moment is that the three main political parties are all populists who actually need the very problems they claim to want to solve in order to exist as a valid political entity, otherwise they may actually have to do some real work in improving infrastructure and services.
@davegubbins44288 ай бұрын
2:02 would LOVE to see this bar chart for each nation in the OECD (for example) in order to gauge to some extent how each state's economy/economic policy is shaped by its politics/culture/history/geography etc etc
@SeanyeMidWest9 ай бұрын
What are the odds you make a video about the economic power of swifties and put them on the economic leaderboard?
@simonthomas53679 ай бұрын
As a Brit having lived in France for the past 18 years, I can honestly say that life here is way better than across the Channel in Broken Brexit Britain.
@smal7506 ай бұрын
grass is always greener elsewhere
@austinbar9 ай бұрын
Given the persisting global economic crisis, it's essential for individuals to focus on diversifying their income streams independent of governmental reliance. This involves exploring options such as stocks, gold, silver, and digital currencies. Despite the adversity in the economy, now is an opportune moment to contemplate these investment avenues.
@jcurdrayeric2439 ай бұрын
People believe their currency has the worth it does because they have no other option. Even in a hyper-inflationary environment, individuals must continue to use their hyperinflationary currency since they likely have minimal access to other currencies or gold/silver coins.
@eloign71479 ай бұрын
Inflation is gradually going to become part of us and due to that fact any money you keep in cash or in a low-interest account declines in value each year. Investing is the only way to make your money grow and unless you have an exceptionally high income, investing is the only way most people will ever have enough money to retire.
@joshbarney1149 ай бұрын
I agree, that's the more reason I prefer my day to day investment decisions being guided by an advisor, seeing that their entire skillset is built around going long and short at the same time both employing risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying off risk as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, coupled with the exclusive information/analysis they have, it's near impossible to not out-perform, been using my advisor for over 2years+ and I've netted over 2.8million.
@rogerwheelers43229 ай бұрын
Interesting Josh. I think this is something I should do, but I've been stalling for a long time now. I don't really know which firm to work with; I feel they are all the same but it seems you’ve got it all worked out with the firm you work with so i surely wouldn’t mind a recommendation.
@joshbarney1149 ай бұрын
Colleen has the appearance of being a great authority in her profession. I looked her up online and found her website, which I reviewed and went through to learn more about her credentials, academic background, and employment. She has a fiduciary duty to protect my best interests. I sent her an email outlining my objectives and also booked a session with her; thanks for sharing.
@youcantata10 ай бұрын
Frenches enjoy their life and love their lifestyle. Ask them that they would like to live like Americans, German or Japanese. They will say no without hesitation. So France does not need to change.
@kingofhearts318510 ай бұрын
They can say that, but if the money isn't there to support that lifestyle they're out of luck. That's what the pension age increase was all about.
@Ningen1810 ай бұрын
@@kingofhearts3185 Relying on the pension Ponzi scheme is a mistake. Also money doesn't mean wealth, but the accessible goods and services mean wealth, because you can have all the money in the world on a lonely island, you ain't wealthy in that case. Work and life balance is important, since time is worth more than an inflating currency. Making everyone running harder in the hamster wheel may look like better economic output, but the price is that the workers can't enjoy life that much anymore, because they have less time to do so and everyone burns out faster.
@kingofhearts318510 ай бұрын
@@Ningen18 And you still need money to have all of that. It's a means to an end, not the end itself. But you can't get there without means. What good is time if you're in poverty?
@Ningen1810 ай бұрын
@@kingofhearts3185 That's why work and life balance is important. Poverty is when you can't provide value or when you can't barter that value to someone else's value. Working and spending your salary is just a way to exchange your precious time to somone else's precious time. The currency is just a lubricant. Also note that money is not the same as currency, because money keeps the value of your labor, while the inflating currency does not.
@kingofhearts318510 ай бұрын
@@Ningen18 Is that meant as a critique or an elaboration? I don't think anything you said is wrong, I just don't see how it's meant to disprove my point.
@snokehusk2239 ай бұрын
Inflation only happens due to money printing. If you stop printing money thus inflation isn't possible.
@cmep9 ай бұрын
You should do a video on the métiers of Artisanats in France. That will give context to how and why France continued to specialize rather than mass produce and why some of the best made items (of all types) are still produced, and will continue to be, in France.
@bullydungeon963110 ай бұрын
Its so so sad that being pro worler and focusing on a higher standard of living is bad for countries
@Ganjor4209 ай бұрын
You missed one good 3rd option at the end, France could also shift the tax burdon more towards wealth tax on multimillionairs and reduce (or at least don't increase) income tax.
@Justmyopinionlol9 ай бұрын
This video is so unnecessarily long please value the time of your listeners
@Lucasbdlt8 ай бұрын
Serious conceptual error in the video relating to what causes inflation. Inflation is a monetary phenomenon. It doesn't matter what happens to wages, if the monetary base doesn't increase there will not be any inflation.
@ccrouzet3 ай бұрын
As a french I think there is a misunderstanding. This video implies that we want and have to pursue economic growth, productivity, the goal being more consumption. But our views are really changing in that matter. People tend to prefer fewer but better, a good exemple is the contrast between the american food consumption (high in quantitiy, sugar and fat) and our gastronomy. Also we know that soon we'll run out of oil ressources anyway, so why building an industry relying on it ? The problem is we are struggling to become independant of it for vital functions, especially in sparse territories
@CornishCreamtea0710 ай бұрын
5:00 One of them, was the father of Isambard Kingdom Brunel. Who became was a famous engineer.
@Godsen510 ай бұрын
NAIRU + Unemployment being Human Misery in all measurable domains (health, wealth, child upbrining, etc.) = Economists think some (millions of people) have to suffer for capitalism to work well (which means for the rich to cumulate more wealth); "other countries are willing to work harder" ... the countries being those were workers have no social, civil and often even basically human rights? Why coulnd't France tax wealth (not income, wealth) to support the system? Why is it the workers that have to pay the toll and not the rich?
@dannydenison625310 ай бұрын
Yes, yes.
@dannydenison625310 ай бұрын
I would love to see a Richard wolf response to those mentioned parts
@theherpetologist606510 ай бұрын
cause the rich just relocate to a new country that doesnt tax the rich. That is exactly what france tried to do with it 70% tax on the rich when Hollande was president. they all just left
@D4PPZ45610 ай бұрын
This is precisely not the answer, neither for the rich or the middle-class. The primary metrics for consideration are healthy competition and increasing worker productivity. You don't want to do anything that would lead to brain drain or reduced capital investment in your nation or these two key metrics will be on the decline, along with the general quality of life. The ideal scenario seems to be full employment without inflated wages and prices. A market of competitively priced goods where demand for goods and the labour to make it are high seem like the best of both worlds, as the purchasing power of wages will adjust to whatever the nominal value of their wages are while allowing the worker to benefit from the increased competitiveness of their nation.
@disalazarg10 ай бұрын
Because every single country that's tried has seen capital flight and brain drain in unprecedented scale. Including France itself during Hollande. And no, the countries that benefit the most from that sort of thing do have human and civil rights, often moreso than a country whose State apparatus has grown to the size necessary for wealth taxation to work-countries such as the United States and the United Kingdom were the main beneficiaries of Hollande's screw up, not Chad or Congo. Much like in America it was Chile and Panama that benefitted from it during Venezuela's Chávez, not Nicaragua. The problem with your analysis is that you see the economy as only two big blocks: "workers" and "the rich", and thus believe anything that positively impacts unskilled workers cannot also negatively impact skilled workers, or viceversa. And no, economies cannot sustain themselves on unskilled workers alone, that's the whole danger of brain drain.
@thibaultlibat36810 ай бұрын
“As someone who gets paid in euros”, did everyone get that during the sponsorship ? Or was it somehow targeted ?
@stevecatpatrick80569 ай бұрын
The obvious comment to make is that, if workers want a standard of living that isn't supported by their productivity, ultimately you have to square that circle with redistribution through taxes and transfers. Not on the businesses, that would drive them out, but on high earners. Problem is this exacerbates brain drain. But to avoid this you need to take from the top of the pie that doesn't earn "W2" income. They will try to leave the country of course, but then you need capital controls. But those come with downsides as well, so it's really striking a balance and picking your poison.
@cn.st.18210 ай бұрын
"C'est la vie is over" makes absolutely no sense. It's not the same as dolce vita, they know that, right..? Have thy even bothered to Google what it means?
@TheHappyLeperBeaver9 ай бұрын
I think they mistake "c'est la vie" for "la vie en rose"
@stevewhatever88059 ай бұрын
Admits french model isnt working and then says "other economies could learn from" total disconnect lol
@ryanf65309 ай бұрын
Economics isn't as simple as good or bad. All economies have strengths that others could learn from and weaknesses they could improve on.
@stevewhatever88059 ай бұрын
@@ryanf6530 id agree with you if you were talking about any other advanced economy but the french one. The only thing to learn from the french model is how not to do it.
@jontalbot110 ай бұрын
The UK voted to leave the EU in 2016. Since then investment, especially Foreign Direct Investment and exports have plummeted. No surprise there. But last year it overtook France to become the world’s seventh largest exporter of manufactured goods. How is that possible?
@pgf28910 ай бұрын
Good question
@ryanf65309 ай бұрын
I don't think that's quite right - UK services exports are at an all-time high - £472 billion.
@georgeszurbach44421 күн бұрын
France has been around for 1500 years and has survived many crisis through its history, while being the nation who brought the most innovations to the modern world. Still today its quality is unmatched in areas like aeronautics, TGV s, ship building ...and .military equipment not to mention culture , history, gastronomy... So I would not worry too much about France future.
@ebx1005 ай бұрын
A new subscriber. Finally, a channel that tries to explain the economies of different countries to viewers with IQ's of over 80.
@diverseizzue9 ай бұрын
This is a video with a lot of storytelling and stock photography, but few facts. I'd love for you to make a video where you support the developments you describe with data, and compare the data to a couple other advanced economies. I've been poking around OECD labour productivity statistics, and I don't think things look that clear...?
@daniellarson306810 ай бұрын
Interesting - So last week I thought of the Tour De France. I figured bicycling must be very popular in France. It has a gentle climate and a beautiful countryside. My next assumption was that bicycle manufacturing must be rather extensive in such a country. Your video of French artisans being prolific in France would also lead credibility to their being many who craft fine bicycles. My brief internet search showed that there used to be a lot of French bicycle manufacturers. However, they have either left to manufacture elsewhere or closed down their shops. Does this exemplify what was discussed in this video? Was my search wrong?
@typicalgamer556010 ай бұрын
I believe it does
@dazzlebreak445810 ай бұрын
Nowadays production happens wherever it's cheapest and easiest, which is different than where cycling is popular. Seems like countries like Cambodia, Vietnam and Portugal are among the top exporting countries and I doubt cycling is wide spread there.
@daniellarson306810 ай бұрын
@@dazzlebreak4458 It seemed like there were still a lot of small bicycle manufacturers in Italy too for some reason. You are right that bicycles are a commodity product that can be made where lower priced labor will be available. So, I suppose the pay is better in France.
@domcizek10 ай бұрын
THE MFG WILL ALWAYS MOST OF THE TIME SEEK LOWER COST LABOR,
@macua725810 ай бұрын
I love that you explain economics for the common person to understand. Could you please explain why Spain has a lower cost of living and yet maintain their status in the European Union?
@2MinuteHockey10 ай бұрын
they bow down to Germany's best interest
@fatemad401210 ай бұрын
@@2MinuteHockeywhat was germanys interest?
@2MinuteHockey10 ай бұрын
cheap spanish agriculture, tech, and labor to feed german owned and developed factories @@fatemad4012
@cyrilmilton9 ай бұрын
Overall, 51% of traders think this year would favor stocks, mutual funds, and other equity-based investments, despite Treasury yields and other safer cash-like investments paying big. I’m looking for opportunities in the market that could fetch me $1m ahead of retirement by 2025
@suziehovic9 ай бұрын
Look for stocks that have paid steady, increasing dividends for years (or decades), and have not cut their dividends even during recessions. Alternatively speaking to a certified market strategist can help with pointers on equities to acquire
@mykreid9 ай бұрын
True. Having the right financial planner is invaluable. My portfolio is well-matched for every season of the market and recently hit 90% rise from early last year. I and my CFP are working on a 7 figure ballpark goal, though this could take till Q3 2024.
@janedaniel46469 ай бұрын
I’ve been down a ton, I’m only holding on so I can recoup, I really need help, who is this investment-adviser that guides you
@mykreid9 ай бұрын
Olivia Maria Lucas ….you're most likely going to find her basic info on the internet, she's firmly established and well qualified.
@GrahamCan9 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing. searched for her full name and her website popped up and it was easy to schedule a call session with her
@brand859010 ай бұрын
seems like even British people forget. It is properly called "The British Industrial Revolution", for a reason. All others followed on. Took the British 200 years to accomplish this. Took America 70 years and the Chinese about 50. Always easier when you have a blueprint.
@marynewcomer40677 ай бұрын
I have lived in France for 50 years and the quality of life here is great. Good food, beautiful landscapes and good jobs.
@remiroudier464810 ай бұрын
I love this channel, but in this video I think you missed the mark. France unemployment has been actually one of the biggest problem of the country in the past decades and is just starting to reduce. I cannot see how the 10% unemployment would be so low as to induce inflation. I think one area where you didn't look is that France productivity gains are meek because it is such a service based economy and lacks the big industries that can realise economies of scales and productivity gains.
@kettusnuhveli10 ай бұрын
The moment an economics themed channel accepts an investment related sponsorahip deal, their credibility goes out the window...
@timogul10 ай бұрын
I have a cousin in France, he was pressured to transfer when his company mostly moved to Germany, but he wanted to stay for family reasons, and it did not go well.
@domcizek10 ай бұрын
SOMETIME YOU HAVE TO MOVE, I HAD 20 JOBS IN MY LIFETIME, WHICH INVOLED SEVERAL MOVES ACCROS COUNTRY, ITS GOOD TO SEE OTHER AREAS OF THE WORLD, BEFORE YOU DIE
@martinmikolasek3088Ай бұрын
What is the most indicative of the decline of Italy? Thirty years ago I came to Italy from post-communist Czechoslovakia and I never believed that my country could (in terms of living standards) be equal to Italy. Today, after many years, I can state that the Czech Republic has a comparable standard of living in many respects. At the same time, Italy had an incomparable economic advantage. When I look at the socio-economic data, such as competitiveness, bureaucracy, etc., it is a very sad sight. The Italian fall still continues. Despite the fact that the Italian economy is still rich in the world. The fall will hurt all the more. So much for the "successes" of the Italian economy.
@FlavorsomeMusic9 ай бұрын
It's "Dirigisme", Dee-ree-jism, which would translate to "Directionism" or something like that. It comes from Diriger, a verb that means "To Direct" Diriger usually used in a context where you're the boss of an outfit and you manage it. isme is a form that is usually used to huuh... denote policies and ways of thinking, much like in english ie: Protectionism.
@lioneldemun60339 ай бұрын
Dirigisme ...in German: " Führer system" 😮
@salomondary305410 ай бұрын
You could use the example of SNCF, the train company. Who has kept a monopoly for decades and the quality has decrease as the price increase.
@gamingyann17699 ай бұрын
I took the train in England… I saw Last Week Tonight on the train situation in the US… Those were far worst situation than what an own state situation did… capitalism leading to monopoly and profit going to shareolders before consumers is not working that well…
@machintrucGaming9 ай бұрын
Privatization and removing vertical integration is what is causing SNCF to be anything but a laughing stock. Explain to me how having sub contracts is cheaper than just hiring the labor directly ?
@salomondary30549 ай бұрын
@@gamingyann1769 thats a good point. But as the video said. The French state create companies on key sectors. Now, that there is a rail infrastructure, they should open the gates for other companies, as they did in many other countries. I should look up more information about the USA situation, the lobbying is strong in this one. Thats one of the key weaknesses of our occidental democracies.
@thomasrebotier17419 ай бұрын
I grew up in France. The SNCF train system had downsides (mostly politically motivated strikes and some undue worker benefits), but it serviced the entire country (including small towns), trains were NEVER late, ticket prices were stable and transparent. Since the EU forced the breakdown of SNCF under "free market" pretenses, trains are late, a lot fewer towns are serviced, ticket prices follow a marketing mania jigsaw, security and fairness in the trains is at an all time low. These days, corporate cronyism goes under the guise of free market and every EU politician gets a bite.
@federiccobene10 ай бұрын
Studying economics without considering the currency in which they operate give you a pale reflection of the reality of what is going on