"France is a paradise filled with people who believe they live in hell" . This makes a lot of sense to me now.
@Kafei013 жыл бұрын
It's because they believe it's hell that that it's heaven. Otherwise they wouldn"t fight for improve it.
@contracuth84953 жыл бұрын
This is what makes people want more
@satyakisil97113 жыл бұрын
This makes more sense about France than anything else.
@berenicesaquet18703 жыл бұрын
Also it's Not heaven, it's better than other places. (There are still a good amount of people with no roof, students skipping lunch, etc ....)
@OfoeNelson3 жыл бұрын
@@berenicesaquet1870 Still better than 80 to 90% of the world hence why it is called a first world country. So yeah it is heaven even if it is not a perfect heaven.
@m.g.17253 жыл бұрын
Yes I too love to watch videos saying my country is great while complaining about it being bad imo
@annickgunes88343 жыл бұрын
Me too lol
@captainkiwi10913 жыл бұрын
T’inquiète moi de même
@raphaelismyname3 жыл бұрын
Ho la la… c'est vrai :o
@kenz65023 жыл бұрын
Chakal t'as dead ça
@popobdn50323 жыл бұрын
Du génie
@bosslikeryt6513 жыл бұрын
Our French brothers are strong like us for a strong Europe. Greetings from Germany🇩🇪🤝🇫🇷
@marc66523 жыл бұрын
Danke, aus Paris ! Einigkeit ist Stärke 🍺🇪🇺
@AndalusianLuis3 жыл бұрын
Muslim brothers together 🇩🇪🤝🇫🇷
@turlututu53843 жыл бұрын
Brothers Muslim and not , we must do the better for peoples and preserved liberty and glory for us fatherland 🇫🇷🇩🇪
@gonzalesfrederic62133 жыл бұрын
Long live the French-German friendship !
@elohimaplop47493 жыл бұрын
Yes we’re living in the beautiful country named Utopia ! Brothers muslims come to EU we will be bestfriend and happy
@gabrielcharles11783 жыл бұрын
Just a clarification on some of the figures. We (I am French) have 5 weeks of holidays, not 6. Not every employee works 35 hours a week. It is a law that applies only on companies that hire more than 50 people. If you work in a smaller company, you have to work 39 hours a week. The minimum wages are not as high as 1500 euros (earnings for people), it is closer to 1200, for a full time worker. France also benefits of its geography and history : just the center of Europe, the greatest maritime area with French Overseas Territories. Welcome to France !
@paulbarbat19263 жыл бұрын
Petite précision : 1500 et quelques, c'est le SMIC brut, 1200 c'est après impots sur le revenu et cotisations mais il a quand même plus ou moins raison Rough translation : As a clarification, 1500€ is the brute minimum wage, before income taxes and the contribution to the social security/ retirement systems. The income tax rate being 22% and the other taxes taking other few percents, the real money a minimum wage worker gets at the end of the month is 1200€ (that's a bit less than 10€/hour before the taxes, so around 7.5€ after taxes). Being on r/antiwork, I am delighted to see it is nearly a livable wage (if you don't live in center Paris, obv)
@jxyfull80953 жыл бұрын
1500 brut equals 1200 net I think that’s what he wanted to say
@jasonmiller3011 Жыл бұрын
1200 a month?
@brodocassel Жыл бұрын
@@jasonmiller3011 yes
@brunorossibonin7883 жыл бұрын
1:47 That's art, man! Not porn...
@Coloscopix3 жыл бұрын
Tell that to youtube.
@walterhighwood32093 жыл бұрын
KZbin allows indigenous tribes to be naked because it has no pornographic intention. So that picture must be OK too because it is an historical art. Americans are often oversensitive to naked female breasts 😁.
@limoncenzo3 жыл бұрын
@@walterhighwood3209 you can also view women giving births on youtube..
@vermicelledecheval52193 жыл бұрын
@@walterhighwood3209 indeed... the little mermaid of Disney was about to be censured because of the movie's banner... American censorship viewed the background of it as... A jungle of dicks... Not kidding 🤷♂️
@charakiga3 жыл бұрын
That’s literally the symbol of liberty and he says that’s « porn ». I literally have hundreds reasons of why Americans are not freedom (like basically the fact that the Statue of Liberty is French and that hamburgers are German) but anyway.
@Nalojuntu3 жыл бұрын
3:36 No, french don't work 35h a week. They work more than this. Many business don't apply the "35 hours law". Many workers are doing "additionnal hours" and many others are not working on a weekly hours basis but on annual time outside of these, or even just on "results expenctancy", like "cadres" workers (technicians, ingeneers, management, etc.). Depends on their contract. French are among the ones who work the most hours time in Europe.
@NinVisible3 жыл бұрын
in general additionnal hours are paid so dosen't change anything (and normally paid more than normal hours)
@francois63553 жыл бұрын
@@NinVisible bah si ça change tout car on parle du nombre d’heures travaillées
@NinVisible3 жыл бұрын
@@francois6355 non car 1) si tu veux travailler que 35h en general tu peux c'est juste avantageux pour toi de faire des heures sup 2) elle sont payer donc finalement ça revient un peux commi si t'avais 2 boulots 3) c'est la même chose partout et dans d'autres pays ça peux ne pas être payer (par exemple la suisse pays que je connais car j'habite a coter les heurs sups sont payé mais le temps de base c'est 45h et pourtant y'a quand même des heurs sups
@Firth333003 жыл бұрын
@@NinVisible Bah t'es bête ? On dit "les français travaillent 35h est une affirmation fausse", en justifiant ça par le fait que beaucoup de Français travaillent plus, et tu réponds "ça change rien qu'ils bossent plus" ? Faut réfléchir, hein. Ca change que le temps de travail moyen en France, c'est 37.5h, et pas 35, c'est tout.
@NinVisible3 жыл бұрын
@@Firth33300 bah si tu veux je reste a penser que si il veux un français peut travailler 35h et pas une minute de plus que dans les autres pays c'est la même pour reprendre la suisse on vas dire les suisses bossent 45h en plus ça ne change rien a ufait que la france est un pays riche et enfin y'a même pas debat a avoir car on parle de durée légale de travaille (en tout cas dans la vidéo et là y'a aucun debat possible c'est 35h
@daniel111113 жыл бұрын
I’m an Indian living in France and I love it here. Though the Parisians are a little hard to socialise with, once you break the ice, they’re amazing. Love to all the French out there ❤️
@razador13 жыл бұрын
Come in other région bro, in the North of France you will see all people are friendly !
@StephLeBoss3 жыл бұрын
I am a French countryman living in Paris and I approve this message
@adityaraj-jr8ph3 жыл бұрын
Southern France is love
@zigoto8363 жыл бұрын
C’est pas pour rien qu’en « province » ont dit « parisien tête de chien » ou « parigo tête de veau » 😂
@jacq46243 жыл бұрын
❤
@enguerrand61173 жыл бұрын
3:44 "The minimum wage in France is 1554 euro" You have to go into a little more detail to understand this figure. In France on the payslip, there are two figures. The net salary and the gross salary. The gross salary is exempt from tax. While the net salary is the amount of money that arrives in your bank account, after subtracting all charges. Therefore the minimum wage in France (net) is 1290€ EDIT : Moreover, the gross salary in 2021 in France is € 1,554. Which gives a net 1193 € the French complain about their salaries, indeed, but it has been 30 years since salaries have increased. When, on the contrary, the price of life explodes to him.
@Attu93 жыл бұрын
He may have been comparing France’s gross minimum wage with other countries’, meaning the ranking would be correct.
@enguerrand61173 жыл бұрын
@@Attu9 I'm talking about ranking ? No I'm just saying that what a French really earns about the minimum wage. It is 1193 € and not 1554 €
@rainman12423 жыл бұрын
@@enguerrand6117 the net is what you take home (and pay income tax on).. the 'brut' is a meaning less number invented by the gov to hide tax hike, on the so-called 'employer taxes' side.. the end result is the payroll cost to employ someone is roughly Twice the net. the difference. Net is roughly 80% or 'brut'
@benco44373 жыл бұрын
I confirm !
@honestbaguette3 жыл бұрын
What I was going to write exactly. Also I saw someone saying we paid taxes on the net wage. No. There is the "taxable revenue" too, which is the gross salary - a part of the taxes only. Which means you pay taxes on money you never saw. To be honest we don't have to pay for things others have to pay for because of these high taxes on wages, so it's kind of an ok deal. Last point : wages do increase but only on par with the average inflation. Though in the recent decades essentials' prices grew far more than many fringe products or products unrelated to general consumption, which means the minimum wage is actually getting less interesting every year that passes by.
@lours69933 жыл бұрын
Misleading on French work culture: the French, as mentioned, have among the highest productivity rate in the world and the image of 2 hour lunches and everyone working to rule at 35 hours is inaccurate stereotype. Australian and working in Paris for 20 years, so I know..
@johnmeyer20723 жыл бұрын
I just got back three months ago from visiting France for about a week for the first time, including a few days in Paris. My daughter is working on a PhD in Dijon, so we visited Burgundy as well. I was really struck by all of French society, the people, the countryside, the history, the food the transportation/infrastructure, and I could go on and on, and dare I say it...the women (but that's generally true of all of Europe in fairness that I've seen as they really know how to take care of themselves). All this is also confirmed by my daughter who's lived there for 6 months in ways too numerous to mention, saying she never wants to come back to the US. I was always a bit of a Francophile but had no idea how good it actually was. I originally visited Europe to see if I wanted to retire to Portugal, but gave up that idea, thinking if I wanted to retire anywhere it would be France. But it rarely makes "The Best Places for Americans to Retire" list mostly due to the cost of living, and that's a function of where and how one lives. There are so many myths and stereotypes that are patently untrue, for example I only encountered one unfriendly person and that wasn't even in Paris; just try to speak a few phrases of French: Say "bon jour", "si vous plait", and "pardonez moi" a lot, and you'll be okay. Then "Parlez vous anglais", usually gets a positive response. I'm sure it has a dark side there as well, but name a place that doesn't.
@brewen_lmrch3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for you analyse. I like it because you are not like some tourists who goes one week in Paris and say "I have visited France" 🤦🏻♀️
@artnodulot15253 жыл бұрын
the very dark side is french burreaucratie
@yamihere55693 жыл бұрын
Yess!! I'm glad you spoke about dijon as pretty much everyone mentionning france solely talks about Paris. I mean I get it it's the capital and most popular city; but it can make up for such a misjudgement of the country overall if peoples keep only focusing on it. Also kind of upsetting as a lyonnaise, because france is always mentionned as a country with good food(as it should) but Lyon is so rarely brought into the conversation whilst we are the gastronomical capital!! Besides, every regions have their own verry personal cultures and food as well which deserves praise too. I went to chambéry not too long ago and it was truly charming, such beautiful blue skyes and the massif des vauges was so beautiful irl, I'd definitely recommend you to go there if you can🥰
@fredericmari88713 жыл бұрын
That’s the important trick. If you start with a french sentence, most French, even Parisians, will try to reciprocate when you switch to English
@anon84283 жыл бұрын
I'm afraid you've got your rose-tinted glasses from your week in France. A week in any country, even 6 months is not sufficient enough time to judge a country. If you haven't had to deal with la préfecture, take daily public transport, walked around at night, informed yourself on French politics which is saturated with right-wing populists-with a certain Eric Zemmour gaining in popularity who wants to impose what first name you can have, you haven't seen the bad sides of France.
@modb793 жыл бұрын
Great video. I don't agree with the fact that due to the long hours of lunch breaks the French are less productive, in fact it's quite the opposite, the French labor force is the most productive on the EU, higher than Germany and the UK that work longer hours.
@metalblind953 жыл бұрын
He said it at the end of the video, don’t worry 👍
@jakegeer1133 жыл бұрын
It might be quite productive but the quality seems to be a lot lower than the uk overall and the price is more expensive all round
@metalblind953 жыл бұрын
Itz Blitz do you have data about this?
@arrisan82833 жыл бұрын
@@jakegeer113 the price goes with inflation, and the quality goes with the qualification of the labor and the minimum quality to ask. The working time, which is lower, has a positive impact on the quality, from 40 hours of work week there is the beginning of negative impact on the work produced (and the average of the working time provided in France is 38 hours, 35H compulsory and in general 2H additional)
@alainmare80813 жыл бұрын
@@jakegeer113 look at the cars produced in UK in the past…..the general quality and management was so bad that they were forced to sell all British car industry to the German, Indian and French companies.
@Bubblegob3 жыл бұрын
I love how it would never cross his mind that maybe a fewer hour work week combined with good healthcare and job security can ease the mind of workers and make the hours actually worked more productive.
@louiscroc123 жыл бұрын
That is actually a pretty damn sad statement
@mynamenoneofyourbusiness6523 жыл бұрын
Valid arugment, however his points were good as well. Appart from this... your comment is just pretentious and despising, I actually want to insult you just for these words "I love how it would never cross his mind..." Listen to what he said: "this is an endless debate with tons of different arguments". I am not gonna add a despising comment on your obvious political orientation, but I wish I were as disrespectful as you are, to do so.
@1310up3 жыл бұрын
The truth is , most people work a lot more than 35hours, but don't get paid for the extra hours.
@anthonylecas76163 жыл бұрын
@@1310up That’s what I was about to Say :)
@supergaga17123 жыл бұрын
@@1310up they get extra vacation instead. A lot.
@soumyajitkar73463 жыл бұрын
Great content. There are a lot of misconceptions or rather misgivings about the French labourforce, especially in the English speaking world. Yes, the legal working hours are lower than most other countries, but it is difficult to find anyone that actually works 35 hours. It's almost always more than that, sometimes by a lot. And on productivity, a case can be made that taking longer breaks and appreciating the little things in life can make you more productive, the French being a case in point. It is sad that some people wear their habit of skipping lunch for work or a desk lunch as a badge of professional honour; judge the French workforce with those glasses and no wonder you will end up with a simplistic assessment of the people being systematically indolent. Also, it would have been nicer if you had not focussed so much on Parisian visuals. There are other vibrant cities and towns that make for great visuals too :) And of course ... **Oh là là**
@canistanbuldan3 жыл бұрын
Fully agree with you, it is said that French are more productive than Americans, even if the latter are working longer.
@jamisonz33653 жыл бұрын
I know there are many beautiful cities in France. But I believe almost all the head quarter of big French companies are located in Paris. I think maybe it's the reason of them putting Parisian visials on this economic contents.
@Coloscopix3 жыл бұрын
@@jamisonz3365 That's not so true. A lot of french companies (medium size) kept their headquarter in their region of origin. They only have the commercial / lawyer in Paris.
@phirus023 жыл бұрын
Y avait des visuels du vieux port de Marseille aussi 😎
@miloigor49143 жыл бұрын
ouais plus Lyon, Grenoble etc
@kapudanuderya3 жыл бұрын
God created France and thought that this was unfair to other nations. So he created French to balance out.
@abeloofrite95573 жыл бұрын
I hope you didn't steal this comment,but if you didn't that's the best comment of the comment section
@kapudanuderya3 жыл бұрын
@@abeloofrite9557 I didn't steal it but I've heard it many times ago :)
@skinva3 жыл бұрын
Parisians* x)
@johnjeanb3 жыл бұрын
Not quite Andrey: France is the result of the French being very critical (life conditions, food), liking art so much, trying to optimize things so they can do the same with less work. The result is a beautiful country with "nasty"people who can be very friendly if you know the magic word "Bonjour". Also a surprising country exporting a lot without enslaving its people.
@lechatrelou63933 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure every french would agree with you.
@Teneban3 жыл бұрын
You say we complain and whine, but really that's something we take pride in and would never want to stop. A very famous French quote is "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it". We don't see protests as a disruption of the order: they are a very important part of the system. If this system didn't include ways for us to improve it over time, then it would be a pretty shitty system, and we'd have a revolution or three about it. A big a part of our national identity is about how the government is here to serve us, and not the other way around. And it's not a lack of patriotism: what could possibly be more patriotic than to loudly demand that our country be as great as we think it can be? Our culture shows protesters as heroes, and that is a very healthy thing imo. Only reasons our friends from the US have a hard time understanding this, is that from a young age, they are taught to start from the assumption that the US is "the best country in the world" and then go from there. If you're already the best, why go out of your way to improve over time, right?
@sinnaysin98613 жыл бұрын
Protesters are far from heroes in France. The issue with a lot of protestations here is that they do not focus on the right targets. In public transports for example, protestations from SNCF stops trains from working at all, which stops a lot of people from working, sometimes for their survival needs. What would be best would be to keep the trains working, but let anyone come and go without ticket regulations. Surely the loss of revenues would have more impact on the government than preventing their fellow citizens from working. Overall I think it's nice to have protestations allowed, but a lot are not done the right way. Anyway, France is still a nice place to live in despite protesters.
@afds15813 жыл бұрын
@@sinnaysin9861 or better yet, the strike should be GENERAL.
@Siegdrifa3 жыл бұрын
@@sinnaysin9861 They can't, if they let people use transport for free, they could get serious problems; they don't own the trains, they are merely employees.
@sinnaysin98613 жыл бұрын
@@Siegdrifa That's the point. It should be the protesters issue to face the consequences of their actions, and only them. The peoples commuting through public transports have nothing to do with whatever the protesters claim.
@Siegdrifa3 жыл бұрын
@@sinnaysin9861 Being on strike is not illegal here, being irresponsible with the property of the state is illegal. That would be like doing seppuku.
@melvynswingler43313 жыл бұрын
I’ve never heard of that expression with the donkeys being covered in gold in France. But the rest is accurate
@theseriousguy30983 жыл бұрын
"Si de beaucoup travailler on devenait riche, les ânes auraient le bât doré" mais je suis d'accord que c'est pas une expression courante.
@ryomaanime45633 жыл бұрын
Surement une ancienne expression. Très juste cela dit.
@arrisan82833 жыл бұрын
@@ryomaanime4563 sa vient des champs, en gros comme les ânes tirait les charrette de transport et les charrue, donc faisait le travaille le plus dur, d’où cette expression.
@Drek4923 жыл бұрын
@@theseriousguy3098 Aujourd’hui j’ai appris ce qu’est un bât d’où « c’est là que le bât blesse »
@charakiga3 жыл бұрын
@@ryomaanime4563 c’est l’expression qu’on dit quand on a 8ans
@marcsoulez13 жыл бұрын
For being French it's a very liberal analysis. when France economy has been always marked by a higher than average intervention of state into economy and durable lefts reforms that had not yet been completely dismantled by our recent liberal government making us having one of the best health care and retirement systems (even though state always can have a veto over businesses).
@thedefusingbomb98533 жыл бұрын
Yeah, the past and present governements are litteraly tearing apart not only health care but also education, security and more :/
@diegochatard-caraballo58483 жыл бұрын
@@thedefusingbomb9853 alas, the health and the education systems are being destroyed since at least 30 years...
@thedefusingbomb98533 жыл бұрын
@@diegochatard-caraballo5848 i know... Sadly part of ppl don't even care
@philv39413 жыл бұрын
Our health car remains in the world's top 7 ( and still one, if the most, expensive) , the gov extended it to the "reste à charge zero" wich is unic. Stop whinning, you are validating the cliché.
@marcsoulez13 жыл бұрын
@@philv3941 because it is among the best of the world means you can't say that it can be better !? Cmon man looking the lawn of your neighbors dosen't make yours more green.
@pandorski350003 жыл бұрын
I'm french and though i appreciate one has interest in my country, i also enjoy when the informations given are exact and not biased or totally wrong sometimes. For that reason, i must say that this attempt is far from the truth, or is , to say the least, an excessive generalization. As you may know, France is probably the world champion in developping general principles and laws but immediatly after, creating niches and exceptions. So the 35h / week, retirement at 62 etc...are not the general case, except for some specific sectors. As a citizen, the french has long understood that the relationship with the politics (supposed to represent us) can only be based on power relations/power balance, not by negotiations like in Germany...hence the potential trouble-making power of the strike
@cmep3 жыл бұрын
You almost hit France on the head with the explanation but a deep dive should have included the fact that people work as hard (and long) as the work requires in France, just like other place around the World. Additionally, there are many professions (and work situations) that just don't take hourly work into account. That said - when the French are off work, they are off work and that, along with holidays being codified into law, makes workers in France more refreshed when they come back from holiday because they really didn't think or worry about work while on holiday. Additionally, actual household wealth is higher in France than many other OECD countries, in part because French have low levels of debt compared to other countries.
@Coloscopix3 жыл бұрын
Le "forfait jour" pour les cadres :). My boss telling me "You have a 39h contract, but I expect at least 50h"
@donnorman65263 жыл бұрын
I agree. People say we don't work because we do 35h.. my ass I do 35h.... I do much more but paid 35h... I kinda agree that one thing good about france is really 0 debt. I just graduated with alternance masters degrees and have 0 debt towards my education or anything else. Is a big plus for a country with above average salaries like france. I still don't get the lunch breaks 2h.. for me 1h is enough, I think it's useless to make the day "longer" tho
@AdrienBurg3 жыл бұрын
Cadres who work overtime everyweek, I pity you. You feel you dont have the choice but you do. I know that I do just as much work every month, whereas I do overtime or not: you just work slower for longer times.
@cmep3 жыл бұрын
@@AdrienBurg it's not a cadre vs non cadre (translation to English - manager vs non manager) thing. It's a work needs to be done item for most positions thing. Some people have their 39 or 35 hour contracts and have figured out a way to work as little as possible and there are some cadre (managers) that are just stuck at work under crap management but most people in France work more to make up for those who don't work or just because they need things to get done. It is those people's work that keeps French companies competitive in a world where 39 hour (or even 35 hour) contracts exist, not to mention RTT.
@Skaelya3 жыл бұрын
@@donnorman6526 wait it's supposed to be 2 hours ? I've never taken 2 hours of lunch break... I mean I also only ever worsk in internship in a "bureau d'étude" but no one there did 2 hours lunch breaks.
@scottkettles66723 жыл бұрын
i'm half french and I work in France the minimum wage while true in some extent is a bit misleading, technically the employer pays around 1500 euros however you have to subscract 25% of charges that are taken by the state and you get the real minimum wage that a person obtains at the end of a month around 1200 euros.
@jeremiemarion39663 жыл бұрын
Your minimum wage is the full wage. Except you're covered for your retirment and healthcare (and unemployment insurance and family benefits), still your wage except it is transfered in other type of benefits so you don't have to pay for it. These are not "charges" but "cotisations" and it is based on the communist principle, "everybody according to their means, to each according to their needs", it belongs to the workers for the rest of their life. It was designed by a communist called Ambroize Croizat and with 2 other communist they designed most of the modern welfare state from scratch after WWII. They were part of the government with other resistance members that fought in WWII as well to build what will be known as 4th Republic.
@kevintoutcourt41643 жыл бұрын
@@jeremiemarion3966 Almost sure you are familiar with "La sociale" and the work of Bernard Friot ;)
@jeremiemarion39663 жыл бұрын
@@kevintoutcourt4164 Never watched it, but i'm familiar with the ideas.
@flouy74303 жыл бұрын
lwork
@Ardakill313 жыл бұрын
pour 1200 ton employeur paye le double, il a des charges salariales
@MulticortT3 жыл бұрын
Oh là là
@morganverdure61163 жыл бұрын
There are many clichés in this videos about French employment: - -35 hours a week is not a maximum it is a reference number. the official average week is 40. But most of the employees don't count their hours. -no there are no huge pauses at lunch and the productivity of the work is amont the highest, with USA and Japan. If you are to make videos about economics, please use sourced datas and numbers.
@NekosSan3 жыл бұрын
He didn't say that the productivity is among the lowest, and actually France have the 7th world biggest GDP according to the IMF. USA and Japan are the first and third one respectivly
@lengerdesautre3 жыл бұрын
Le SMIC est pas à 1k5 il est en dessous aussi je crois, mais le truc c'est le mieux ou peut travailler les "prolétaires" c'est travaille pour l'état être des fonctionnaires généralement il y a beaucoup plus d'avantages
@forbiddenknowledge2102 жыл бұрын
Wrong 35 hour is correct unless your working in restaurant and hotels who got exemption from this rule which 39 hours there is no such thing as 40 hours a week if you work more than 35 hours upto 43 hours you get 20 percent more over 43 50 percent more let me give uou an example I work 40 hours a week 36 hours Ian paid normal salary 12 euros a hour before taxes for the remaining 5 hours I make 70 instead of 60 then add bonuses like food which is typically on average 7 euros and I you do night shift like iam doing you get 0.90 cents per hour extra from 9 pm to 7 am so please for God sake stop spreading misinformation when you are less informed on a matter regardless of being in France or not
@morganverdure61162 жыл бұрын
@@forbiddenknowledge210 bon alors.... Selon l'institut national des statistiques économiques (l'insee) la durée hebdomadaire moyenne de travail en France est de 39.1 heure pour les salariés à temps complet, 47.7 heures pour les non salariés à temps complet, 23.4 h pour les salariés temps partiels et 19.7 pour les non salariés temps partiel , en 2019. Et non les heures supplémentaires ne sont pas 'une exception" autorisée que pour l' hôtellerie restauration. Chaque convention collective en gère les modalités mais tous les salariés de tous secteurs sont autorisés à faire des heures supplémentaires.
@morganverdure61162 жыл бұрын
@@forbiddenknowledge210 as for spreading misinformation : sorry i am just an economics teacher in business schools... Lol
@rounaksinghhoonjan3783 жыл бұрын
France is a great nation indeed. Love from India.
@davidvincent58333 жыл бұрын
Thank you France loves India too
@knarfnoe72193 жыл бұрын
@@davidvincent5833 With the rafale for India, the Chinese and Pakistanis will avoid conflict. The rafale send enemies to hell in sleek and sexy supersonic flight.
@slurpii46693 жыл бұрын
Compared to India france in the Jardin d'Eden
@backintimealwyn57363 жыл бұрын
@@slurpii4669 India's great, one of the smartest country on earth. India did a tremendous job after colonization and is one of the countries that are doing the best without falling into dictatorship (unlike China), I think it will take a bit longer than China but it's normal when you have a democacy , yet it's definitely one of the next great powers.
@creatineenjoyer73453 жыл бұрын
@@backintimealwyn5736 true
@olivierpynoh79823 жыл бұрын
"limited working hours and long lunch breaks that result in limited output" : that is just not true. A lot of studies show that less working hours a week result in same output and even greater output since the employees are healthier and happier.
@Lwena3 жыл бұрын
Yeh, we lowered corporate taxes, hoping that the unemployment rate would drop, but the companies just took the opportunity to pay their shareholders more ...
@LadyMagolotta3 жыл бұрын
How surprising, it's like big machine as corps and firm just want to have goods figures, while people will actually spend the money and hence helps the local economy, creating works,which lead to need of workforce to create more goods to sell...
@jeslea68943 жыл бұрын
@@LadyMagolotta What he's saying is wrong though. That may be true for big business, but you can't judge business practices solely on what the "big dogs" are doing. Small businesses (50-100) have grown quite a bit, especially small factories.
@devilsadvocate26433 жыл бұрын
Yeah French gov LOVES to tell us about the "trickle down economy" a.k.a help the super rich so they will feel like giving people morsels of their wealth, which was proven wrong countless times. The end result is they get obscenely richer and nothing trickles down.
@36Yutang3 жыл бұрын
@@mikhael636 Lmao with the CICE created by Macron under Hollande presidency, 1 job was created per 240.000€ yearly tax cut. Paying 6 people 40.000€/year and giving one a public job would have done the same. (except public jobs have other uses for society than making rich people richer)
@guillaumepineda48673 жыл бұрын
Not really. Simply depends how relevant your job is. They're ready to pay insane amounts for filling empty strategical positions. If a Firma wants to earn more, it needs to hire highly skilled employees.
@tomdgr97673 жыл бұрын
I'm french, and I aprove this video, but I never said ho lala :D
@chillcapsaicin61093 жыл бұрын
Wut das dat mean????
@saranghae513 жыл бұрын
I have few French friends and they say ohh la la a lot 😅
@pierren___3 жыл бұрын
You are a shame 🤧 oh lala
@quentindupouey71263 жыл бұрын
Maybe you do but you don't know it yet:) I found that olala myths stupid and when I arrived in Australia I figured out I was saying it, and not just a little..!
@RyanBarroso3 жыл бұрын
I'm french, and I say oh lala/oulala😂
@Nalojuntu3 жыл бұрын
3:50 "Correlation between minimum wage and employment rate" : wrong. And it has been proven wrong by studies. The employment rate is correlated to the distribution of work time throughout the workers. Share the work time (lowering it), you increase the employment rate. Increase the work time for the capitalists to extract more value out of the workers work, you decrease employment rate. Unemployment is just artificially maintained to not share the work and to keep the wages low.
@afds15813 жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@123Clean1233 жыл бұрын
By the way you describe French unemployment you'd think it was over 10% or something but it's only at 8.1%. To suggest that their significant productivity rating on a per hour basis compared to others is a result of only the most productive members of their society working is a bit of an overstatement. Good info overall but you do throw a lot of your own unchecked biases throughout the video. From some of your statements you'd think the highest unemployment rates would be in Norway, Sweden, Denmark. But it's not true. That would be places like Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greece, Montenegro etc... Norway's at 5% despite having notoriously high taxes. Denmark has higher taxes than France and yet it's unemployment rate is at 4%, even lower than the US.
@joris51163 жыл бұрын
Yes. Unfortunately he uses the common liberal rules of thumb and leaves it at that.
@iandlz93113 жыл бұрын
That unemployment rate is a joke; it doesn't take into account people who are not looking for work, people who have occasional small gigs, etc. The real unemployment rate would be close to 20% (people out of work + prorata for people working part-time/occasionally). The productivity per hour also seems weird, if the calculation is based on 35 hours work weeks then it would be wrong, as the majority doesn't work 35 hours even if it's mentioned in their contracts
@adaslesniak3 жыл бұрын
Fully agree - when he says that companies export jobs to countries with lower corporate tax rate... that is just bias and that is just stupid, as corporate tax is payed in headquarter no matter where jobs are. Corporate profits have little to do with employees salaries and for companies they are costs that are excluded from taxation base.
@123Clean1233 жыл бұрын
@@adaslesniak 💯. Companies just base their headquarters out of a jurisdiction on 'paper' but have workers wherever else. Otherwise Barbados, Panama and Bermuda would have 20x the population they presently do. And they don't. Their operations tend to be elsewhere because, as nice as Barbados and Panama are, not many people would leave their friends and family to live there. But London, NYC LA etc? Diff story.
@abdallaosman52683 жыл бұрын
@@adaslesniak tbf it wasn’t cuz of corporate tax but rather employment tax
@lucieciepka10313 жыл бұрын
So if I got it correctly France has to erase workers rights, erase employer taxes and overall lower taxes. Also replace pensions with 401k HasMat, healthcare with Go Fund Me, parental leave with a breast pompe at your desk. Oh and how does deregulation work for you? We’ve heard that Texas has grown cold tourds self regulating businesses.
@mr.meeseeks30743 жыл бұрын
The beauty of liberalism or how to sacrifice the people's well-being for the economy while pretending it's for the sake of the people.
@salpetre45023 жыл бұрын
@@mr.meeseeks3074 spot on
@adammasterx58543 жыл бұрын
Damn, people here really insulting my country
@mythicdawn95743 жыл бұрын
Pretty much what I got from the video. It pretends to explain France but it's just a pile of cliches. Fortunately he at least mentions the serious stuff in the end such as internal EU competition and French workers productivity. But trying to explain France in its current state without going deeper on certain subjects is quite ridiculous. I'm thinking about euro, EU, "strategist State" historicity, the various markets France occupies and what is their strength and weaknesses when it comes to exporting those products... In the end, I'm quite sure the average foreigner learned nothing from this video, since they already knew we worked less hours, had a lot of taxes, high debt, eat frogs and snails (lol no ?), plenty of tourists... Quite the easy content to produce indeed :p
@pommedeter74073 жыл бұрын
Yup, I was like, « don’t you think treating workers like actual human beings is worth it, even if it causes more unemployment ? »
@MrEtidu493 жыл бұрын
I’m French and I have to say that while we are not lazy, many of my beloved compatriots, myself included, work to live and not the other way around. The 35h week is (unfortunately) a myth a d most ppl actually work around 40h a week. I find it kind if fun to listen to foreign opinions on our way of working and taxing companies and I actually have a hard time understanding the anglo-saxons perspective of work that makes it a focal point of their life. I personally love living in a country where we tax a lot to pay for actually cool stuff like education, hc, … it’s too bad that ultra rich comit tax evasion and that middle/ low classes pay the prices but that’s why we’ll keep striking to achieve optimal social justice and minimal work weeks hehe
@paolosantiago31633 жыл бұрын
"I'm from the Philippines but I really love France as a whole country hope to visit, live or both there someday .?!"
@rerem23 жыл бұрын
thank you! I had some Philippine acquaintances, I never managed to get close to them :/ they didn't like me, I didn't understand why, but we talked more seriously and in fact, they hated the French. Ducoup it makes me warm in the heart to read your comment :) thank you my friend! and I love the Philippines
@rerem23 жыл бұрын
I am a big fan of your cooking, stock up for when I arrive :p
@Draigh63 жыл бұрын
Good review, though there is one major issue: Neither lowering the employment tax nor lowering the wages would in any way lead to the creation of more jobs - companies would just pocket the money and give it to the share-holders.
@Yoedric3 жыл бұрын
Exactly. As evidenced by the past 15 years of right-wing governement.
@AmanKumarPadhy3 жыл бұрын
Just a question, could the legislative wing just mandate it for the companies to "invest" that money for r&d? Im asking because it seems weirdly natural to me, but no one does it (or they have and idk :p)?
@pojitapejito3 жыл бұрын
@@AmanKumarPadhy okay so it basically already exists : it's called "crédit impôt recherche", which means if you invest a quantity of money into r&d, you will pay less tax. But that doesnt lead to more money being put in r&d, they invest the same ammount. But they pay less tax and give more to the shareholders. It's a common misconception that capitalism breeds innovation because they always try to innovate to be on top of the market, but it's actually wrong, france being an excellent exemple of why that is. What matters to be in top of the market is marketing, not innovation. The Credit impot recherche basically just drains our public money
@TheMusicalKnokcers3 жыл бұрын
nooooo you can't say that! companies care about their workers ;( they would hire everyone and we would achieve world peace.
@zoyun3 жыл бұрын
A rare argument that I find it strange we never mention about unemployment rate is the demography of France in comparison with most of the other European countries, like Germany. France's population is younger with a higher birthrate so it needs more employs to be created each year, more than Germany that loose more workers that it gains each, needing immigration to compensate. The younger a country's population is the more the unemployment rate tends to be high. I read that with Germany's demography France's employment rate would be far lower than Germany's.
@mathieu41793 жыл бұрын
As a French person I think you take a lot of risky shortcuts and jump to conclusions way too fast about a few things related to people struggles and politics in general. One thing you have to be very clear about also, is that Paris is in no way representative of France as a whole when it comes to employment, money and political ideas. Parisian people tend to look down on others quite a lot and are generally snob. Obviously not every parisian is like that, but still, it's a common thing. Which means living in Paris for a few months or even years (where wages are approx. 2x to 2.5x higher than other regions btw) will not be enough to understand how France works or what French people think. You have to keep in mind France is one of the most highly taxed countries in the world too. Look for "social contributions" and how money is not invested how it should by the government anymore. Look for the price of gas. Billions are taxed every year from the middle class and just disappear never to be seen again in the system, and quality of services keep getting down and down over time. And the fact that our paramedics and related are only ranking 26th for wage in EU says a lot about the recognition crisis and the true struggles we have to face. In the meantime, tens of thousands are trying to house, and landlords or bankers are getting hysterically selective nowadays, with borderline psychotic requirements. Which means for an average couple like mine, we can't move because it would require either bigger wages or permanent job contracts, which are both very hard to acquire nowadays even when you're qualified and doing fine money-wise. Keep it mind when you try to get an appartment you're competing against 25 to 100 people on average. Image of France from an international POV is mostly smoke and mirrors, with a fake shine to it, especially when it comes to French healthcare system. Come and live for a few months outside the capital, you'll see. Hospitals are being shut down month after month, and not replaced. Mistreatment of patients is also quickly becoming the norm, due to how poorly health and care workers are managed, and due to ridiculously low budgets allocated by the State. I would know, I'm a nurse. Again, keep in mind taxes are rising, and quality of services and budgets are dropping year after year. Also you make it seem like wages are high, this is a lie. A very high percentage of people with a job live under the poverty line, and numbers keep growing. Social assistance programs are also very poorly spread and funds are smaller and smaller. Students cannot eat everyday. In the meantime ministers and officials have their wages going through the roof, usually 5 to 20x higher than the average worker and they keep pushing ultra liberal / globalist policies like relocating businesses which makes the process of finding a decent job harder and harder. Unless you are the boss of a multinational business who makes billions a year, preferably a big lab, in which case you get an immunity to all taxes and keep getting richer while other smaller businesses are getting crushed. Not everything you said is wrong, but you better go and discuss with real people in France regions, especially small businesses, to better understand what I'm saying. France is not what it used to be a few years ago, and is certainly not close to what is described in some "official" reviews. Disparity prevails nowadays. Surely French have flaws, like complaining a lot etc. But keep in mind that it's precisely because we complain and fight for our rights that we have what we have today. French had to pay the price of blood more than once to repel tyranny and fascism throughout recent history. Btw, believing that French say "Ho la la" is pretty much the same as believing that French walk in the streets wearing berets, striped sailor shirts and baguettes, while eating frogs. It's just fantasy cliché from people that don't know much.
@sfghetsfghet25403 жыл бұрын
Tu as tout dit vraiment bravo. Merci de remettre, certains anglais ou personne du monde anglophone, à leur place car ils pensent tout savoir.
@TheSharingan323 жыл бұрын
Les clichés c’est fou, ton pavé est tellement stéréotypé 😂 Genre tu l’accuses d’avoir une fausse image de la France, mais la tienne est pas plus réaliste. Elle est pleine d’aigreur, et de mauvaise foi. Je ne dis pas que tout ce que tu dis est totalement faux, ou illégitime. Juste que t’es complètement extrême. A un moment il y’a un juste milieu. Tu te donnes juste l’image, malheureusement trop commune, de quelqu’un qui critique, mais ne propose absolument rien (et n’a certainement jamais vécu à l’étranger de surcroît, car souvent c’est à ce moment là qu’on se rend compte qu’on était pas si mal en France 😉). Tu viens lui donner des leçons de clichés alors que les tiens 🤢 mention spéciale à Paris qui se fait démonter… ça se sent que t’en as gros sur la patate 😂 Par contre très propre ton niveau d’anglais !
@arthurhooper74763 жыл бұрын
@@TheSharingan32 ce n'est pas un problème de critiquer sans proposer de solutions, c'est justement par la critique que l'on peut débuter sa reflexion sur un problème. En plus, ce n'est pas en se disant que c'est pire ailleurs, à l'étranger, que l'on peut se satisfaire du moindre mal. En effet, pourquoi s'arrêter au moindre mal, pourquoi pas le meilleur bien? Pour finir la dessus, tu dis qu'il est malheureusement quelqu'un trop commun qui critique sans proposer de solutions, mais j'affirme que l'on devrait penser que oui, heureusement que les gens critiquent, car même s'ils ne donnent pas de problèmes ils les montrent, ce qui est essentiel pour les résoudre. Enfin, les problèmes dont ils parle, à l'exeption de son image de paris, ne sont pas des clichés mais sont les raisons des grèves qui ne sont pas du tout abordés dans la vidéo.
@mathieu41793 жыл бұрын
@@TheSharingan32 Non vraiment, c'est pas tant un cliché que ça pour moi, je dis ce que je pense et j'assume. Concernant Paris vu que j'ai l'impression que j'ai touché une corde sensible, je précise que j'ai bien dit "certains", et c'était juste pour mettre l'accent sur un fait particulier, que les parisiens n'étaient pas représentatifs de la pensée française au même titre que, je sais pas, disons les habitants de Los Angeles ou de Washington ne sont pas représentatifs des idées politiques ou économiques de leur nation. Je n'ai rien contre Paris, ni ses habitants. Je ne suis pas frustré concernant cette question. Je reconnais que ma façon de présenter les choses est assez péjorative. Encore une fois, c'était juste pour mettre l'accent et attirer un peu l'attention. J'aurais dû prendre un peu plus de recul avant de marquer ça comme ça, sans doute. Merci de ta lecture.
@TheSharingan323 жыл бұрын
@@mathieu4179 Rien a dire, très belle réponse. 😉
@sylver-d-bruxelles3 жыл бұрын
Hi, I'm French, so there are all mistakes : -FIVE weeks' annual vacation, not SIX -1554 €/mouth it's the "brut" wage, so minus 23% of social contribution and minus the income tax, it's in reality arround 1050-1100 euros in the bank account -The amount of income tax is an addition of 4 percent ratios of the annual wage -Why fire one to hire one other, except if the fire one was an asshole ? Oh la la :P
@SylvesterStaline.3 жыл бұрын
Le fait de ne pas pouvoir virer peut etre un cauchemard dans certaines boites Entre la nana qui se metma enchainer les maternités des le cdi signé, les incompetent membres de je ne sais quel syndicat,... Il y a plein de boites qui engageraient bien plus si c'etait plus simple.
@sylver-d-bruxelles3 жыл бұрын
@@SylvesterStaline. j'avoue il y a des gens qui abusent, ça serait bien qu'il y ait des statisticien qui se penchent sur la question
@SylvesterStaline.3 жыл бұрын
@@sylver-d-bruxelles mon pere a eu une fois une directrice de magasin. Elle lui avais promis qu elle avais pas de gosses prevues, 3 grossesses plus tard en plus de deux ans et demis elle avais servit a rien. En plus tu dois engager quelqu un pour remplacer donc double salaire... pour une petite boite cela peut etre mortel. Apres faut pas deconner c est bien les protections aussi, je suis tres loins d'un full liberal. Mais un reajustement quoi
@sylver-d-bruxelles3 жыл бұрын
@@SylvesterStaline. j'avoue là je la vire...
@SylvesterStaline.3 жыл бұрын
@@sylver-d-bruxelles c'est presque impossible, tu risqueras de payer plusieurs milliers d euros voire dizaine, plus les prudhommes ect Pas pour rien que parfois certains patrons font gaffe avec les jeunes femmes et vont preferer des jeunes hommes ou des femmes dans la 40/50aine, c est pas toujours du machisme.
@hamzapetridis2063 жыл бұрын
Limited output? Lmao France’s employee are literally the most productive employees in the world. But yeah sure.
@mrworldwide73873 жыл бұрын
Wait, really ?
@sawsaga3 жыл бұрын
@@mrworldwide7387 in capita per hour yes
@justfelix91993 жыл бұрын
Please watch the video before commenting...
@GabiMining3 жыл бұрын
As said in the video, France has a higher unemployment rate so ofc that they are productive. Fewer people are getting hired and only the best, making France hightly productive but they still work less then all their neighbor countries if you take the total rates and not the /hour rate
@Yoedric3 жыл бұрын
@@GabiMining We're talking a few % of employement above the world average, that's not enough to state "only the best are hired in france".
@lucwenbourne2337 Жыл бұрын
“Limited output” the French are some of the most productive employs
@ImpluseResponse3 жыл бұрын
Just to make it clear, the 35 hour week doesn't apply to every job. For exemple executives do not have a maximum number of hours per week!
@ringsaphire3 жыл бұрын
Legally, for everyone, execs included, it's 48h/week if you go on a weekly basis. If not, for most execs, there is the "forfait cadre" a yearly 218 days salary (43.5 weeks) The rest is done for free and unnofficialy - call it volunteer work, if you like working after 8pm and on week ends, your loss.
@lusiabournet82163 жыл бұрын
Yeah but they got 10% to 50% advantage on salary for working more than 35h per week. Not count the executif that has very good salary. 35h means the standart.
@l-esprit_de_l-ouest3 жыл бұрын
35h/ hours is not enougth if you are earning about 10 e / hour. 1200 e / month is ridiculously low : you cant make any savings.
@ringsaphire3 жыл бұрын
@@l-esprit_de_l-ouest and yet french people save more money - as americans tends to borrow much more, living on credits (the use of credit cards and debit cards are the perfect example of this difference in mentallity). Or are you saying that the lowest income in the US can make more savings? Also, french workers too can have complementary jobs (as auto-entrepreneurs)
@ZZZZordan3 жыл бұрын
@@ringsaphire The average worker will work around 38h/w iirc, not 35 So yeah, 35 paid the minimum is not enough
@luclu7_3 жыл бұрын
You definitively know the person who wrote the video never actually worked in France :'D I love how they think that company would hire local people instead of cheaply outsourcing to another company that doesn't really care about human rights, that's why unions exists. It's also why it's hard to fire someone you don't like for any reason. Lower company taxes are just because the government is from a (far)-right party. Companies do make more money, but employees don't.
@tayloryoung98033 жыл бұрын
macron far right , well thats an interesting information. Well of course if you are extreme-left then everything is far right and maybe the socialist party just center right
@antoinem19743 жыл бұрын
@@tayloryoung9803 He is to some french people. French government is from a right party (for France) and likes to please the far-right to be reelected. Don't forget that French use to say that Republicans are Far-far right, and democrats (far)right. Each country has differents views about right or left.
@marinlorre52073 жыл бұрын
Yes hired some cheap hand from the massive immigration supported by ? the gouvernement, which make it much more (far) left to me (and to a big portion of the population).
@regdetouraine95713 жыл бұрын
@@tayloryoung9803 😅👍
@maxchapuis62563 жыл бұрын
Hello, as a french, I found your video very accurate and found it good. But I would like to add that it would have been good to precise that the rate taxe of our companies is very unequal. Little and medium ones pay a lot of tax (enormously), and big ones (in %), pay way way less. It is also one of the keys to understand the dynamics of our economy.
@maxchapuis62563 жыл бұрын
By the way I susbcribed and will watch some of your other videos, thanks for your work.
@zil18323 жыл бұрын
France's Rafales are so cool! From India. Edit: Well well, did I start a comment war?🤔
@OfficialLoupak3 жыл бұрын
oh la la
@shiroegenshiken13713 жыл бұрын
Psst, we want to sell 2000 Rafales, do you want to buy it?
@Skaelya3 жыл бұрын
nah they're not, DASSAULT are the worst. they deserve a nobel prize... as in really nobel prize, a prize that has the name of the worst death bringer in the world.
@shiroegenshiken13713 жыл бұрын
@@Skaelya ......... 3 words. AMERICA! FUCK YEAH! I won't disagree, Dassault enterprise is a death bringer. They make WEAPON, that's the business. But the whole US army is worse and Rafales are not the product the more used by dictators.
@sans-nom_1.mp4253 жыл бұрын
@@Skaelya selling weapon is not the problem for me, the problem is to who you sell it, if we sell it to others countries to defend themselves or good causes it’s okay but we often sell weapon to country who do war crime/crimes against humanity with
@arthurpoquillon88743 жыл бұрын
A little clarification when you talked about strikes : you showed images of crowds of people with flags climbing on statue and waving french flags. This was not a strike, it was taken in Montpellier, i was there, and it was a celebration for winning the football world cup in 2018. The location is in the Place de la Comedie.
@sarahwashington003 жыл бұрын
J’y étais aussi 😂😂😂
@ringsaphire3 жыл бұрын
Strikes used to ressemble celebrations, but not anymore...
@georges36233 жыл бұрын
t'es cringe fréro tu viens casser tout le délire vraiment
@fytc443 жыл бұрын
It's not only taxes, it's also contributions that fund the unemployment fund, health insurance system, so in the end, it can come back in the pockets of the citizens.
@charakiga3 жыл бұрын
If you for example, I don’t know, have a very big car accident, and you’re highly injured, well you won’t pay anything, because it’s already taken from your salary, not like in USA.
@charakiga3 жыл бұрын
And of course it makes the roads that you take every day to go to work (and hospitals and public buildings)
@silva36583 жыл бұрын
Also African countries
@MarquisVonLion3 жыл бұрын
It also funds the thousand of illegal immigrants, the legal immigrants that claims to be unemployed while having a job, the tax evaders, no wonder they run a very large deficit... their social system doesn't always help the one that deserves it !
@IRACEMABABU3 жыл бұрын
@@charakiga No, the roads are payed by the taxes, and your health by social cotisations. Two different things.
@Raju-vb6ed3 жыл бұрын
"Vive-la-France" Love from India 🇮🇳
@arma51663 жыл бұрын
btw its vive not viva
@Raju-vb6ed3 жыл бұрын
@@arma5166 oh thanks 😀
@rameshraju47843 жыл бұрын
Wtf, you have my name
@Raju-vb6ed3 жыл бұрын
@@rameshraju4784 yeah,where are you from
@Raju-vb6ed3 жыл бұрын
@@hypocrite5873 yeh bhi thik haii😂
@haykkarapetyan2825 Жыл бұрын
As an Armenian, I'm impressed by the impressive economic growth that France has achieved in recent years. With a diversified economy and a strong focus on innovation, France has become one of the leading economies in Europe. It's inspiring to see how France has successfully leveraged its strengths in industries such as aerospace, technology, and luxury goods to drive growth and create new opportunities for its citizens. Congratulations to France on this impressive achievement!
@waynereid3718 Жыл бұрын
This country steals from the Africans and enrich themselves! How did they get so Rich?
@marylineflauw56595 ай бұрын
Vous continuez à le croire avec 3150 milliards de dette ? Et un déficit du commerce extérieur gigantesque ?
@alextabet92473 жыл бұрын
France’s economy is the second largest in Europe. Only Germany’s economy is larger than France’s. The UK’s economy is the same size as France’s and the two swap places frequently.
@mrcarioca80463 жыл бұрын
UK Is better than France
@alextabet92473 жыл бұрын
@@mrcarioca8046 better is subjective. Both are great in their own right.
@great79393 жыл бұрын
@@mrcarioca8046 in which way? Health care? No. Good food? No. Good living? No. In which way and i will agree with you.
@bluec.monkeee59723 жыл бұрын
@@mrcarioca8046 you have 4 countries who represent uk, ok.france is alone, the street the highway the village. food .trains everything is big. uk everything is small and not develope.
@cloudwalker95723 жыл бұрын
It is to keep in mind that while Germany has a better economy it's population is also 83 million compared to France 67 million.
@poga8sun3 жыл бұрын
As a french, i find most of the messages are misleading and solely based of neoliberal rules of economy... And especially France does not work neoliberally. Most of the biggest private sector is held by the public investment (look at how the richest companies were built, Thalès, Dassault etc...). And tipically ideas Like unions have too much power, Haha, they are representing the people working, how and why would you skip what people think of your New rules...
@dixonhill11082 жыл бұрын
France relies on the past for its wealth, if it had to start from scrath it'd be a substantially poorer version of Quebec.
@Jonmal0ne3 жыл бұрын
France is so rich its debt is approximately 130% of its GDP and growing exponentially on a daily basis.
@marylineflauw56595 ай бұрын
Non 113/ 00 3150 milliards euros de dette, faillitte
@franckr61593 жыл бұрын
"France is a paradise filled with people who believe they live in hell": well, not really. Yes French people tend to complain a lot, however it's not because they truly believe they live in hell, rather that they see the model which is developping everywhere is rather a less regulated capitalist system, with rich people becoming richer while paying less and less taxes (hence contributing less to the overall people's wealthfare), which is the opposite of the regulated capitalist system that made France rich and most French live rather well (Gilets Jaunes is the share of French starting to suffer most). Hence their pessimistic view on future.
@didierleonard57683 жыл бұрын
Yeah… intellectual dishonesty at its maximum. GJ is as extremist as its representative on pple of France 0,5% on some election. Call it so democratic this so little part want to impose there view to all others. Maybe compare them to the so called 1% rich that posses 95% is a good irony.. laughable until violence ( always) begins, when anyone trying to federate their move is bullied by themself.. and they like to call themself “ Le peuple” . With this 0,5%, they should know this: “ What is exaggerated genome irrelevant “
@PlatypusPGM3 жыл бұрын
@@didierleonard5768 on comprend rien
@clementita543 жыл бұрын
@@PlatypusPGM Si tu comprends pas l'anglais c'est ton problème, mais son commentaire est totalement compréhensible. Je te conseil même deepl et un copié collé de son texte si tu en as le besoin :)
@PlatypusPGM3 жыл бұрын
@@clementita54 je parle du commentaire de didier. C'est un charabia "Call it so democratic this so little part want to impose their view to all others" je connais deepl et parle couramment anglais. Mais la c'est le bordel on pige juste rien
@clementita543 жыл бұрын
@@PlatypusPGM ptdrrr on pige totalement, si tu ne comprend rien encore une fois, taff ton anglais. Ou utilise un traducteur?
@olivierdurand60623 жыл бұрын
Oh la la 🇲🇫
@franciscouderq11003 жыл бұрын
even less your “la la”
@alienordaquitaine35863 жыл бұрын
Oh la la x2
@philippecon71343 жыл бұрын
Ferme bien ta geule c'est plus local
@dvorak26763 жыл бұрын
i'm french and i don't know what oh la la means
@ericfoucher37103 жыл бұрын
Pourquoi ne parle tu pas français dvo rak?
@PierreMiniggio3 жыл бұрын
12:07 I'm French, and I just learned thanks to your video about this proverb. I've never heard it before. "Si de beaucoup travailler on devenait riche, les ânes auraient le bât doré." From what I've found, it seems to be a really old proverb. So that's prob why I've never heard it before. Any other French here can tell me if that's a common proverb or not ?
@REDD00003 жыл бұрын
Ta traduction du proverbe est mauvaise mais ok
@PierreMiniggio3 жыл бұрын
@@REDD0000 Ce n'est pas une traduction de ma part, j'ai essayé de remonter au proverbe original français, et c'est cette version que j'ai trouvé. Si tu traduis littéralement la version anglaise de sa vidéo, oui ce n'est pas exactement les mêmes mots (ça donnerait "Si travailler dur rendait riche, les ânes seraient couverts d'or"), mais ça n'a aucun sens de traduire sa version anglaise du proverbe si c'est de base un proverbe français qui a été ensuite traduit et adapté en anglais. Si tu connais une autre version française de ce proverbe qui vient avant celle que j'ai indiqué dans mon premier commentaire, je veux bien que tu l'écrives ici.
@kevin45983 жыл бұрын
"While the French have a lot to be grateful for, not everything in France is Oh La La !" I don't understand, what does "Oh La La !" is supposed to mean to you people ? Because this has no sense to me. "Oh La La !" can mean "How unfair", "Holy shit", "How Boring", "How surprising" or many other things depending on when and how it's used, so... I don't get what you mean't there. All in one, this is a quite ideologically oriented (capitalism-friendly) appreciation of the reality, even if not entirely false.
@slurpii46693 жыл бұрын
Oh la la sounds like..... I dont know..... "Elegant" to most non french people
@max_2083 жыл бұрын
@@slurpii4669 in fact "oh la la" has a simular usage to "damn" in most cases
@PrimarchRoboleonFrenchyman3 жыл бұрын
"Oh la la" is often followed by a sigh
@max_2083 жыл бұрын
@@fixhero2273 yeah it isn't a perfect translation but it does the job, "oh la la" is slightly more annoyed while "damn" is a bit more on the angrier side. Still "oh la la fiston" is something you might hear in real life (but honestly some kind of swear word like "putain" or "merde" is more likely to be used in this situation)
@BadDictator3 жыл бұрын
Make a video on the Indian economy, I wanna know about the recession and projected growth rate from you, cuz of your amazing explanation.
@EconomicRaven3 жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙏
@French20cent3 жыл бұрын
About the 35 hours a week, there is a second layer : legally speaking it is the set working rate for employees, yes. But there are two other things : - If you have a worker's contract, overtime is well paid. - If you have a "Cadre" contract, it is theoretically capped at 48 hours a week but you don't clock in your hours. This made this contract very popular, in fact as soon as your job doesn't require to be present at fixed hours of the day (typically, office jobs), you are very likely to be "Cadre", and in that case there is no such thing as 35 hours a week. Especially if you want to be promoted. I work since 2013 and have pretty much never worked less than 42 hours a week.
@dabereogbuishi75333 жыл бұрын
Please keep this up. I love your premium content. Hopefully we can see more content on emerging economies as well. Eg Nigeria, Indonesia, Malaysia etc
@EconomicRaven3 жыл бұрын
We will cover the emerging economies too! Thank you for the support 🙏
@knockhello26043 жыл бұрын
@@EconomicRaven Yeah do Nigeria, a world void of whites should be your title ( it'll get so much clicks trust me, and it's true and accurate.)
@1foldrok3 жыл бұрын
"OH la la" , mdr il me fume. Personne ne dit sa a part très rârement 🥖🥐
@kevintoutcourt41643 жыл бұрын
Ca dépend. Si je vois un mec se viander, j'ai tendance à dire ça. xD
@Enuogyan3 жыл бұрын
Complètement faux
@1foldrok3 жыл бұрын
@@Enuogyan je pense que sa depand des gens alors
@lilbean22393 жыл бұрын
Perso j’ai l’impression qu’on le dit beaucoup inconsciemment
@niltranodesu46483 жыл бұрын
Perso je dis plus Ho putaiiiiiiin ! xD
@mattrozel3 жыл бұрын
Well I'm not really convinced. The analysis is very superficial and based on mainstream economy stereotypes. For example "taxing employment to fund social security and retirement system is ridiculous." I disagree. Lowering taxes on this and losing the benefits is supposed to boost employment (I don't think so) but it will be a disaster for most people. I assume your argument is based on the belief in trinkle down economics, which is known to be complete bullsh*t. So yeah, indulging in judgement of such a complex system in a ten minutes video is something I wouldn't take a chance with.
@johnfisher4373 жыл бұрын
My "social contributions" are 26%, I then get taxed on anything over 18k by around 11%. Iy is prohibitevely expensive to employ anyone, and therefore I don't. A lot of French people I know will take a contract for a year, and then claim unemployment benefits for the next 11 months whilst swanning about on a beach in a French dependency, then return home, get another contract, and so on. I don't know what the answer is, but paying for someone to take an 11 month "holiday" grates.
@ZZZZordan3 жыл бұрын
@@johnfisher437 "claim unemployment benefits for the next 11 months" ??? In what parallel world do you live in mate ? That's so full of clichés it could be a joke, do you know a total of 2 people for you to claim that "A lot of French people I know..." ?
@johnfisher4373 жыл бұрын
@@ZZZZordan I've lived here, this time, for 15 years, and before that for another 5. I know quite a few thanks very much, lovely people, when I see them. Now that chommage is going up to a mini,u, 1500euros, I expect not to see them much :-)
@ZZZZordan3 жыл бұрын
@@johnfisher437 1500 when unemployed, of course mate, nice dream world you have there
@Benjamin-pp1xq3 жыл бұрын
@@johnfisher437 The minimum chomage income (ARE) is 29.56€ a day quick math 901.58 a month (30.5 days average) and this is without the taxes (and yes the ARE has a tax on it). You might be mixing up with the minimum wage (SMIC) that is about 1500€ a month (brut)
@vvnachovv3 жыл бұрын
OMG! Payroll taxes? What are you talking about??? Calling taxes what is actually a contribution to the social support network you've just mentioned is intellectually dishonest. They are not taxes, they are the basis for the social support network.
@LadyMagolotta3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, social cotisations =/= taxes. It's a vocabulary trick to made people think they should cut it off. Exept that you pay for what you got, I do prefer having a system like we currently have than an individualist, selfish, ultra liberalism system. Anyone who have lived a bit knows life accidents DO happen, you have to have a very very wealthy family to think you are protected from the consequences of it, and it represents what, 5% of the population who can realisticaly consider it ? And even them, at least in France, are not all selfish enough to want to break our current system to lead to a society where you have the spine to say to children their parents are not rich enough for them to pretend to have an education, or worse, to pretend to have the medical care they need. I can wrap my mind around regular people who think a social net system (or should I say, an inexistent social net system) like in the USA would be better than what we have.
@thedefusingbomb98533 жыл бұрын
@@LadyMagolotta As a "Oh La La" myself, I agree with you two. However, reducing the wealth tax was clearly a huge mistake from our government
@LadyMagolotta3 жыл бұрын
@@thedefusingbomb9853 indeed. However, as Nacho Vaca says, what wewe pay based on our income is NOT taxes, it's contributions..
@georgelegrand94763 жыл бұрын
@@LadyMagolotta yeah unfortunately most of the viewers of this vid wont catch the liberal point of view that clearly leads this narration...
@devilsadvocate26433 жыл бұрын
These things are just called Payroll taxes in English, it's the share of your salary going to the public system. It's a tax in itself since it is a "compulsory contribution to state revenue". If you think he willingly uses the word tax to induce the idea that it should be cut, you should improve your English then because it's just the most normal word to use. Yes they are used for the social system but it's just how they are called, deal with it ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@seba813763 жыл бұрын
I'm an Indian living in France and "voila" I approve this video
@unknowninfinium43533 жыл бұрын
How do you find the place?
@seba813763 жыл бұрын
@@unknowninfinium4353 its very interesting, France and its people always welcomed me for the way I am ...
@chinmayprakash77263 жыл бұрын
@@seba81376 what do you do there ?( he means to ask that)
@normalhuman65813 жыл бұрын
Where in India?
@unknowninfinium43533 жыл бұрын
@@normalhuman6581 Google.
@equinoxe96623 жыл бұрын
Wow, just watched this video and you talk more accurately than many politics here on french TV. Got my suscription !
@EconomicRaven3 жыл бұрын
thank you 🙏
@marvinkrischna84003 жыл бұрын
Ooh La la !
@leduoanime91563 жыл бұрын
Oh La La !
@solomanguedi95363 жыл бұрын
Ooh La la
@icitlalistardust90603 жыл бұрын
For your information: the picture you used to illustrate The (1789) Revolution…. is in fact related to the 1848 revolution! Révolutions are a thing in France…. We make one about every 50 years… and BTW we’re late for the next one, due in 2018!
@despaney3 жыл бұрын
Hum, so the yellow jackets would have been an aborted revolution !
@icitlalistardust90603 жыл бұрын
@@despaney The yellow jackets are…. Business as usual!
@louiscollas81673 жыл бұрын
You're actually wrong. It has been painted in 1830 and refer to the "three glorious"
@icitlalistardust90603 жыл бұрын
@@louiscollas8167 My bad….. guess I missed that one!
@michaelkeaton53943 жыл бұрын
1:47 little mistake here, the painting "la liberté guidant le peuple" was not made to represent the french revolution of 1789, it was made to represent the revolution of July aka "les 3 glorieuse" that took place the 27,28 and 29th of July 1830...
@odje65663 жыл бұрын
It's always interesting to see how France is seen from abroad. Thanks a lot ! I still have a feew coments, as an insider ;). French unemployment derives also from the fact that we don't have zero hours jobs like in the UK or Japan. We don't have people taking a board telling you where you can wash your car etc. High productivity is also a factor to be emphasised. I read once that if France had the British productivity, we would have 4% unemployment. For the comparison with Germany it is also different. France is a centralised country and it's true about political as well as economy. So the state always plays a strong role in "driving" our economy. The lesson about that is that France is not very fit for UE liberalism point of view, which imposes more a german approach, largely decentralised (and then initialy more in competition, which is still different from "competitive"). There is also a lot to say about the maxim "lowering costs to improve competition" (or to lower unemployment). I agree with the idea that France has a sort of "art de vivre", and I recently realised that this is actually what the 90millions tourists come to experiment every year. I agree then on the fact that we may wonder whether this is an issue, while it contributes to our soft power as well as many of our industries (tourism ans luxury mainly). So, I would conclude in highlinting that France has always been stronger when the state was giving strong economical orientations, like with De Gaulle (I'm not especially a fan but this is a fact). I don't say for other countries but liberalising our centralised economy is just making things be worst. If we structurally have more public services, and more state governed super big companies but all working well, what's the matter of changing it for a model such like that of our neighbours ? They follow their own intuitions and are big enough countries to support it. Let's us accepting doing the same. This country is not better than other, but it is definitely not as bad as everybody makes us believe. 🇲🇫💙🤍❤️ NB : I don't blame the EU, I just believe some of its rules should be requestioned with regards to the low benefits it produced for nations. But this is politics, we should be able to calmly discuss this 🇪🇺💙💛. I wish Germany, France, Italy and other continental big economies (the UK following it's own uncertain brexit way) would cooperate strongly but with the glasses of the 21st century, not those of the 1980s. The world has changed, lets get stronger together instead of weaker together.
@d-n5393 жыл бұрын
I really like how you synthesis France's situation.
@killer12332433 жыл бұрын
I also like your synthesis , but i have to desagree ( as a french ) on the eu part: every contraigning rule we had those past few years again our economic system where from the EU agenda .... And the EU as it was made is not going to change around, not for a long time , not for the only sake of france......
@odje65663 жыл бұрын
Hi @Mask. Thanks ! Your coment is also relevant and I don't think we "desagree". We are just not exactly on the same line (which is different ;) ). Once more, this issue is a political one. European Union does not make sens without Germany or France. So, it abusively gives us the extraordinary power to shape it. Trump and many other roughtly showed that international agreements were only holding on good behaviours from every parts, but were little constraining - as long as you are a "core" element within it. This is the case of France within the EU. But you may still argue that the UE is constraigning, and you would be right. Being part of it is a compromise. Now, I am 100% sure that France would be weaker alone. Nowadays, we are only a 67m people's nation facing a more and more challenging world. This is no longer the time when technological advantage generated anomalies such as France's super power in the 18th and 19th century - which, besides, I don't regret for what it cost to many other nations. Great Britain logicaly faces a rather similar declassing feelings and struggles with it. Brexit derives highly from it. But in the future, British will experience tough negociations in 1 to 1 with China, the US, or even the EU, and I am not sure lonerider social and fiscal dumping will hold long. If I should synthetised my digressions in this coment, I would say I believe the UE is a golden cage but still a cage that we can shape to fit a little more with France's economcal and political traditions. We have to find a new compromise (as I said, in the light of the 21st century, not the 1980's, when economic liberalism was seen as the logical horizon), more respectful of our aspirations as well as those of Germany and Italy for instance. I dream of more harmony, brotherhood, and mutual support between european countries, and this - in my view - is only attainable within EU. But anyway, this is a nice discussion, let me know your point of view if you want to develop it a little more. A plus !
@bouhbouh94083 жыл бұрын
@@killer1233243 EU agenda is made by France too. Blaming EU is a common practice in Europes for the leaders to avoid the blame. EU commitee is made of the presidents of the countries. They basicaly decides things there so they can blame EU and not have a debate in their own countries.
@boubabear98603 жыл бұрын
@@odje6566 So France is weaker alone but we're constantly told we destroy the climate and planet on our own ? As I say to every EU(RSS) lovers, make up your damn mind ! Either we're so weak that we need to be part of the new dictatorial block of the era, with all the suffering and loss of culture it entails, or we're not since we can destroy the planet on our own and so we need to be left alone ! Also, if we're so weak and little, doesn't that make us a minority ? And aren't minorities set not to be oppressed and culture canceled ? Thus does it mean we have a right to be offended on every little thing, threaten others and be violent to anyone who doesn't respect our way of doing things ? Does that mean we can answer the EU with violence and accuse them of colonizing and stealing from us to maintain their own riches ? Which is it in the end ? The way I feel it we're stuck in a "head I win, tail you loose" bond with EU and most of the world ! It needs to stop ! It can't be all take and no give ! What the anti-EU want is that you make up your fucking mind about what we are to you and so we will react accordingly ! But if we're weak and stupid and our culture is worth shit and all without you, then you are acting colonialist and so you deserve the hatred and backlash. Oh btw and how do the other countries in the world deal without saintly EU ? And do not talk to me about USA and China who were basically born of an amalgamate of states/kingdoms that they can barely (or on the contrary they strongly) keep in check and which will one day break apart as surely as continents do. What do other countries do ? Yeah they get into agreements and unions with neighboors but how far does that go ? Do they have to rub their forehead to the ground ? Deny their culture ? Ruin themselves ? Or do they get to denounce and leave and give fucks when it doesn't suit them ? Are they made to apologize ? Well it's not working in any case, whether it's asked or not, politely or not. And how many of them get accused of ruining the planet on their own every time they gather to discuss prices and diplomatic efforts ? How many times will we have to say it for it to go through your EU addled brains ? We want to be left ALONE ! We want to be ourselves, not what any one of these idiots want us to be ! Germany, USA, China, whoever wherever ! Do we discuss how they should be ? Well the EU goons do, but the people ? Most of us DO NOT GIVE A FUCK what your country did, what color your people are, how you save the planet or not, how you do gay or not, how this, how that, if you went to war, if not, if yes, if no ! WE DON'T CARE BECAUSE WE HAVE OUR OWN COUNTRY TO CARE ! And we're tired AF to be disrepected, called invaders-this, planet-killers that, and ist ist ist ! We want to take care of our own ! And be shown respect ! And if not we want to be able to complain about it and threaten war and nukes about it ! The EU oppose all that ! They want us to be exterminated as long as it's not them or the US or China ! That's why we want it to go down ! As the rest of the world proves, you can still be strong, make alliances, exchanges and all without having to be the bullied kid in some fucked up twisted classroom !
@Suirioujin3 жыл бұрын
Well, at school, we have 7-8 hours of class per day, from 1rst grade until 12th grade except for Wednesday ( 4 hours) , so i think it's fair to have smaller hours a week once we really work
@jollcheist1443 Жыл бұрын
France built its empire on the back of Africa.
@intselec21843 жыл бұрын
8:44 a yes the snail and frog leg 2 meal that 99% of french never even saw.
@ChachouLP3 жыл бұрын
99% of French ? N'exagérons pas beaucoup de français connaossent et en on déja mangé
@LIXOUALeBg3 жыл бұрын
@@ChachouLP Connaissent oui, mais mangé j'en suis pas sûr
@yeshuahdenazareth78683 жыл бұрын
The number of outdated clichés is staggering.
@ArisFv3 жыл бұрын
Hi, french guy here. Interesting video, thanks for the great content ! I would add something about the unemployment rate. In France we have the amazing possibiliy to earn the unemployment benefit WHILE you're creating a company, as long as you don't take any money from your company for yourself. You can earn the unemployment benefit for 2 years top and only if you worked at least 6 months before. So my wife and I did quit our respective jobs to create a company each. So we are increasing the unemployment rate, but at the same time creating employment and paying corporate taxes (just funny to think that in some companies, your boss is technically unemployed). And it doesn't matter if you have a company, as long as you are earning unemployment benefit you are increasing the unemployment rate. Clearly a lot of unemployed people just does not have a job sadly, but some others are unemployed while contributing to the country's economy. Just a fact about french unemployment rate to consider to explain why the numbers are higher than you would expect from other similar countries.
@GustavoJua153 жыл бұрын
Facinating. Would like to know what the numbers would look like if accounting for that scenerio.
@alessandrogiannini82963 жыл бұрын
Great quality video, compliments from italy😉
@EconomicRaven3 жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙏
@RyanBarroso3 жыл бұрын
Congratulazioni fratelli ! Siete campioni d'europaaaaa🇫🇷❤🇮🇹
@harrisonreinisch92023 жыл бұрын
Awesome video!! I loved it I wonder if in the future you should talk more about the housing markets of these types of countries and the status of their infrastructure for goods and services? Just an idea!
@EconomicRaven3 жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙏
@LC-nh8ig3 жыл бұрын
France's so rich that more than half french people are living under poverty levels. This country is SO screwed
@enkhnyambattulga93513 жыл бұрын
I told you that this channel would explode when you only had 20sub.
@EconomicRaven3 жыл бұрын
thank you for the continued support 🙏
@marvinkrischna84003 жыл бұрын
Good bet
@haroldinho99303 жыл бұрын
We love you france! From Northern Ireland
@remypoincet76853 жыл бұрын
And love you too Northern Ireland! From France
@imtolazyto3 жыл бұрын
J'approuve
@mathieuxuereb36563 жыл бұрын
Oh La La ! This video will help me a lot for my friends! Good job
@Chronicler923 жыл бұрын
Just a side note: "Oh La La" is not used in a positive context (based on my current knowledge of the french language). It's actually used as an exclamation for reacting to something problematic
@etn4773 жыл бұрын
Most of the time yes, you're right. But it can also be used as a positive surprise reaction for example. It depends of the context and intonation :)
@Chronicler923 жыл бұрын
@@etn477 Merci!
@sweetso73953 жыл бұрын
@@etn477 Ouais, t'as raison, on l'emploie très rarement au premier degrés, expression jugé comme "has been".
@samyfournel17653 жыл бұрын
Oh la la😂🇫🇷
@clementbarbu64663 жыл бұрын
And I’ve never met anyone eating frog’s legs outside of tourist restaurants
@juste_mesure3 жыл бұрын
@@clementbarbu6466 I know people who hunt and eat them. Cut in half alive. Quite horrible death.
@berylho32883 жыл бұрын
@@clementbarbu6466 maybe not in Paris, but other countryside in France, it is not that uncommon
@metalnavy25523 жыл бұрын
Ce mec prononce Oh lala : Ouh la la
@paradise8083 жыл бұрын
@@berylho3288 lmao no mate actually almost no one has ever tasted frog meat in france
@leonid47812 жыл бұрын
If working hard made you rich, donkeys would be covered in gold! I will be using this one
@joylewis98593 жыл бұрын
Can you make a video about Nigeria, specifically how the reliance on the oil industry affects the economy?
@EconomicRaven3 жыл бұрын
the Raven will fly over Nigeria soon!
@juliecrockford10463 жыл бұрын
j'habitte en france, mais je suis anglais. I love it here, but as far as work goes there are less opportunities; as people tend to stay in their jobs longer. I can only write as someone who lives in a very rural area, but I am not complaining, as the French are lovely people x
@hailbeagle54143 жыл бұрын
FYI, 01:26 is not footage from a strike, it's Montpellier's Place de la Comédie during the FIFA world cup...
@mooldoo3 жыл бұрын
About tourism, analysts show France is number one IF you consider the number of people who spend even just a night in a french hotel because France is geographically well placed. But numbers can be manipulated. It doesn't mean the danish tourist will stay on vacation in France. In fact he just slept in a french hotel because he scared of the plane and will spend 90% of his budget during his vacations in Spain. So, if you take in consideration the amount of money spent (or the number of nights in hotel) Spain comes first. And I'm french.
@RobertSmith-up9rz3 жыл бұрын
Your argument about the hotel nights calculation is also biased. Spain may have more, but that’s also because people are stuck there while in France they can transit to another country. It still makes them “tourists”. That’s why every organization calculates based on number of incoming tourists, and not the number of hotel nights.
@baptistebrigand58823 жыл бұрын
...
@Ratimir1013 жыл бұрын
Will you do one like this for Russian Federation in future?
@EconomicRaven3 жыл бұрын
the Raven will fly over Russian Federation for sure!
@Ratimir1013 жыл бұрын
@@EconomicRaven Thank you in advance for future flight and now for answer! I would just add one specific thing I wonder about, that being how makroeconomic picture looks very good in Russia, low debt, trade surplus, government generally having positive balance, and large reserves and funds, so I wonder how can thay use that to increase quality of life of citizens in future
@SimonBorro3 жыл бұрын
In reality when you live in France : - free school is horrible and does not allow high studies - the health system is not free, it is deducted from salaries directly, and to have free care in France you have to take out additional private insurance, as in many countries. - the retirement age is an average, at 65, many have a retirement not exceeding 60% of the minimum income of the country.
@asterixky3 жыл бұрын
By the way, "Ooh lala" used in France means, "Someone just fuc%ed up"
@pierren___3 жыл бұрын
Both
@jakubstasiuk47873 жыл бұрын
The way You pronounce Renault tho. Im Polish and it still hurt.
@laurentloop55733 жыл бұрын
Small correction about the minimum wage in France which is 1554€ before the social contributions, etc. The "net" wage that goes into your pocket is actually 1231€ by November 2021. Has grown for the last couple of years.
@hugoc46063 жыл бұрын
Vive la France, vive l'Europe, vive l'oxydent
@badiulalamhimel35413 жыл бұрын
Tu voulais dire l'occident ?
@Enigmashoot3 жыл бұрын
@@badiulalamhimel3541 je crois que c'était fait exprès 😂
@Skaelya3 жыл бұрын
ET VIVE LA REDUCTION !
@kiliandervaux66753 жыл бұрын
@@Skaelya Mince, j'allai la faire 🤣
@baptistebrigand58823 жыл бұрын
@@Enigmashoot .
@fidgek_23143 жыл бұрын
Lol you censored the delacroix painting which btw doesn’t represent the French resolution but another one that happen in 1830
@kela953 жыл бұрын
It's missing a part, that even most of the french people don't know, it's about the CFA francs, two money in use in several African country, old colony mostly . Which has a significant impact in the french economy.
@scarocci73333 жыл бұрын
Ah, the famous "france take colonial tax on old colonies" legends, according to a single person in a german newspaper . Heck, the original article was from an african blog, and had been exposed as fake more than half a decade ago. Too bad many people took this number and ran away because it comforted themselves in the "france is only rich because of africa" victimization mindset
@alekshar96903 жыл бұрын
There is one minor error in your explanation, there are no "employment taxes" in France, the employer only pays wages but, and it is also misundertstood by many french, the wage contains a big part of insurance payment that is allocated to the global welfare system. This "defered salary" as it is called in french, allows you to get unemployment, illness, maternity leave and pensions covered without having to take risks with placing your money. About the productivity per capita, the difference between global productivity and productivity by hour is often forgot. In any job, the productivity lowers with the number of hours you worked straight (100% the 1st hour, 98% the second, etc). France chose to limit the number of hours per individual to distribute it over many people which increases the global output but with a cost (as wages could not be lowered to compensate the hour reduction, they froze for many year to fill the gap). As the misconception persists, investors keep thinking working less is less productive (true at individual level, not at the company one) Finally, maybe one key thing is missing in your video to understand France. This is a purely socialist country (even if many french would not admit it), even the more liberals and right-winged people do want a socialist country (many public services, high welfare, etc). Even in the right wing, candidates who disagree with socialist values in primary elections loose a part of their electorate in the process.
@Ronor3 жыл бұрын
Agree for the begining, not the end. France is not socialist, and a strong welfare state ,even based on distribution and not capitalisation, isn't socialist. It's not an enconomic democracy, so it's not socialism. A public sector is not socialism either.
@alekshar96903 жыл бұрын
@@Ronor Your conception is based on what was originally called socialism, which evolved into several communisms : Marxism, Luxemburgism, and so on. Nowadays socialists movements are not based on common property of the means of production anymore. Being Syriza in Greece, LFI in France or Bernie Sanders in USA, they all fit the same intentions : _nationalize what is the most important for the well-being of peoples (mostly what cannot/should not be opened to the free market : transportation, medical, education, police, etc) _reduce, if not eliminate, capitalistic behaviors like speculation, steal of the workers' production (aka dividends), and so on _some price controls to prohibit abusive market positions _finance the unions to help defend the workers Pure economic democracy, whether being from state planning or common ownership of companies are only proposed by communists movements (either anarchists, democrats or authoritarians) On many points, France is still a socialist state (but moving fast towards pure liberalism) : _2 years ago : energy prices were still set by the state _rents still partially are (and it increases) _speculation is taxed (the less time you kept a share the more you are taxed) _transports remains mostly controlled by state _unions are financed by the state _etc
@Ronor3 жыл бұрын
@@alekshar9690 That's social democracy, not socialism. While reducing the worst effects of capitalism, the vast majority of the economy is still capitalistic. Moreover, none of theses new party call themselves socialist (LFI, Podemos, Syriza, die Linke, not a single Socialist party)
@Ked_gaming3 жыл бұрын
I'm french and find this vid very accurate. I'd add that the 35 hours limit is mostly for low wage workers, most jobs with the "cadre" title don't have working hours in their contracts. I'd say a large portion on the working population works a lot more than 35 hours
@camypuech82683 жыл бұрын
5th reason of high unemployement rate : great unemployement conditions with 60% of your last revenue for 2 years
@aitaisakura42813 жыл бұрын
And the most visited country in the world. France is sure lucky
@azzarys3 жыл бұрын
I'm french and I say "ohlala" everytime ... i'm such a cliche, but that's ok, my doctor said it was curable
@mr.g8123 жыл бұрын
Like me, an Italian, who always says "mamma mia"
@Ziberio653 жыл бұрын
@@mr.g812 Good luck bro because i'm french and all i say everyday is"baguette baguette hon hon hon"
@scav70203 жыл бұрын
Love the video, thanks for your work.
@AdityaKadamMechanical3 жыл бұрын
I am Indian who have lived in France. This analysis is pretty realistic ❤️🤟🏼
@backintimealwyn57363 жыл бұрын
@David Garcia Great, Indians are great, we need more of them if they want to come. Their kids do great everywhere they go , it's the best kind of people you can get.
@backintimealwyn57363 жыл бұрын
@David Garcia a bit ..;)
@Jokkkkke3 жыл бұрын
I really enjoy your use of hard stats, Raven! Too many folks on this platform don’t do that and therefore suffer from a less transparent methodology
@EconomicRaven3 жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙏
@georgelegrand94763 жыл бұрын
yeah hard stats like SMIC at 1500€ xd i wish that was true
@captainkiwi10913 жыл бұрын
Greetings from France 💶💶
@EllisBoydRedding3 жыл бұрын
I'm an Italian living in France since 2007 (and a French citizien for a few years now); it never ceases to amaze me how many French complain so much when the quality of life in France is so high compared with its neighbors (I'm not saying Third Worlds Countries); actually, it's probably one of the most telling signs: the better you are, the most you complain
@Kafei013 жыл бұрын
0:52 : It's five weeks of paid vacation, not Six. And no one retire at 62 because you would retire with a low pension.
@josephvonmeisthal2753 жыл бұрын
depends when you started
@noefillon17493 жыл бұрын
The average retirement age is around 64 I think
@TheTobiasz1233 жыл бұрын
@@josephvonmeisthal275 and how much you make
@josephvonmeisthal2753 жыл бұрын
@@TheTobiasz123 depends of the jobs you did. But my grand parents where paid 1700 euros after 42 years as teachers. My father cannot be taken into account because he worked his whole life in Germany
@soverain3 жыл бұрын
Retirement age is not fixed. You need to Contribute for at least 40 years. If you are unemployed for any reason, it does not count. If you end your scholarship at the age of 24 for example, you'll start to contribute here. So you'll end at the age of 64. @@josephvonmeisthal275 there is multiple retirement "regimes" in France. Teachers are part of one of them. They can go to retirement at the age of 60 for the most of them with a fairly good amount of money.