Thanks as always for watching :D This video was requested by the team over on Patreon. If you want to have your say on what video is produced next please consider supporting the channel. www.patreon.com/EconomicsExplained
@yigitklcarslan88044 жыл бұрын
first
@ahmadyounes40464 жыл бұрын
Please make a video about the economics in the islamic golden age
@sebastiangutierrez844 жыл бұрын
You should do a video qualifying the economies of the countries you already did, just to catch up on your list and have more countries to compare.
@benmat4 жыл бұрын
I'm French, and all you tell in this video is so relevant ! My favorite video on this channel.
@ordenmanvrn76854 жыл бұрын
Gdp per capita means nothing! Why dont you use GDP/PPP? Great video tho
@SpillBertBR4 жыл бұрын
I'm glad you had enough stock footage of France to not:"This is France: *shows footage of Belgium*"
@StoutProper4 жыл бұрын
Tamen Ω you mean Belgium isn't part of France?
@aroundhere12004 жыл бұрын
@@StoutProper Belgium? Whats that? All i know is that region is split betuin northern France and southern Netherlands .
@letheas61754 жыл бұрын
Wait? You mean that rebellious province of the netherlands?
@crudeliademon92374 жыл бұрын
@@StoutProper no, it's only a far better country to live, and don't forget most cool things people label as french are actually Belgian, starting with french fries
@etiennelamole95654 жыл бұрын
@@crudeliademon9237 Ça sert à rien de parler anglais mdr
@pieines72994 жыл бұрын
Something important in france is the difference between the big city and the rest of the country. If you look at the road, and railways, EVERYTHING lead to Paris. it's really a "all road lead to rome" situation, and centralisation is a big big thing, and a problem when the big city life is costly and overcrowed and the countryside empty and poor.
@jujululu56734 жыл бұрын
The countryside isn't empty and poor 😂 have you ever been to Lyon, Strasbourg, Bordeaux, Lille, Nice, Toulouse, Aix en Provence etc.. or even the little cities with just rich people living in like Cannes, Saint Tropez, Deauville, La grande motte etc.. Paris is richer it is true but the other cities are not poor. Even a lot of parisians are leaving Paris because it is too expensive, crowded and stressfull to go in cities like Bordeaux or Nantes.
@jujululu56734 жыл бұрын
@DBR Liamg oh ok i see yes its true paris is the sixth city in the world with the highest Gdp and no other french city is in the top 100 so there is a real difference i though he was saying that everybody live in paris and all the people who dont were poor
@gamecubekingdevon34 жыл бұрын
@@jujululu5673 toutes les villes que tu a citées restent des grandes villes. il parlais plutot de la campagne, qui elle, est bien sous-financée.
@jujululu56734 жыл бұрын
@@gamecubekingdevon3 oui mais plus de 80% de la population française vit dans les villes ou les banlieues donc ces villes représentent une bonne partie de la qualité de vie des français
@gamecubekingdevon34 жыл бұрын
@@jujululu5673 une portion non négligeable vit également dans des plus petites villes (moins de 100 000 habitants) et cela n'empêche pas que la majorité de la surface territoriale reste sous-financée (au profit de quelques métropoles et d'une mégalopole bien mieux financées). les chiffres globaux sont donc a prendre avec des pincettes, car ils ne montrent qu'une moyenne au sein d'un ensemble bien hétérogène. (par exemple, si tu observes l'IDF et le limousin, t'a limite l'impression de voir deux pays séparés et pas des membres du même pays tellement les deux n'ont rien a voir)
@EconomicsExplained4 жыл бұрын
Last time I was this early the people could eat cake!
@yigitklcarslan88044 жыл бұрын
lmao
@ufhb66494 жыл бұрын
Last time I was this early France was called Gaul.
@RealVidjag4 жыл бұрын
last time I was this early this meme was still relevant
@michaelsemper10444 жыл бұрын
You can only have your cake. You can't eat it too.
@jaiparwani42794 жыл бұрын
@@michaelsemper1044 kill the cake! Kill the cake!
@codymitchell44764 жыл бұрын
“THIIIIIIISSSS is the economy of France. First, I’m going to discuss all the quirks and features, and then I’m going to give it a Doug Score.”
@Bonanzaking4 жыл бұрын
Ah good to see some overlap in subscriber base.
@maximecarpentier95974 жыл бұрын
@Itachi Uchiha Doug DeMuro, a car channel
@ereder14764 жыл бұрын
with a daily score and a weekend category
@benfidar4 жыл бұрын
@@ereder1476 This country gets a 63 out of 100. That puts it with these other medium sized comfortable countries...
@JLchevz4 жыл бұрын
haha same
@John-lh1qx4 жыл бұрын
He says “The French Revolution” Me, a student who has taken AP european history: Which one
@bentonite_magma4 жыл бұрын
How did you do on the exam?
@sidecar77144 жыл бұрын
Google “French Revolution “ , click top link.
@lucimicle56574 жыл бұрын
The cool one
@ByzantineCapitalManagement4 жыл бұрын
1789,1830,1848,1870 ( debatable) 1968 (also debatable) etc.
@albitorri24 жыл бұрын
would anyone like to talk about this stuff? i'd love to exchange opinions with another person. Please if it was so, respond to this comment, thank you!
@TheNefastor4 жыл бұрын
I am French and I approve this message. One thing, though : people can get fired, you just need an actual reason that is provable, like "not doing their job properly". It happens all the time.
@Bowlyful3 жыл бұрын
No, you have to look you couldn't be further from the truth.
@unplu63 жыл бұрын
I think french people give more value to actually living than having money
@TheNefastor3 жыл бұрын
@@Bowlyful I have fired people. I know what I'm talking about. I've been French my entire life.
@TheNefastor3 жыл бұрын
@@unplu6 I can't speak for all of us but it's certainly true of pretty much everyone I know. It's possible for French people to be satisfied with their lives... although we will always complain to the government because we must keep them on their toes. And because it's fun.
@whynotfr3 жыл бұрын
@@TheNefastor alors oui mais quand t'es dans une grosse boite et que tu veux virer quelqu'un avec 20 ans d'ancieneté tu vas voir la note est salé/ Si tu vires des gens qui ont 2 ou 3 ans ca va tranquille.
@Shuuchi06764 жыл бұрын
"Beheaded some nobles." That's like saying there's a few drops of water in the Atlantic ocean.
@utkarshg.bharti97143 жыл бұрын
I think that's the best way to bring governments to pay more attention to the public's affairs. Since voting isn't working anywhere in the several developing economies of the world and even some developed economies.
@haripetrov12893 жыл бұрын
@@utkarshg.bharti9714 Given that the participation in voting is about 60% in developed countries. How can governments listen to what people want through voting?
@Bolderizenfer4 жыл бұрын
"If you want to predict the future, look to France" me (as a french) : Alright then future will sucks
@meneither38344 жыл бұрын
@plentyness KAWABUNGA IT IS.
@jevinliu46584 жыл бұрын
To be honest, I agree. And I didn't know that.
@sephikong83234 жыл бұрын
@Boris Erdogan Not all, but many (especially northern Marseille, Lille and Paris, especially outer Paris)
@happylife56544 жыл бұрын
Je confirme. Cette vidéo est absolument irréaliste
@The4lexO4 жыл бұрын
@Boris Erdogan Ethnics slums because of colored people ? In this case we're not talking of spaniards, italian, polish, portugese, english, eastern people who came to France for the same purpose...
@FingeringThings4 жыл бұрын
I thought their economy ran on baguettes and macaroons
@EconomicsExplained4 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah but that goes without saying.
@brianswindall4 жыл бұрын
LaGardes and Macrons
@grahamturner26404 жыл бұрын
LOL
@artman77804 жыл бұрын
It also runs on frogs and escargots. Délicieuse et uniquement français.
@vulthuryol80514 жыл бұрын
@An Vode Best discovery of 2020
@antoinegaudron4464 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video about France. Though I did not find the part about unemployment in France quite accurate even if the criticism regarding the education system is fair. Separating from an employee is now much easier and inexpensive as it was before (severance cost is maximum 1 month per year of presence...). It would have been a good starting point for talking about the massive space inequalities in France between the Paris Region which is extremely wealthy and the rest of the country (especially North-East regions that never truly recovered from the closing of the coal, steel and textile industries in the 70s). One last point, even if leather goods (and Luxury in general) are an important export for France, you did not mentioned that France was a key global player in Aeronautics, Space, Automotive, Nuclear Power, Rolling Stock and Pharmaceutical industries...
@alessandropaleologo15344 жыл бұрын
Do you feel like there is much inequality between french people and immigrants from the colonies? Is it a big deal?
@antoinegaudron4464 жыл бұрын
@@alessandropaleologo1534 sure but not a very different problem from many countries of Western europe. Actually we have two kinds of inequalities : impoverished suburbs around main cities and small/mid sized cities that gravitate around the large ones (which are economically much more dynamic).
@livethefuture24924 жыл бұрын
For the lack of skilled workers issue, does France consider employing skilled immigrant workers from Asia and the rest of Europe.
@ogribiker85354 жыл бұрын
Spot on about the inequalities in the regions, as an ex-pat Brit living in one of the poorest departments (86 Vienne, not in the north east) the level of poverty particularly amongst the old has been shocking. The employment rules have changed a bit but are still very different than the UK's higher & fire at will 'laws'. More and more people are using self employed workers (like me!) to get around the problem. Still much prefer to be poor and happy in France than stuck in the rat race in the UK.
@jeremyboudaud33224 жыл бұрын
@@livethefuture2492 it's hard mainly because of the language barrier but we have many skilled immigrants from Algeria, Morocco etc.
@eoghan.50034 жыл бұрын
Why does France make such good hard drives? Because they have so many revolutions per minute
@RonaldMcPaul4 жыл бұрын
Not the most reliable solid state drives.
@grahamturner26404 жыл бұрын
lol
@austinharding97344 жыл бұрын
huh?
@austinharding97344 жыл бұрын
apparently such good ancient hard drives who have never heard of SSD
@andrewjgrimm4 жыл бұрын
Because they’re good at backing up.
@clementl.95664 жыл бұрын
2:38 The painting is from Eugène Delacroix entitled "La Liberté guidant le peuple" or Liberty leading the people in English which actually doesn't refer to the French revolution of 1789 but instead alludes to the July revolution of 1830 which toppled Charles the tenth. Otherwise, great video as always, keep it up and thank you for the first place I mean even though there are only 3 countries for now ^^
@jameskirkman88044 жыл бұрын
I was thinking, maybe you should make a video, solely ranking all the countries you have covered, as there many that should be on the list, such as the UK, US, China, Australia, South Africa etc. Just a thought😃
@ferencgazdag14064 жыл бұрын
Or dilute it, and rank them one at a time, at the end of each video.
@jameskirkman88044 жыл бұрын
Ferenc Gazdag Ya something like that, all in one video could be a bit too more information
@thabangtukule9994 жыл бұрын
south africa my country. the land of the zulus
@jameskirkman88044 жыл бұрын
Thabang Tukule mine too, Zulus for life
@olivers-g40214 жыл бұрын
@Ali G it would do great with the list, but it had been getting more unstable recently
@martinpas89634 жыл бұрын
One quick remark about the 35h/week : This is true for public services employees, not true for all other workers.
@tonyhawk943 жыл бұрын
Even in the public sector it's no longer that true. I'm an engineer in the public sector and I have a 37.5h / week contract.
@Keln023 жыл бұрын
My father's a doctor in a public hospital. he works 6 days a week, with an average of 10-11 hours a day. And he get on call too. Add an extra 12h It's plain madness
@martinpas89633 жыл бұрын
@@Keln02 absolutely, wanted to make it simple for non French, but you are right.
@Bob-jf1tb4 жыл бұрын
Tout travail mérite salaire. À lot of French people refuse to do "work-experience", where you're not paid, because life is expensive and you cant live on expérience. Maybe all citizens dont have as much available capital to invest in such situations.
@iliasilisparrow4 жыл бұрын
@@philmerc364 Interships are spread and well accepted in France, they are a mandatory part of all trainings. The problem comes when compagnies want to hire people for free and except the state to pay for it, the state should only pay if learn new valuable skills, and not just "work" for the compagny
@warwickeng54914 жыл бұрын
That's why you do it whilst you're studying at least
@erinafujino30454 жыл бұрын
@@philmerc364French here, did you think about complaints ? People are very specific about what they will do and not do before they start working. Changing the post, rotating position, changing the hours are big a no. They're quick to tell you they didn't sign for this and "faire valoir ses droits" (make your rights counts) is a major topic of discussion at dinner. I mean teacher prepare you not to accept anything and say no to the boss. Your parents will look over you when you start working so as not to be naively exploited by the boss. "Remember you have the right to that, you are allowed to ask for this, he can't make you do that". You didn't start working yet, but you"re watching for traps and you'll be a hero if you stand up for your rights. Most guys, don't care about the customers, the business, they signed up very specific. They will do just that and wait to get enough seniority to become unfireable. That's their end game, once they know they can't get fired, you'll see how ethical they are. They'll only refrain from doing criminal stuff that can get them fired. At most office, they are usually groups, those who can't get fired and chill and those who want to prove themselves so has not to be laid off just before they reach seniority (lol, the bosses like to get rid of people just before they can get fired ).
@andrestapiadelfierro57853 жыл бұрын
France actually has an "elite" university system called "Grandes Ecoles". It is very different and completely independent from regular university as it is hyper selective (competitive exams for places after the first two years of studies) and a whole lot harder with an enormous workload (40+ hours a week of actual course, plus all the homework that entails). This creates a bit of a two class system in the country, as virtually all very high paying jobs (company executives, highly placed finance executives, all presidents, most government ministers, high ranking diplomats, R&D scientists, etc) are filled by people that come from this system. So the country does have a problem with the value of their education versus the cost of young employees but only for the lower placed employees.
@TheTariqibnziyad4 жыл бұрын
"The revolution was about people demanding to have a say on how their country was run" Me : laughs in committee of public safety and Napoleon.
@sephikong83234 жыл бұрын
He should have said "The Revolution was about the bourgeois wanting to become the new nobles and using the disgruntled masses to do it"
@eth35494 жыл бұрын
But then plot twist! Avant la lettre Communist dictator takes power! And then plot twist! Communist dictator just gives up and get executed, and bourgeois take power again! And then plot twist! Military coup! And then plot twist! The general who was just supposed to be hired muscle hijack the coup! And then plot twist! He actually does more to push the ideals of the original Revolution than all the previous regimes combined! And then plot twist! Well, you get the idea by now...
@TheTariqibnziyad4 жыл бұрын
@@sephikong8323 exactly, first thing the "revolutionary" government did was abolishing right of assembly, labor strikes and labor unions.
@TheTariqibnziyad4 жыл бұрын
@@eth3549 pretty much.
@gupyb41654 жыл бұрын
Me: laugh in 5th republic constitution.
@marcoperez32124 жыл бұрын
A topic suggestion: Economy of tax havens
@EconomicsExplained4 жыл бұрын
I have already explored Monaco and the City of London but definitely something I will look at a little bit more in the future.
@pamirhimalaj13004 жыл бұрын
@@EconomicsExplained And Netherlands with their doble irish whatever
@marijnbuitenweg4 жыл бұрын
@@pamirhimalaj1300 He already did that one
@artman77804 жыл бұрын
@Economics Explained Could you do the economy of Nigeria or Rwanda? They seem interesting.
@themongolsarecoming_94374 жыл бұрын
evading taxes are we now ?
@antoineadam45644 жыл бұрын
Great video, I think it does summarize the current situation of the French economy very well. Actually, @EconomicsExplained, the reason for this persistent high unemployment rate is the deindustrialization which happened from the late 70s onwards. The French industries were made out of big companies which heavily outsourced their production abroad, while leaving behind only engineers/businessmen in R&D centres. The main difference between France and all of its developped neighbours is that its economy and society is heavily centralized, which led to having many successfull megacorporations which could easily delocalize. Countries like Italy or Germany have 2x and 4x as many export-oriented SMEs, which are harder to delocalize and invest more in the local economy
@alcfeoh2 жыл бұрын
Also the fact that unemployed people can make as much (if not more) money than employed people at times... This was counterbalanced by the RSA, a government bonus given to people with low wages so they make slightly more money than unemployed people... That's France in a nutshell: Social welfare is used and abused and the solutions to fix it rarely make sense.
@ajf29584 жыл бұрын
As a French fan, I found this video very interesting! About education, a big issue is the disparity between the elite schools that are highly selected and extremely efficient at training workers (most major CEOs come from a few schools) and the rest of the non selective universities which have an unimpressive reputation locally and abroad.
@namenloss7304 жыл бұрын
Les CPGE filtrent, les universités pas. J'ai fait les deux, c'est deux mondes différents. La ou en prépa c'est galère et tout le monde à sa chance si il bosse, l'université c'est une garderie. c'est la merde parce que les universités voient "on a pas vocation à être selective" pas comme le "On donne leur chance a tous" que ca devrait être, mais comme "Il est inscrit on lui donne son diplome dans quelques années". Un peu comme la SNCF voit "on a pas vocation à être profitable" comme .
@davidmartineztorres87314 жыл бұрын
Everywhere in the world is like that. That is why I believe that you should do everything legally possible to climb the social ladder. This will make it easier for your kids to keep climbing even higher
@stijnhonselaar51884 жыл бұрын
@@davidmartineztorres8731 Or get rid of selection universities altogether and invest in the quality of the whole education system. In countries like the Netherlands and Belgium, as long as you have obtained a university degree, it does not matter where it is from because the government safeguards all education institutions to be proportionally funded and meet the same high standards. It's the reason you don't have an equivalent of Oxford or Havard or the French grand écoles in Germany or the Benelux countries. But it is better for the population as a whole.
@rchlh4 жыл бұрын
Hi, this was a great video and as an American who studied and now works in France I have a bit to say!! I think part of the employment problem here as well is how rigid the economy is in terms of being able to get jobs for certain professions. French employers expect you to have studied exactly what you will work in, even just to get an internship. In the US for instance plenty of people will study literature and go on to work in marketing, I know someone who studied art history and now works in business consulting. In America it really doesn't matter what you've studied as long as you put in the work and are willing to learn. Meanwhile I have friends who are in the corporate world in France and basically they say when they are hiring if an applicant hasn't studied the field that the job is in (i.e. marketing degree for a marketing job, finance degree for a finance job) or gone to the proper school they will not even look at the CV. So it basically means you are locked into your field from very early on and it's hard to switch because more often than not it means going back to school. It's also not considered weird/bad here to stay a student for an extremely long time, I know some people who didn't start working full time until 29 years old. Lots of people will just constantly enroll in masters, phds, etc. Just my two cents (or centimes, I should say)
@liladrielle Жыл бұрын
Hi, I'm French and I can tell you that you are FULLY right. This is the big PB. Value of the diploma is bigger than experience or results you had. It's a silo world that kill felx employement market. => BTW All what said about "take it easy" is TOTALLY WRONG vome and leave in France and you will see reality. 35 hours is a myth. If you look at realy fact into the country you see that it"s just "bad com" => France has lost all what was supposed to be social security for about 20 years now. But you should look to other more realistic KPIs than classical Macroeconomic ones.... I"m sad to hear thos cliché....
@davidroullier80024 жыл бұрын
This video is misleading. I am a French engineer. I can tell you: I have worked with colleagues from Ivy leagues and my university (only within top 20 in France), prepared me much better than my competition. Bureaucracy: you bet. Laziness: depends who (specially not Engineers). If not, ask to my full scholarship in one of the best universities in the planet why my 12/20 GPA in a french university translated to an A (4.0) in the US. If anything, I would argue that one of the French comparative advantages for french corporations is having overqualified underemployed engineers readily available. I would earn much less in France than what I earn in the US. Yet my french colleagues are every bit as good as me, and compete harshly for an opportunity in France.
@davidroullier80024 жыл бұрын
That being said, taxes are the issue. The french system is overindulging particularly to low qualification people. There is a bias towards relaxing, but french education system and culture value education, science and hard work. People compete fiercely for a place into a Grande Ecole, despite the salary gap between an Engineer and a bartender not being as pronounced as it is in the US. Maybe one way to see it is that we do not need as much money to entice us to invest our lives and give our hard work to become someone productive. Somewhere else, you need to be paid 5 to 6X more to be persuaded to become an engineer rather than not studying or studying an "easier" career.
@RaymondChenon4 жыл бұрын
Bien dit :) I'll add Bureaucracy was expanded by the government to create more jobs for some unemployed. But it is a bottleneck in business. For example changing a headquarter address or the name of a company (SAS) needs to write to 3 lawyers and cost a few 1000 EUR.
@damienpeladan4814 жыл бұрын
I teach in French universities (Korean studies). I think that we indeed are really good in social sciences, but the way we design our universities’ curricula is sometimes too oblivious of the fact that most students are not planning to become theoretical researchers. It does lack a bit of pragmatism and is too disconnected from the business world in my mind. There’s definitely room for improvement I would think.
@davidroullier80024 жыл бұрын
@@damienpeladan481 I agree. In my experience, pragmatism is the only area where I feel that studies in the US are superior to studies in France. Perhaps that is the most important area. The French education system can do better, but more importantly, it should adapt faster to an ever-changing world.
@joshbrown22174 жыл бұрын
@@damienpeladan481 I think this is a problem in most old countries with old educationitional institutions. I didn't go to Uni here in the UK, but based off my experience in the lower schools and my mates, it seems that is also the case there. The could also be said of old Italian universities as well. I believe it's because they're so old and icnonic, that often it's hard to change the outlook of how to change the educational communities outlook on how to teach at these Uni's. Like you're not going to tell Oxford how to teach, even though they lack pragmaticism. Although I think the UK did a good job of tackling this with the whole apprenticeship schemes and subsidsy schemes for taking on unexperinced people. From what I heard from this video is that in France, you haven't reallt adopted this, which would probably help in developing the pragamatic side of things
@finn55174 жыл бұрын
*literally any country in the world* EE: This is a very interesting case study
@ben50564 жыл бұрын
I lived 20 years in France and I think you are spot on, the sheer amount of red tape and inflexible employment policies is strangling innovation and entrepreneurship in France. Steps have been taken to try and change this but their is significant resistance to change in France.
@SuperLusername4 жыл бұрын
-"Tourism is one of the best exports a country can have" -Croatia has entered the chat -2020: "I'm about to ruin this country's whole economy"
@won18534 жыл бұрын
I was actually planning to visit Croatia this summer
@SuperLusername4 жыл бұрын
@@won1853 Well you will probably have a better experience than most until this season, since instead of looking at other tourists you will actually get to see the sights.
@SuperLusername4 жыл бұрын
@Богдан Кондратов currently we are skyrocketing into the ground. Like a...uhhh...jet torpedo
@SuperLusername4 жыл бұрын
@kroooassant unless the Austrians, Swedes, Dutch and Danish block that deal
@mg43614 жыл бұрын
Croatia has similar systemic problems as France but without any of the advantages. Inflexible labor system - check, complicated bureaucracy - check, huge taxes - check, general mentality of viewing private business as an enemy rather than a key component of society - check. Add a massive brain drain and an aging population. Croatia is a country in very, very deep... problems.
@scifience82974 жыл бұрын
please do a video on the economies of Yugoslavia and fascist economies
@Русские_вперед4 жыл бұрын
Just look at modern world. Fascism is everywhere now and i doubt anyone can stop this since Russians won't going to do it.
@Ruinexplorer4 жыл бұрын
SmoK Are you serious? This has to be a joke.
@johndavidmanuel21894 жыл бұрын
@@Русские_вперед Fascism is everywhere? You must be blinded. Everyone says that
@deek01464 жыл бұрын
Fascism isn't an economic model. Nazi germany was heavily socialist (for the time), Chile was heavily capitalist.
@alessandropaleologo15344 жыл бұрын
@marios gianopoulos fascism is based on corporativism
@apacheattackhelicopter81854 жыл бұрын
I'm from France and this is pretty on point. I would add a few things to try and explain the unemployment (which has been around this level since the 90s): - Very high taxes and minimum wage, making a lot of industries noncompetitive - As you mentioned, generous welfare makes it possible to live without working, but this takes up a huge share of budget. And French public spending is by far the highest in the EU and probably in the world - Very strong unions, especially in the public sector, and very liberal right to strike - Generally a nanny-state mentality - people expect the state to do everything for them Fun fact - the 35-hour work week was actually introduced to combat unemployment, but failed miserably at it. Now the government is thinking about going back to 40-hours but they don't dare as it will cause massive protests and strikes
@gianfavero4 жыл бұрын
I live in FR. I think you're mostly right. But bureaucracy must be the single biggest issue I can't believe how much of it there is
@wertyuiopasd62812 жыл бұрын
immigration****************
@bhaaratsharma60234 жыл бұрын
I just like your videos even before they start because I know the content is going to be excellent anyway.
@EconomicsExplained4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the support mate :)
@MeHungy1364 жыл бұрын
This video is so spot on. I'm an Aussie with a French wife and I always scratch my head as to why France is the way it is. My wife came to Australia as an economic migrant. I tried to settle there and set up a business but 2 months of filling out forms later I still hasn't even registered my business. In Australia you apply online and get an ABN in a week.
@HC-nj3bs4 жыл бұрын
French paperwork is terrible that’s true, but as a French living in Australia I can say there is a lot of problem in Australia as well
@anonanon3344 жыл бұрын
@@HC-nj3bs These countries are incomparable, Australia is paradise compared to France for an expat.
@LiraeNoir2 жыл бұрын
As a French, yes our administration and paper work is a nightmare. Opening a business certainly is. That French myth certainly is true. On top of that, there's a lot of approximations. So even if you have the money to hire a lawyer to do it for you, it's still a long nightmare. One thing many people miss about France, is that we are the champions of having lots of law, but very little enforcement, and some degree of wrong enforcement. Including in government services and general administration.
@fanfanatik31442 жыл бұрын
@@anonanon334 You probably can't answer this question but out of curiosity if you can, how does the UK itself compare to those two countries respectively?
@mcvgs17804 жыл бұрын
Country: France Sport: Revolutions Motto: Off with his/her head!
@goliathsteinbeisser35474 жыл бұрын
@kroooassant Isn't it "Liberté, égalité, fraternité!"?
@loopingpong14124 жыл бұрын
@@goliathsteinbeisser3547 its switzerland
@account3664 жыл бұрын
@@goliathsteinbeisser3547 yes
@utkarshg.bharti97143 жыл бұрын
US could do with some of that... seriously.
@hfgygt44 жыл бұрын
Create "The Economy of Singapore" or "The Economy of Portugal" next!
@theuniversalbox4 жыл бұрын
I’ve got good news, there already is a video about Singapore ;)
@henrichvonstaufenberg48414 жыл бұрын
Lol what economy of Portugal? It has not its place in Western Europe compared to those countries it is a underdeveloped poor and dirty country with more lazy people..... Portugal should be compared to Eastern European countries..... in fact Poland and Czech Republic are also doing better
@capecodcorporate4 жыл бұрын
Henrich von Staufenberg It is more beautiful, culturally relevant, and kind than Germany
@utkarshg.bharti97143 жыл бұрын
@@henrichvonstaufenberg4841 Czechia is pretty decent as a country you know. I haven't been to Portugal but poverty isn't exactly a central/Eastern European forte, given the thousands of homeless people in the United States, UK, and urban centres of large, developed western European countries.
@henrichvonstaufenberg48413 жыл бұрын
@@capecodcorporate then you don’t know what culture means, beauty is different for everyone and lol only met weird sketch people in Portugal and a lot of bad intentioned people in Germany none of these..... and that’s because Portugal is a poor country so many people want to trick you..... even managers at 5 stars hotels are incompetent and just want your money nothing compared to the curtesy of German hotels
@TheWester64 жыл бұрын
Economics of Argentina pls!
@davidmartineztorres87314 жыл бұрын
Che, cuantas copas tenes
@oc9114 жыл бұрын
@@davidmartineztorres8731 Falklands Islands are British
@jcm954 жыл бұрын
I've been commenting this for the last 6 months, hope they listen at some point
@albitorri24 жыл бұрын
would anyone like to talk about this stuff? i'd love to exchange opinions with another person. Please if it was so, respond to this comment, thank you!
@x86assembly184 жыл бұрын
I second this!
@Zajecu4 жыл бұрын
You forgot one important detail: French social security isn't free - it comes at a price of the highest taxes in Europe.
@Zajecu3 жыл бұрын
@@Weeee439 yes it does, if you count taxes and mandatory social security contributions
@karisvenner38923 жыл бұрын
@@Weeee439 Actually highest public spending in the World. 57% of the GDP is spent by the public sector every year. Which is more than Scandinavian country despite the fact that France is only half as rich.
@barnaby42323 жыл бұрын
@@karisvenner3892 France isn’t half as rich that’s ridiculous
@karisvenner38923 жыл бұрын
@@barnaby4232 Yes it is, just check the GDP per capita of different countries. Norway : $80000 Denmark : $60000 Sweden : $50000 Finland : $50000 France : $40000 All Scandinavian countries are 25% to 100% richer than France. (And these are 2019 numbers, 2020 numbers will most show an even wider gap thanks to strict lockdowns applied in France)
@barnaby42323 жыл бұрын
@@karisvenner3892 exactly so what you said was objectively wrong plus those numbers aren't even accurate, how does 25 percent more rich equate to twice as rich?
@BusinessMadhouse4 жыл бұрын
Absolutely love your content. Excited for this video. Your work inspired me to start my own channel
@EconomicsExplained4 жыл бұрын
Go for it!
@sanketbajaj46414 жыл бұрын
Solid stuff buddy 💪💪💪💪
@goliathsteinbeisser35474 жыл бұрын
16:00 About investing in France: If you buy company shares, on top of your national taxes and fees you will have to pay the French financial transactions tax and social tax on dividends, even if you are not French and have never been to France. In theory they would reimburse you for the social tax at least, but the application is so expensive that it only makes sense for big investors. Goldman Sachs is getting their tax reimbursement. You? Me? Not so much. To me, France seems to be overly bureaucratic and shooting itself in the foot with things like taxes that achieve the opposite of what they are supposed to. The investment climate feels downright hostile, actually, and I was just looking to invest a few hundred €. When looking for places to invest, I skip right past France.
@nachannachle27064 жыл бұрын
Simple solution: don't rack any dividends. Capital appreciation has been so underrated over the past 10 years, yet it is the hallmark of "value" in investment. For this reason, I'm not surprised French legislation goes against the US model. You always need an alternative to the status quo. All is well.
@whynotfr3 жыл бұрын
Totaly agree : From a french entrepreneur who leaved France.
@Ben-bg2lp4 жыл бұрын
I thought he would start by saying: "This is Las Vegas!"
@grahamturner26404 жыл бұрын
LOL.
@pentagramprime15854 жыл бұрын
If only I had a time machine so I could go back and re-edit this video.
@StoutProper4 жыл бұрын
Viva Las Vegas
@litupclock4 жыл бұрын
Hey! Loved the video :) Would it be possible to include a GINI index ranking as well to show how well the GDP per capita is spread. This would stop gulf states running away with the show despite the majority of people living lives not reflective of the high GDP per capita. Unless somehow you were going to include this in this category. In which case wouldn't it make more sense to replace this category with quality of living? Just a thought!
@perplexingpantheon4 жыл бұрын
Jeepers, the last time I was this early, the US was still apart of the Paris climate accord.
@EconomicsExplained4 жыл бұрын
oh... noooo.
@AlextheBant4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for being the most informative channel to date. Economy has always been an area where I lacked and your videos provide the perfect ground to get into it amd understand our current world better.
@13inchchub944 жыл бұрын
EE: French revolution is so extent theres university courses on it. Me who watches oversimplified.
@arcreehysteria98054 жыл бұрын
The problem with unemployement is that everyone are doing long studies (as they are basically free, and this is good), but at the end no one wants to do the repetitive and boring jobs that every country needs because of their education. A lot of student a choosing their studies first because they like the subject regardless to if they can get a job with these.
@Tonyx.yt.3 жыл бұрын
yeah, reminds me of shitons of studends choosing psycology, human sciences, literature, hystory, international relationships, political sciences but a very small amount of then can actualy find a job related to their studies... that's why some years after ending high school i choose to study beverage technician, 100% real world teaching for beign a skilled worker in production and commerce about beverages (wine excluded)
@AAMD112 жыл бұрын
C'est la meme chose au Canada!
@alisakcha9654 жыл бұрын
Just my two cents as a trained economist from France ! In the video, I think you underrated France's real adoration for its most scientifically abled. Philosophic and Literary prowess are no longer the most valuable qualities in the Elite since, I think, the 80s at least. I feel part of the problem is precisely that technical studies are more elitist than in other places where they're pretty much the norm but are on average less difficult to complete. As such, while being an engineer obviously carries prestige everywhere France exacerbates It to a completely different level. There are very significant distinction between engineers based on the prestige value of the school rather than on the engineer's specialty (In France you're not simply an engineer, but an "X" or a "Centralien" or a "Ponts"... You catch the gist). Entire carreer paths in the industrial sector are barred for everyone that wasn't trained as an engineer despite significant job experience in the relevant sector. Finally, and maybe that's the most detrimental part of this mindset on a day to day basis, there's this extremely prevalent idea of thinking that If a person is good enough to be an engineer It can also be good to do pretty much anything else except maybe being a MD. A bit like the Roman idea that good politicians would make good generals but updated to the XXth century (can't really say the XXIst...). Somewhat ironically, It therefore sometimes feels like sometimes all the best technically minded engineers (those that scored the best at the insanely selective entry exams two years into tertiary education) -except in Aeronautics- leave France to work abroad , while France is left mostly with the carreer administrators from the same schools. In my opinion It results in the fact that in France If you aren't able to beat your partners in Science, you'll have to pick the other tracks that are left for you. If you're not below average intellectually, the short study path is clearly not your best bet on average. First, the wages are quite low in the vast majority of situations, which should be indeed expected from a job which doesn't require a lot of qualification, and the working conditions are generally not stellar, which should also be expected from physically demanding jobs, which obviously discourages some that are potentially interested... But the real problem that makes It very unattractive to reasonably smart people is that It's extremely difficult to grow out of this carreer because there's an oversupply of people with a tertiary degree that will as a rule be selected before you for the promotion. It's therefore, in the majority of cases, a worse carreer path for the individual in a vast majority of situations than sludging through a questionably useful degree and then stumbling upon an office job. This equilibrium is arguably worse for the country as a whole (because It definitely results in a lack of trained technical workers) but French people are fiercely individualistic and no governement will be able to change that in a lifetime. But the fact that technical studies are then out of the question because only the best students really get the chance to study the technical subjects. It pretty much leaves people with everything else, where the supply of Education is nearly as high as the demand. Subjects like Psychology, Law, Applied Economics (theoritical Economics is quite hard to get into in France unless you're a trained engineer)... Of course, devil hides in details and schools like the ENS offers an extremely selective and prestigious cursus for the very best in less technical subject matters and those will become world class professors in their own sphere of expertise like late Nobel Prize Esther Duflo, but they're an exception rather than the rule and they're pretty much only there for scholarly purpose and too small to offer a realistic alternative path to good carreers. But It's then not really a surprise that there's an oversupply of people that are intellectually minded and able to carry an interesting conversation till 5 AM like a typical cliché of a French person does and a lack of skilled technical worker that are better at their job than at questioning the nature of Labor in modern economies. Therefore, what France lacks the most in comparison to its more successful European partners is a category between the Elite that is extremely competent, maybe the most scholarly excellent in the world, and the common folks that can't really innovate because they don't possess the ability to because of their lack of training in the relevant skills. It's not really a random occurrence to me that those people are indeed the insanely productive backbone of every of the most successful European countries like Switzerland, Germany or Sweden. Those are the real treasures of modern developed economies. Therefore, I think France's situation pretty much shows better than any other developed countries the danger of striving for having the very best while neglecting to uplift the average guy. Maybe It's time to accept this and to find a path to solve the serious problem of France's lack of skilled workers... For me, It inevitably starts by stopping to care as much about the excellency of the cream of the crop that will thrive in every system anyway and temperate the feel-good policies that only really function under the assumption that every kind of work is equal... And to simply start to care about the people that are not the very best but still would be completely able to do well in the highly complex modern economy If they were given the tools to do so. It's things that would show their effects in the long term however ... Never too late I guess, but given France's relatively bleak perspectives in the near future, It's time to seriously think about It to avoid the less enviable situation of our Southern cousins. One short term solution that could however be used in the meanwhile would be to tap into this supply of worker by allowing people that weren't trained for their technical jobs to be able to do so while working. It would require some concession on the worker's side (you can't remunerate very well a person that is not operational for the job, obviously) but I feel like an even steeper obstacle mentality-wise lies in the employers. Indeed, I feel like French recruiters are not confident enough in their recruits ability to improve with work experience and will sometimes unconsciously think that If you weren't trained for It in your tertiary education specifically then It's prefferrable to wait for another candidate, potentially leaving behind someone that was honestly competent enough to learn this skill and would have costed you less in the long run (Ce qui est rare est cher). PS : I feel like you overrate the value of the "Made in France" brand value somewhat. It's definitely true for all the things that are typically associated with France like wines or luxury goods ... But far less so for other products like car manufacturing or Aeronautics which are nonetheless pivotal to the French economy... Just look at the popular image of Peugeot in the UK as an example. Few people also seem to know that the de facto headquarter of Airbus is in France, and that France is therefore one of the World leader in this sector. Can definitely agree that being a world leader in Aeronautics isn't really something extremely valuable currently, though...
@loyanganbalongjam99614 жыл бұрын
Nice summmary of current state of French economy.
@diadochi37842 жыл бұрын
Bravo! Well written.
@dohc10674 жыл бұрын
After visiting Greece, I have a whole new level of respect for France. The culture, food, clothes, wine, and sites, definitely worthwhile experiences for sure. Paris is congested, but it does give you access to Marseille with its beautiful views and Brussels with that great chocolate a few hours away. If you prefer a slower pace, Nice may be your ticket. Monaco, the name says it all and if you prefer great shopping please check out Italy. Of course this was prior to what is happening now:(
@AbhayKumar-cm2kh4 жыл бұрын
Largest Exports : Guillotines and Baguettes
@EconomicsExplained4 жыл бұрын
The staples
@grahamturner26404 жыл бұрын
LOL
@themongolsarecoming_94374 жыл бұрын
what about surrender and revolution jokes i am starting a revolution against your evil rule.
@brownerjerry1744 жыл бұрын
What aboot frogs and snails
@leovalenzuela83684 жыл бұрын
Rohit Raj 1996 called, they want their French stereotypes back.
@AuxenceF4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this video !
@kobet_4 жыл бұрын
Great video. Since this video focused on the impact of tourism on France, I feel like it would be really interesting if you made a video on Hawaii. I'm from Hawaii myself and COVID-19 has absolutely killed the tourism industry here.
@chemicheto4 жыл бұрын
Quarentine has made me an addict to your videos
@Warlock_Sack4 жыл бұрын
“THEES IS FRAHNS”
@apacheattackhelicopter81854 жыл бұрын
Shams Ellissius
@jordanmccallum12344 жыл бұрын
Sounds to me like their issues, particularly in relation to entrepreneurship and employment come from the tensions between having an economic system which benefits from having few worker's rights, and a culture which highly values workers rights. The only way to resolve those tensions is with a bureaucratic state to enforce the latter. If your goal was to fix these economic problems, you'd either have to replace those workers rights with something else which the working class would accept, or to turn their economic system into something which doesn't incentivize exploitation, thus making the bureaucracy unnecessary.
@meneither38344 жыл бұрын
What economic system would that be ?
@Chocolouf4 жыл бұрын
Another issue is that practical skills learning has been seen as a way to discharge failing students from classical system, as well as the unprepared orientation of students before they go to university and other higher level studies. It's also quite difficult for workers to adapt their skills to the market and re-learn, it's getting better but there isn't as much investment as it should be.
@goldminer7544 жыл бұрын
I think the German education system has managed to buff its industry alot by having two higher education systems besides Uni that focus on practical skills and have a good acceptance in society while overall larbour rights are pretty similar. We have other problems though the french dont have in this magnitude.
@jordanmccallum12344 жыл бұрын
@@Chocolouf I absolutely agree about th stigma around practical skills, not specifically in France (as I am not French and don't know), but in my country I have found the stigma around practical trades has been a contributor to university dropouts who feel disillusioned because they were never learning something they enjoyed and felt good at to begin with. I don't want to say "overeducation" because I don't believe higher education should be exclusively for having a job in that field, but certainly an inappropriate blanket push towards white collar fields, where a more nuanced approach much leave people more satisfied with their occupation.
@jordanmccallum12344 жыл бұрын
@@meneither3834 I don't know France's culture well enough to know what the French people want most from their economic system. I have my preferred brand of communism, and Frances history suggests they might be keen on it too but maybe times change. There are also systems like Parecon, examples of economies which are something entirely new.
@rollsroyce42494 жыл бұрын
France! UK's favourite hexagon!
@AuxenceF4 жыл бұрын
@Boris Erdogan err 418
@brightmong72904 жыл бұрын
pentagon?
@Alec913 жыл бұрын
Hexagons are the bestagons!
@faizanpatel41304 жыл бұрын
Waiting for this video for soooo long! Thanks
@Bhatakti_Hawas4 жыл бұрын
When France sneezes, the rest of the Europe catches the cold
@jascrandom98554 жыл бұрын
Except Germany
@lewis4244 жыл бұрын
no that's china
@themongolsarecoming_94374 жыл бұрын
cough secretely means surrender cough
@Daniel-jm7ts4 жыл бұрын
@@jascrandom9855 *dismantles the HRE and humiliates Prussia*
@livethefuture24924 жыл бұрын
I believe it was Metternich(Austrian chancellor) who said that during the 1840's
@mgtow-extraits4 жыл бұрын
- 50 years of massive immigration, mostly from africa and algeria (non-eu newborn births: 40%) - huge taxation: 2nd most taxed country in the world (behind denmark) - 15% of the population living under the poverty threshold (over 9 millions people out of 67 millions) - underestimated unemployment official numbers
@samuellloyd99744 жыл бұрын
9:34 "Tourism is the best export industry you can have" Corona: nope
@empereurmaxime89144 жыл бұрын
I am French and I find that this video explains very well the good sides and the bad sides of the economy of my country
@tomsawyer51724 жыл бұрын
me: sees #superior when talking about the metric system, also me: *Instant like*
@akshatasthana62614 жыл бұрын
i'd been waiting for this video!!
@shudheshvelusamy76444 жыл бұрын
..."Tried and tested formula." _Sees only two countries ranked so far_
@2lian4 жыл бұрын
To add something as a French. If we don't want to work (unpaid) for experience it is because we do not earn any compensation from the state for doing so. When a student finishes school he earn zero money from social security because, the only way to get money from social security when you are unemployed is to have worked before. Internships are (usualy) the worst type of contract you can get (minimum ~500€/mounth if not 0, no unemployement help after and no retierement) and you are much better working as a cashier (Minimum wage ~1300€ + full social help).
@NPJGlobal4 жыл бұрын
Can we please forget about the myth of the french 35 hours workweek? I'm french , work 45 hours a week and know no one in my entourage who works under 40 hours
@mattiacecconi76314 жыл бұрын
it’s interesting to see how we can often reduce many problems to faults in the educational system
@Grimfang9993 жыл бұрын
The problem with Frances economy is actually the combination of a minimum wage and strong collective bargaining institutions. It is much easier for these institutions to negotiate a flat minimum wage increase than it is to pressure businesses to force up wages. But consequence, the minimum wage in France is so high that it is near equal to the median wage, meaning nearly. half the population is on minimum wage naturally, this has brought horizontal economic mobility to a standstill with the only real ways of improving income being vertical mobility aka promotions, which are of very limited supply. In other words, france completely lacks meritocracy, and so individual wealth is stagnating. Meanwhile in places like norway and sweden, all wages are high but the wages are more meritocratic between the deciles, averaging a 1.2x moltiplier over the previous decile. It is fair, and also meritocratic, because it ONLY has collective bargaining
@apaulson6590 Жыл бұрын
American living in a French overseas territory. Great video given what we’re seeing in France today. Feel like there was a missed opportunity on the value French overseas territories provide, and it’s control over west African nations. Also Belgium, come guys Belgium is prime for a video. Flanders vs wallonia, shift in wealth, language borders, world wars, beer companies…. Would love to see it.
@lawsonsippola22284 жыл бұрын
What about making a video, probably about 20 minutes long about adding all the countries you have had done before to the leader board? It'd be cool to see where you rank countries like Canada, Norway, Italy, etc. You've already done all the research for the countries so it'd be a relatively easy video to make and you could shamelessly plug all your prior videos to get more sweet, sweet views. Top notch content btw.
@davidvictor36694 жыл бұрын
An excellent introduction. I have assigned this to my Doing Business in France class.
@johnhawkins53144 жыл бұрын
Here's a question I pose to the rest of the audience: If your economy is as large, strong and as stable as France's, is it necessarily a bad thing that it is stagnant? Sure it's growth may be stagnant, but that may also mean that France's current standard of living, which is by all means quite high, is actually sustainable. This channel has covered various countries which have countries that are dependent (to various extents) on limited natural resources. So while they may be growing, if they do not diversify their income, their growth may stop at a point where the country is only developing. The first counterpoint I can think of is, "Yes, it is bad, because as discussed France has the unlimited resource of tourism and prestige, and thus should have unlimited growth." and I do agree to that to some extent, however, countries can only have so much tourism (it is typically very high, but there is still a limit on it regardless). What do you all think? I'd like to see some interesting points both ways
@meneither38344 жыл бұрын
Prestige fades, and by the way, France has a growing population, so it would need to grow to keep the standards up. If you get outgrown you'll just end up assimilated into someone else's economic sphere which happened to France after WW2. Also I wonder to what extend what you said applies to Japan.
@The4lexO4 жыл бұрын
They planned more than 100millions of tourists to come to France by 2020s...but in the mean time Covid boy came out
@amanjumna4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. The scenes make me yearn for travelling to resume.
@keelanfarrell80474 жыл бұрын
As an Englishman, I laugh at the sinking boat of France while the UK heads towards the iceberg, good thing I'm also Irish (and American but we don't talk about that) Also do another UK video pleeeeeèeese
@beback_4 жыл бұрын
Keelan Farrell Dude focus on putting one or two points across lol
@thisismelv4 жыл бұрын
Chill out Ireland isn't doing that good.
@themongolsarecoming_94374 жыл бұрын
umm.... so you are an irishman pretending to be an american pretending to be an englishman pretending to not be drinking tea while eating hamburgers with a side of potatoes. your passport must be a nightmare
@Andromahlius4 жыл бұрын
The UK has already hit the iceberg, nowadays they're just burning the safety boats.
@quavious29404 жыл бұрын
Please consider posting the lost of sources for future videos in the descriptions, it would be very nice to do further readings on the sources of your videos
@nielsdue1234 жыл бұрын
I would absolutely love it, if you finished of Scandinavia with The Economy of Denmark.
@808bAler2 жыл бұрын
1. Size 2. GDP Per Capita 4. Stability and Confidence (Fix me at 16:05) 4. Growth 5. Industry Found one, EE! Sorry, no time to do the spreadsheet! Love your channel! Cheers from Hawaii!
@mnti38274 жыл бұрын
When you can, could you look at spain? I'm curious as to know about them as well
@muhinyi4 жыл бұрын
Amazing video!
@MrPaulo83944 жыл бұрын
Great videos, lots of true things but some corrections to make: In France, If you work as an executive, a chef and lots of other jobs, forget about the 35 hours week. For example, as an executive in a consulting firm, you will have a contract with no fixed limit of hours. One benefit compared to other nations though is that there are 25 days of paid holiday (no matter what kind of job), which is great. Also, in my opinion, it is fairly naive to compare France to Sweden or Norway. France has 7 times the population of Sweden, a much more complicated history, a colonial past, was partly destroyed during the world war and needed to get rebuilt quickly. This has led us to create a bit of a melting pot nation, which is great in many ways as it brings us cultural diversity and part of our creative genius relies on this. However, it does make it harder to reach a full consensus among the population. As a result, the country is usually harder to reform, and that slows down changes needed in Universities for example, which indeed aren't the best at teaching practical skills outside of medicine or law. However, France has an excellent (albeit elite) system of top-notch semi-public engineering and business schools with a world-class reputation. If you need a proof of it, try to look at the number of French Developers working in the valley, or French mathematicians being some of the top traders or risk managers in the city of London.
@Amusementpark1234 жыл бұрын
Well done, your well-founded video never disappoints
@breconcameron7324 жыл бұрын
You should do one of these on New Zealand, wanna know what we'd be rated as
@livethefuture24924 жыл бұрын
Wait does New Zealand even exist? You must be taking about little Australia! XD
@annabethchase25694 жыл бұрын
I think for every video you make about a country, you should also add one of your previously reviewed countries to the leader board as well
@NeoShameMan4 жыл бұрын
It's also rumored to have the highest productivity per person, i want to know more about that, also educated french worker export very well, especially in stem, what about that?
@jeremyboudaud33224 жыл бұрын
Brain drain (we have high income taxes, so some people move out)
@sephikong83234 жыл бұрын
And there is also the great employment bottleneck. As most new workers come into the labour force both completely over qualified due to having done long studies, but at the same time being grossly under qualified as these courses for the most part don't teach any real life skills, you end up with youths being heavily unemployed and if they find a job, they quickly get taxed dry, so many simply escape the country. And these problems aren't going away anytime soon thanks to the ubiquitous power of unions
@shakya004 жыл бұрын
@@jeremyboudaud3322 Not a significant brain drain, about the same as other developed economy. But a "rich drain".
@kwamenaplays58994 жыл бұрын
I enjoy these videos. I like and subscribe.
@tislr88304 жыл бұрын
This video started well, and the global picture shown here is correct, but i"ve been a bit surprised for some reasons ; France is a great country, with a huge influence on the world's economy and that has been correctly explained. But as the german says, the devil hides in detailles. - The understanding of the revolution(s) is intresting and have some truth in it, but is certainly a little bit exagerated, France isn't the only product of ths "Delta" time in history. It is true that the society (shall i say the STATE) has as it's primary objective the well beeing of the country and it's people and to solve people's issues. It is key to understand and the author got this straight (honourable) Now what I desagree - Tourisme and french economy. Yes Toursime is a huge part of the french economy, 7% (2018), [the UK financial services is also 7% of the british economy.] And is worth talking about, but doing so, major parts of the french economy have been whiped out. The industry is robust. Car manufacturers are strongs, the banking and insurance system is big. Pharmaceuticals compagnies, Aerospace and aircraft industry (first french export), transporation and energy, defense. French economy can be seen has developped in most sectors, outshining in none regarding their takes in the national GDP but still, saying Luxuary and tourism is the key of it's economy is like saying Germany is only good at doing cars. So a focus on the luxuary industry which isn't it's biggest wasn't the best way to talk about it's economy (without beeing incorrect). - Education and Research, Yes french university are not our best assets, but they still make the best mathematicians on earth (with Princton university). The system is dual, the Grandes écoles, and the university. without going further in it judging the system only with university is a mistake. Buisness school are good, Engeenering, MedSchool and even economics. We ahve a lack of integration between The private sector and the university. But as i said University is only one of the two pillars of French Higer edu system. Reasearch isn't done in the university as much as they do in other countries, Many labs are run by the state. What is to be understood with the french education system is : it's complicated beyond reason, but miraculously working. And the country is still -2019) the 5th largest patent producer. I will not defend it because it's not worth it. But the system is bad but works. and that not uncomon in France, things are overly complicated but still work. - What about the big players, out of the top 500 corporations worldwide as measured by revenue. Franceis the 4th. with 0.462 compagny per 1M inhab (only outperformed by the Swiss and the Dutch in the top 10 countries). They lead the economy (most of them have been creation of the state like Saint-Gobin in ...1665 or EDF in 1946). They are doing buisness in many fields, allowing the economy to be diverse and drive a lots of ressources in research. While the states run labs are doing most of reasearch instead of the university (despite often been link one another with colaboratory work, Teacher are also working for Labs that are only coleaded by the university and partly by the State (seek about the CNRS). - Employment rate, Yes it is low , why ? The social choice is : better not work than having a badly paid, part time job. The poverty rate is lower in france compared with other OECD, and the productivity is higer, the countries choosed another way to devide the wealths generated within the country. that's a Political choice more than an economical anomaly. Their is some truth about the "impossible to fire a french employee" but that's greatly exagerated. If your buisness isn't doing profite, you can totaly fire employees. The buraucracy here is a nightmare for buisness and entrepreneurs, but if you are a medium or big compagny that's how they got most of their subventions, and they rarely complain about this part. - No they don't go on strike often (other europeans beat us at this game) but when they do, be sure everyone notice. The french culture is about clash and fight, so when the unions strike it means negociation are "ongoing". Strike isn't the result of failed negotiation but often a part of the negotiation. (this is ofc generalising). Their is also a reasuring trend in the Anglo-saxon world to show how franceis terrible and unstable, a sort of self reasuring, mainly in the UK. But data are clear, two countries are very much alike when it come to economical growth and GDP , GDP per capita, the inqualities beeing higer in the UK. mainly showing all the turmoil we see and hear is more about theatrical stand than real long term economical differences. In overall i'm a bit surprise you got the big picture of the country but the detailes are full of misconceptions and stereotypes. Thanks for the video, and take care, I would be pleased if you do the economy of the EU one day ;D
@huguesjouffrai96184 жыл бұрын
I think you are pointing at the limit of this format and this channel: it has to almost caricature countries' economies in order to give us the big picture in a short and understandable manner. And of course it misses key aspects but overall it's still interesting. However it should be seen more as an invitation to learn more than as an accurate synthesis. I think that a foreigner watching this video will get a good and accurate idea of what the particularities of the French economy are and how it fares compared to the rest of the world. Most of what you pointed at are details in comparison with the main aspects that make the French economy stand out.
@neilkasher4 жыл бұрын
Great videos thanks!
@motan78644 жыл бұрын
12:06 I'm French, and this is perfectly nailed on the head, bravo! I would add: France was heavily influenced by communism during the course of the 20th century and is still feels its crazy ideology today: many French politicians still defend this tainted ideology, and French people hate money and hate rich people. It's ingrained in the everyday French culture. Becoming rich is pretty much a deadly sin here, and because French people lack that motivation to become rich, they become depressed and complain all the time. That's why they're so eager to protest and not so eager to work hard. I believe there are studies about how surprisingly depressed French people are, my theory is because of the hate they have for money and success.
@notliquid14484 жыл бұрын
Tout à fait !
@brownerjerry1744 жыл бұрын
Being super materialistic isn't an escape too,because those too materialistic economies are also very depressing,germans would die to get rights and working conditions like you,,,maybe finding a balance like Scandinavian countries is a good option,,theyre happiness report says so,,,
@silano3604 жыл бұрын
@@brownerjerry174 Germany has almost equal working conditions and rights, so what are you talking about?
@dazzlebreak44584 жыл бұрын
Don't you also have very high taxes for rich people? I remember that a few years ago Gerard Depardieu got a Russian citizenship because of that.
@livethefuture24924 жыл бұрын
For the lack of skilled workers issue, does France consider employing skilled immigrant workers from Asia and the rest of Europe.
@studentofsmith4 жыл бұрын
I watched a few of your videos now and before I begin watching I always think, "I wonder if he is going to mention x?" and you always do. It gives me a lot of confidence that you know what you're talking about and try to include all the relevant facts.
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@ubomninomen77654 жыл бұрын
Great stuff. I especially liked the discussion of why French aren't that motivated to work, although I didn't hear about how/if/why the income tax rates reduced the incentive for people to work. It totally makes sense that generous unemployment pay/benefits would lower the incentives to work, but suspect that is a big factor in a lot of European nations. Please include more discussion of tax rates and policies.
@azazzelx4 жыл бұрын
so its like an economic ecosystem that has inflexible culture clashing with their own economic system...
@amosvibro74244 жыл бұрын
Its so aesthetically pleasing to hear Economics Explained say "but"
@srami0044 жыл бұрын
Sounds like they need to reform their education system, and encourage entrepreneurship.
@videogamebomer4 жыл бұрын
Sounde like you dont know what your talking about
@sephikong83234 жыл бұрын
@@videogamebomer He knows *EXACTLY* what he is talking about. Our education system is a joke on almost every level and only worsens all the rest (an over abundance of over qualified new workers with no real world skill whatsoever) and the fact that creating a new business is so hard (and risky considering the lack of safety net and the high taxation) only hurts the economy, we have been relying on mega corporations that relocate their factories for far too long and it's time we start to create new businesses that benefit the real, local economy instead of relying on enormous corporations with no loyalty to their country whatsoever
@elon61314 жыл бұрын
@@sephikong8323 well you better not go look at america's education system..
@ahadumer4183 жыл бұрын
@@elon6131 dude the only problem with the American education system is that it is expensive we have to make sure College are affordable but those university make good studrbt
@elon61313 жыл бұрын
@@ahadumer418 the really expensive colleges are the only ones who actually do a good job. that's hardly a point in the US's favour, because this is true everywhere. the hallmark of a good system is that even when you don't have hundreds of thousands of dollars, you can still get good education.
@visoriannull8324 жыл бұрын
Mother of god that last segment sounds like paradise.
@simonestreeter15184 жыл бұрын
How can you do such a nice, thorough job of analyzing France's economy without even mentioning immigration?
@whynotfr3 жыл бұрын
Emmigration non ? Tous ceux qui créent de la richesse dans ce pays se cassent.
@simonestreeter15183 жыл бұрын
@@whynotfr Ça veut dire quoi, alors? Et 'emmigration' c'est pas un mot. Vous vouliez dire immigration ou émigration?
@whynotfr3 жыл бұрын
@@simonestreeter1518 ça veut dire qu’on importe les pires éléments du monde et que les français de base qui ont dans l’histoire fait se pays se barrent à l’étranger. Le numéro du faux zeteticien a 2 balles qui reprend quelqu’un pour une faute de frappe c’est relou. Je continuerai pas la discussion puisque nos avis sont trop divergents et ça ne sert à rien de débattre puisque l’on est même pas en accord sur le constat de base.
@simonestreeter15183 жыл бұрын
@@whynotfr Bah non, vous vous trompez. Je suis d'accord, et j'ai fait la pub originale parce que la vidéo essayait de cacher le point par l'omettre. Et excusez-moi pour le malentendu, le français c'est pas mon langue maternelle. Bonne soirée.
@prashanthananthananthakris48364 жыл бұрын
anyway ... awesome channel dude .. mad respect .. love ur world view and ideas... ty for the great content
@frederickcstacey.75204 жыл бұрын
All I have to say about the reasons for the unemployment is, je ne sais pas!
@guih34383 жыл бұрын
Excellent video, very unbiased and detailed ! Learned a lot about my own country economy 🤓
@1.5Koreans0.5American4 жыл бұрын
I would love to visit when this pandemic is over. 👍
@EconomicsExplained4 жыл бұрын
certainly would recommend
@damienthrynity89184 жыл бұрын
Would recommend you to try more than just Paris. There is a place in France where you have a magnificent castle every 20km or so.
@Snp20244 жыл бұрын
@@damienthrynity8918 any video on tourist spots?
@saarangsahasrabudhe86344 жыл бұрын
French people like this.
@christopherabelet46724 жыл бұрын
Be carreful with Paris. France is not only Paris we have nice stuff also 😉
@lifesucks53224 жыл бұрын
you should make a video where you go over all the countries you’ve already made the videos for and put them on the list
@quavious29404 жыл бұрын
Do a video on the analysing the strongest economic participants of the European union and speculate the affect of the coronavirus pandemic of the union and the Euro currency
@CosmiaNebula4 жыл бұрын
Do a short episode on the economic effect of America not adopting the #superior metric system.
@olivercuenca41094 жыл бұрын
14:10 I mean I think that hating work for "exposure" or "experience" is something we can all get behind, no? Who needs those freeloaders if they're not willing to pay?
@jameslegrand8484 жыл бұрын
I mean, here the concept of internships do exist. But most of them are backed by the educational system so you literally have 0 chance of someone who isn't a student, who works for free.
@damienthrynity89184 жыл бұрын
As a French studying in IT I can tell you that long internship must be paid. And it's well paid, depending only on your age only and less taxed than a real job. But for sure, it's not like the holy grail of undefined duration contract that allows you not to be fired.
@mrniceguy71684 жыл бұрын
Training employees is time intensive and expensive, and most internships are very productive for the worker. This is much worse than usual for a country like France with its abundance of “rights” Nobody likes the idea of internships but pretty much everyone that has done it feels they benefited from it.
@livethefuture24924 жыл бұрын
Doesn't that just make French population uncompetitive. And don't companies just hire foreign migrants instead, who'll do the job for far less pay.
@mrniceguy71684 жыл бұрын
Live The Future Actually the minority/foreign labor often are the ones hit most hard. There’s little risk hiring a skilled, educated native Frenchmen, but there’s a lot of risk in hiring an unskilled, uneducated, 2nd generation Algerian. Compound that with a lot of welfare and there’s no incentive to work.
@viktorsigurdarson4 жыл бұрын
You should do a video rating the countries you have covered already