WSJ: Europe is Losing
Europeans live longer, have more leisure time and less income inequality, and often live in stunning cities and towns built over the centuries. But increasingly, Americans enjoy a higher standard of living. They have over 50% more living space on average per person. More than four in five Americans have air conditioners and clothes dryers at home, compared with between one-fifth and one-third of Europeans. Executive assistants in New York City earn around the same as specialist doctors in London.
The reason: no innovation
But Europe’s lack of economic dynamism has deeper roots, too. Taxes and regulations have risen inexorably; the volume of EU regulations has doubled since 2010. Sprawling rules protect old buildings, incumbent firms and aging consumers, limiting the creation of new infrastructure and industries. As Italy’s prime minister Giorgia Meloni puts it, “America innovates, China imitates, Europe regulates.”
Sweden is the exception:
Sweden has quietly spurred economic growth by cutting back its welfare state—tightening government spending, revamping the pension system and slashing corporate and personal tax rates. Per capita incomes are now climbing, and the country has seen a burst of entrepreneurship. Sweden even moved ahead of the U.S. in the number of billionaires per capita, thanks to a thriving tech startup scene and a video-game industry that has produced hits such as Minecraft and Candy Crush.
Europeans dont want change:
One reason change is difficult is that most Europeans will continue to enjoy a comfortable lifestyle for decades to come. “In global terms, relative decline is inevitable, but it may still be a very nice place, right?” says Sander Tordoir, an economist at the Center for European Reform.
Many European voters might consider the relative decline in economic power to be a price worth paying for spending less time at work than Americans and living with less inequality, a more generous social safety net and higher environmental standards.
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