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Sometimes visual representations help to understand a fundamental problem. The attached chart shows how the major economies of the eurozone have been systematically left behind by the US in terms of productivity growth since the introduction of the euro.

The centralization of political decision-making processes in Brussels and the ECB's fatal monetary policy, which only serves the purpose of financing the growing state apparatus and its bureaucracy, have left gaping holes in the productivity growth of the private economy. It can be assumed that the Keynesians in the capitals of the eurozone, who are still convinced that they can steer an economy centrally, will now massively loosen monetary policy and fuel government deficits to finance their strange initiatives and projects, which in the end will help to squeeze the private sector further and further.

The panic in the Eurozone capitals is palpable, the strange escalation attempts of the Ukraine war are a symptom of a failed attempt at global governance of a complex economy that is now slowly but surely coming to terms with the fact that the entire path of green transmission was nothing more than a failed attempt to escape this trap. Next steps are price and capital controls, which are supposed to prevent the eurozone from bleeding to death, but will have the opposite effect!

https://m.stacker.news/36811

Shouldn't the post title be Euro zone trails US?

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Yeah I was shocked by this headline. Appears it’s in error

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Yep. Sorry

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Yes, sorry.

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despite losing ground to the united states, europe has been increasing its value of sold industrial production. Or am I seeing something wrong?

https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php?title=Industrial_production_statistics#Context

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It looks as if this is denominated in euros and would primarily include internal trading. The eurozone is losing out massively in terms of participation in the global economy

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Never visualized its this bad... And while Europe does thrive off of Tourism, it doesn't bring the capital required to sustain each of these economies.

Will we ever see countries leave the Euro and go back to their currencies pre-Eurozone?

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Yes, this will happen. But I guess there will be a solution like using the euro for international trade while running a domestic currency to devalue... when? I have no idea

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It's just mind boggling that productivity [growth] in the United States between 2019 and now has been 6%. In Europe, 0.6%,"

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People need to understand that the EU/ Eurozone is a socialist club that hides behind the climate bs

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