pull down to refresh

The European Union's prolonged interventionism and endless subsidies have cultivated an unsustainable economy, propped up by companies addicted to state handouts. These so-called "entrepreneurial welfare recipients" are now facing the harsh reality of positive real interest rates. With the tide turning, many can no longer sustain their debts. The recent slight uptick in real rates has already triggered a wave of insolvencies, exposing the fragility of these businesses.
Germany is now witnessing an alarming rise in bankruptcies, with insolvency filings soaring by 10.7% in August compared to the previous year. Since mid-2023, the monthly increase has consistently been in double digits. In the first half of 2024, over 10,700 companies declared insolvency—a staggering 24.9% jump from the same period in 2023. Creditors' claims have also skyrocketed, reaching €32.4 billion, more than double the €13.9 billion in claims during the first half of 2023.
As the EU’s subsidy-fueled bubble bursts, the call for free markets grows louder. It’s time to phase out the parasitic dependency on public funds and embrace a sustainable, market-driven economy.
10000 companies in half a year is a huge number. I wonder new companies would not be more than in 100s. I think more than subsidy, it's their ignorance that's killing the German economy. How on Earth they can't understand?
reply
if it's that bad in Germany, you have to wonder about the other poorer EU states that are basically all subsidized with most of their governments just suckling away euros any time they need to build something.
i know some people in the Balkans that have small businesses and their whole life goal is to somehow qualify for eu subsidies. a guy in a group was offering to write business plans to get eu subs.
how about build a fucking business that people actually want to buy from and grow yourself organically.
parasite mentality
reply
The full from of EU is Europen union
reply
I think it's EUSSR
reply
There’s an interesting opinion piece in the FT today.
The ECB has no room to cut rates
Ignazio Angeloni (former supervisory board member of the ECB)
reply
Here's the article: https://archive.vn/oPWhN
reply
And they need to do it urgently
reply
47 sats \ 0 replies \ @drlh 11 Sep
Pip pop, new bubble is popped.
reply