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   alt.politics.economics      "Its the economy, stupid"      345,374 messages   

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   Message 344,693 of 345,374   
   Progressive poison to All   
   Re: It's taken just five years for progr   
   20 Feb 24 02:32:27   
   
   XPost: alt.fan.sean-hannity, alt.society.liberalism, talk.politics.guns   
   XPost: uk.politics.misc   
   From: progressives@suck.com   
      
   On 26 Mar 2022, Wi1liam T T  posted some   
   news:t1nknq$35f97$24@news.freedyn.de:   
      
   > Biden / Obama are taking the USA down the same path.  Make no mistake,   
   > Obama is pulling the levers behind the scenes and making Biden the   
   > patsy.   
      
   She steered the continent through the pandemic. She has massively   
   increased the powers of the European Commission. And she has led a   
   response to the challenges of climate change, Russia’s invasion of   
   Ukraine, and competition from China.   
      
   Ursula von der Leyen might well have convinced herself of the strength of   
   her record when she launched her bid for five more years as President of   
   the Commission on Monday. There’s a problem, however. She has been a   
   disaster for the European economy. Over the last five years, she has   
   launched a ruinously expensive round of borrowing as well as a green   
   strategy that will de-industrialise the continent, all while imposing   
   round after round of growth-destroying regulations. On Von der Leyen’s   
   watch, the EU has fallen decisively behind the rest of the world – and   
   there is little hope of it recovering during a second term.   
      
   In many ways, Von der Leyen has been the most significant EU Commission   
   President since Jacques Delors, the father of the single currency and the   
   single market, back in the 1980s. The comical Jacques Santer, another of   
   her predecessors, left little mark. The same was true of José Manuel   
   Barroso and Romano Prodi.   
      
   But over the last five years, Von Der Leyen has overseen the final   
   departure of the UK from the bloc; taken control of healthcare policy   
   during the pandemic; launched the EU’s first major round of borrowing;   
   introduced a climate change strategy; and vastly increased the power of   
   the Brussels machine over industrial policy. It is quite a list.   
      
   The trouble is that Von der Leyen has also been a disaster for Europe’s   
   economy. Europe’s performance, just like that of the UK, had been slipping   
   for a decade or more, but it was over the last five years that the gap   
   with the United States, and China, became more and more painfully obvious.   
   By the end of last year, US GDP was 8.2pc higher than its 2019 level. For   
   the eurozone, output was only 3pc higher.   
      
   Major economies such as France, only up by 1.8pc over five years, and   
   Germany, with just a 0.1pc increase, performed even more poorly. Sure,   
   Europe was hit by the pandemic. But so was every other country in the   
   world. The EU is now slipping back into recession as much of the rest of   
   the world steams ahead.   
      
   Von der Leyen’s catastrophic mis-management of the Commission is one of   
   the major reasons for that. There have been three big problems. First, she   
   has massively increased the amount the Commission borrows, launching a 700   
   billion euro Covid Recovery Fund, and issuing its own bonds for the first   
   time.   
      
   This was meant to mark the start of a fiscal union to match the EU’s   
   monetary union, and finally rescue the economies of countries such as   
   Italy, which received large chunks of the cash.   
      
   Three years later, it is clear that it has done nothing to accelerate   
   growth, that huge amounts of money have been wasted on vanity projects,   
   and that it has failed to drag Italy out of its near-permanent recession   
   (it grew by just 0.6pc last year, with 0.7 per cent forecast for 2024).   
   The borrowed money still has to be repaid somehow, but there is little to   
   show for it.   
      
   Next, Von der Leyen launched a massively expensive “Green New Deal” that   
   was designed to turn the continent into a global leader in combating   
   climate change as well as make its industries far more competitive against   
   their main rivals.   
      
   It included a carbon border tax that looked suspiciously like disguised   
   protectionism, and vast subsidies to take a global lead in alternative   
   energies.   
      
   And yet, the results have been dismal. Europe’s once world-beating auto   
   industry is getting wiped out because it can’t compete with cheaper   
   Chinese models, the continent is dependent on Chinese imports of equipment   
   for wind and solar power, industry has been decimated by soaring costs,   
   and it has been out-competed by better designed and bigger subsidies   
   offered by President Biden in the US.   
      
   At the same time, the “farm to fork” strategy that Von der Leyen launched   
   in 2020, restricting the use of pesticides along with dozens of   
   environmental targets for agriculture, has proved ruinously expensive,   
   triggering a wave of protests in France, Spain, and Germany, as furious   
   farmers take to the streets.   
      
   Finally, all the extra powers the EU has accumulated for itself over the   
   last five years have mainly been used to destroy innovation, and micro-   
   manage the bloc’s way to economic irrelevance. The mandarins in Brussels   
   boast about being a “regulatory superpower”, as if it were pen-pushers and   
   law-makers instead of entrepreneurs and businesses that created new   
   wealth.   
      
   Take Artificial Intelligence, the most exciting industry in the world   
   right now, and one where Europe could be a world leader.   
      
   The absurdly cumbersome AI Act from the EU imposes huge costs that will   
   crush start-ups and deter investment – even President Macron in France,   
   hardly a free-marketeer, criticised it in public – killing off a new   
   industry before it has even had a chance to establish itself. The result?   
   China and the US will dominate the sector, and the EU, as in the rest of   
   the tech industry, will be nowhere.   
      
   Just like the UK, the EU desperately needs to grow faster. It is falling   
   behind in key industries, Europe’s welfare states are increasingly   
   unaffordable, and its mountains of debt keep on growing. Its share of the   
   global economy has fallen from around 30pc 20 years ago to 15pc now. But   
   there is little chance of faster growth under five more years of Von der   
   Leyen’s inept leadership. Instead it will simply decline into greater and   
   greater irrelevance.   
      
   https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/02/19/five-years-ursula-von-der-   
   leyen-destroy-europe-economy/?li_source=LI&li_medium=for_you   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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