sexta-feira, 12 de março de 2010
TEC "Germany's engine" - On why it remains so as I see it...
Germany's strengths are multifold and have remained so in a long while.
This is because the country does have a broad-based sense of purpose in what it does and how it accomplishes it.
The economy will forever be the domain of balances, any number of them required to stay checked permanently.The highs and lows are dictated by a fairly large number of variables none more uncontrollable than those invented or manipulated elsewhere in an interdependent world.
The only reason Germany's economy was so badly hit last year was the simultaneous collapse of world markets mainly those the country traditionally exports most to.
Despite the slump it is my conviction based on factual evaluation over a timeline that it won't be long before Germany bounces back strongly.That recovery will be driven by exports but also by measures the government might adopt to boost internal consumption.
The striking difference is that Europe's powerhouse earned that status by own merit over decades of wise policy combining growth, savings and social stability.
Truly a social market economy that has served Germans right turning their country into a remarkable success story.
Today it finds itself able to deal with the aftermath of the worst (and freak) downturn since 1929 from a position of strength unlike many other countries around it big and small.
Germany had already implemented a number of reforms others are only now grudgingly beginning to accept they have to include in any responsible political agenda.
The economic and social paradigms not being static call for continuous adapting to changing conditions.
While that change is needed and welcomed it should not supersede or wipe out altogether relevant changes made in the past that proved workable and successful.
In a world increasingly dominated by economics - often not the best of strands as confirmed recently - there must remain a large enough room for policymaking.
The goal of politics, many others aside, is to match economics to people creating an economy that produces wealth that can then be best channelled to the greatest number.
Germany is one of a few that has been especially successful at both.
Its fundamentals remain unsurprisingly strong.
This is because the country does have a broad-based sense of purpose in what it does and how it accomplishes it.
The economy will forever be the domain of balances, any number of them required to stay checked permanently.The highs and lows are dictated by a fairly large number of variables none more uncontrollable than those invented or manipulated elsewhere in an interdependent world.
The only reason Germany's economy was so badly hit last year was the simultaneous collapse of world markets mainly those the country traditionally exports most to.
Despite the slump it is my conviction based on factual evaluation over a timeline that it won't be long before Germany bounces back strongly.That recovery will be driven by exports but also by measures the government might adopt to boost internal consumption.
The striking difference is that Europe's powerhouse earned that status by own merit over decades of wise policy combining growth, savings and social stability.
Truly a social market economy that has served Germans right turning their country into a remarkable success story.
Today it finds itself able to deal with the aftermath of the worst (and freak) downturn since 1929 from a position of strength unlike many other countries around it big and small.
Germany had already implemented a number of reforms others are only now grudgingly beginning to accept they have to include in any responsible political agenda.
The economic and social paradigms not being static call for continuous adapting to changing conditions.
While that change is needed and welcomed it should not supersede or wipe out altogether relevant changes made in the past that proved workable and successful.
In a world increasingly dominated by economics - often not the best of strands as confirmed recently - there must remain a large enough room for policymaking.
The goal of politics, many others aside, is to match economics to people creating an economy that produces wealth that can then be best channelled to the greatest number.
Germany is one of a few that has been especially successful at both.
Its fundamentals remain unsurprisingly strong.
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