Nacho García

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Nacho García

Nacho García

@Nacho3gh

Madrid. Katılım Eylül 2012
217 Takip Edilen275 Takipçiler
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Luis Garicano 🇪🇺🇺🇦
Europe looks great to Americans because Europe is great for people with American incomes to buy the nicest it has to offer. But the nicest it has to offer is not available to (young) people in Europe today.
Luis Garicano 🇪🇺🇺🇦@lugaricano

We stopped everything to write an answer (link below) to Paul Krugman's two posts of today (one informal, one with a simple model) arguing that Europe is broadly not falling behind the United States. The change measured by the Draghi report, he argues, is mostly due to growth in the technology industry, which has distorted GDP numbers without actually leading to higher standards of living. We should believe our eyes when we walk around France and walk around Mississippi. Krugman is wrong. The measures he uses understate European stagnation. This matters enormously. Divergence with the United States is the strongest evidence for reform in Europe. 1. The growth numbers Krugman compares the United States, France, and Germany at purchasing power parity in current prices. On that measure, France's and Germany's position relative to America has been roughly constant since 2000. But current price comparisons miss productivity gains in sectors where prices fall. If America produces twice as much software while the price of each unit halves, the value of American software output looks unchanged even though the volume has doubled. Most economists therefore use constant prices, which fix the base-year PPP level and apply each country's real output growth on top of it. American output growth has concentrated in tech, where prices have fallen tremendously as productivity rises. In terms of the volume of things produced, America has pulled away from Europe. 2. Is it all the tech industry? Krugman concedes this tech divergence but says it is not welfare-relevant. The American growth lead is an accounting artefact of measuring more iPhones at base-year prices, not a sign that Americans are actually richer, because Europeans buy the same iPhones at the same world prices. This is not the right way to think about the world today, as an earlier Paul Krugman would have argued. His model assumes tradable goods, interchangeable workers, marginal-cost pricing, and no profits. Each assumption fails. Most of what households buy is non-tradable: housing, healthcare, childcare, education. When American tech firms bid workers from haircutting to coding, American haircut wages rise. Germany has no growing tech sector to do the bidding, so German wages stay flat. Technology is not priced at marginal cost. Apple's margins are around 40 percent. Anthropic's inference margins are at 70 percent. The major platforms enjoy network effects, switching costs, and lock-in that hold prices well above what a competitive market would deliver. A large share of the productivity gains in technology stays as profit. A lot of the value of American technology dominance shows up in equity, not in wages. Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Alphabet, Meta, and Amazon together are worth $21 trillion, more than the entire combined stock market value of all European stock markets. Around 60 percent of US equity is held by American households. The median French or Spanish household holds almost no equity. The median employee at Meta, a company with almost 80,000 employees, earned $388,000 in 2025. This advantage is not going to go away. Krugman's own 1991 paper, cited in his Nobel prize, showed that comparative advantage in modern industries is produced by increasing returns to scale, specialized labor markets, supplier networks and the agglomeration of suppliers, workers, and ideas in particular places. Once an industry concentrates somewhere, the concentration is self-reinforcing. Europe is being pushed away from the next round of technology industries (AI!). 3. What about inequality? Another retort is that GDP per capita hides substantial inequality, and so even if America is rich on average, this is mostly due to the super wealthy. But despite the US's high pre-tax income inequality, it also achieves higher median incomes than Europe, in part because of such a high base, and in part because it actually redistributes more than many European countries. The cleanest comparison is median equivalised disposable household income: income after cash taxes and transfers, adjusted for household size and purchasing power. According to the OECD's 2021 numbers, the median American earns 30 percent more than the median Dutchman, about 31 percent more than the median German, and about 52 percent more than the median Frenchman. 4. What about hours worked? Krugman points out that while American GDP per person is higher, most of this is because Americans work more. For this divergence to be an hours worked story, Americans must work more relative to Europeans now than they did in 2000. The opposite has happened. Birinci, Karabarbounis, and See in a 2026 NBER paper show that about half of the American-European hours gap that existed in the 1990s has reversed by the end of the 2010s. Americans work fewer hours per person than they did in 2000, while most Europeans work more. 5. Is America not a bad place to live? Walk around Alabama and France: surely the former cannot be substantially richer than the latter? American cities often have poorer centres and richer suburbs or exurbs. European cities preserve richer and more attractive historic cores. A visit to a city as a tourist in America compared with a city in France will leave one having seen different spots on the income distribution. Americans in Europe go to the nicest and richest European cities. Rather than a walking around test, do a driving around test. Go to the periphery of any modern American city and see a level of new-built material wealth that is extremely uncommon in Europe, with thousands of enormous four- or five-bedroom homes. In the South, in places like Nashville and Austin, drive around the downtowns to see hundreds of luxury apartment buildings springing from the ground. This construction boom is replicated virtually nowhere in Europe today. The other question is generational. Housing often costs more in Europe than in the United States, despite the quality of the housing stock generally being much better. Europe has nice city cores but these are inaccessible to young Europeans. Consider the salaries available to entry-level workers. The starting pay for a London police officer is $57,000. In Washington, DC, $75,000. The entry-level Deloitte consultant job in Madrid pays around €28,000, roughly $33,000 per year. In Charlotte, the entry-level Deloitte job pays $63,000. There are many things to dislike about life in America. But relative to 25 years ago, the gap in material wealth has shifted dramatically in America's favor. siliconcontinent.com/p/european-sta…

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cornulda
cornulda@cornulda·
- tenes que dejar de decir todo el tiempo que te queres morir, no puedo estar todo el dia atras tuyo
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Jesús Fernández-Villaverde
Jesús Fernández-Villaverde@JesusFerna7026·
Hoy me decía un lector que defender el cupo vasco era, para él, un ejercicio de “compromiso cívico compartido”. En estos momentos, el País Vasco, la segunda comunidad autónoma con mayor PIB per cápita de España, recibe unos 6.500 millones de euros anuales en transferencias fiscales netas procedentes de las 15 comunidades de régimen común (todas excepto Madrid, con menor PIB per cápita). Esto ocurre porque no contribuye al déficit de las pensiones contributivas y porque el ajuste del IVA está mal calculado (deliberadamente). Que el País Vasco no contribuya ni un solo céntimo a cubrir el déficit de sus propias pensiones contributivas (un déficit derivado de una TIR excesiva de dichas pensiones; no, los pensionistas vascos NO están recibiendo lo que actuarialmente les corresponde, sino pensiones entre un 45% y un 60% más altas de media, y esto no es el retorno de sus cotizaciones pasadas) no es “compromiso cívico compartido”. Es una tomadura de pelo, escrita con la sangre de los guardias civiles asesinados en Intxaurrondo. Para normalizar la situación del País Vasco y evitar que siguiera habiendo muertos (o, al menos, no tantos), se firmó en 1981 un concierto que se ha ido actualizando gracias a los votos pivotales del PNV en el Congreso de los Diputados, y que transfiere renta del resto de España, de los más pobres a quienes ya son más ricos. A mí me produciría repugnancia moral disfrutar de un nivel de vida superior al que me corresponde por estos motivos, pero supongo que llamarlo “corresponsabilidad fiscal” resulta más cómodo para dormir por las noches. Pero el verdadero problema de las haciendas forales (o, más en general, del principio de ordinalidad) es que convierten a los territorios en sujetos de derecho, y no a los ciudadanos. Son los ciudadanos que viven en Asturias quienes pagan impuestos y reciben servicios, no Asturias, Pola de Lena ni la calle Guillermo Schultz de Mieres. Afirmar lo contrario es una concepción feudal de la política, y me asombra que tantos la defiendan desde la izquierda.
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Zigor Aldama 齐戈
Zigor Aldama 齐戈@zigoraldama·
Quizá el mundo multipolar no es lo que nos imaginábamos. (Están saliendo unos cuantos memes bastante buenos con la captura de Maduro).
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Velina Tchakarova
Velina Tchakarova@vtchakarova·
After carefully monitoring the situation in Venezuela for the last 24 hours, the EU has found out that the water bottle of Maduro did not have the EU-regulation approved attached cap.
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naiive
naiive@naiivememe·
When I get reincarnated, you won't know it's me but there will be signs...
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Hermes DV
Hermes DV@hermes_dv·
En un mundo dominado por slogans vacíos y certezas prefabricadas, Robe Iniesta eligió el filo. La palabra que corta, que escuece, que no se arrodilla. Fue literatura indómita, humanista de los arrabales, filósofo del rock que pensaba con las tripas.
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Christian Giner
Christian Giner@Cginergarcia·
🗣 "Para algunos vivir es galopar un camino empedrado de horas, minutos y segundos. Yo más humilde soy y solo quiero que la ola que surge del último suspiro de un segundo, me transporte mecido hasta el siguiente" Hasta siempre, #Robe ❤️
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NO CONTEXT HUMANS
NO CONTEXT HUMANS@HumansNoContext·
So that’s how pillows are made
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jezucrihto xd
jezucrihto xd@yisucrist·
tan real esto
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Luis Garicano 🇪🇺🇺🇦
I am afraid the chart misses the most consequential — and most unrealistic — projection: AIReF 2019 forecast a TFR of 1.8–2.0 for Spain in 2048. Would be great to hear @joseluisescriva’s view on that number, produced under his leadership for the pension sustainability analysis. That forecast helped undo the 2012 reform.
Luis Garicano 🇪🇺🇺🇦 tweet media
Jesús Fernández-Villaverde@JesusFerna7026

Daniel Almazán (@DaniAlmazan_) has produced a highly informative figure comparing the actual Total Fertility Rate (TFR) in Spain with past forecasts, which I am borrowing from him. Even if you are not from Spain, please take a moment to read this. Since the labels are in Spanish, let me explain: The blue line represents the historical TFR for Spain. The dashed lines represent past forecasts from the INE (the Spanish National Statistical Institute), Eurostat (the European Union's statistical office), and the UN’s World Population Prospects (WPP). All three agencies have consistently forecast a rebound in fertility, which, so far, has not materialized. Spain is just an example. We could plot similar figures for dozens of countries worldwide. Many forecasts in the 2024 WPP by the UN are simply implausible; see some of my earlier posts for details. Forecasting the future is hard. I recognize that. But shouldn’t we be worried that we keep systematically missing the boat? This is not just about Spain; it’s about dozens of countries where the TFR is falling at an unprecedented rate. This matters a lot. Why? Because key policy decisions (like the unfortunate Spanish social security reform in 2021) are based on these forecasts. Let me end by warmly congratulating Daniel on a fantastic figure and @Jongonzlz for sharing it.

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no context memes
no context memes@nocontextmemes·
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