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Libellule's avatar

This is fascinating on many levels. Thank you for posting. I can't help but wonder, doesn't this all suggest that the economy and economic growth depends largely now on capital-intensive industries that require scale in order to achieve a healthy business model? And doesn't that suggest we are in a phase of economic development where - even in places that profess allegiance to the supremacy of market capitalism - the conditions for true market capitalism - and its socially important efficiencies and gains - are no longer truly met? If industry consolidation is necessary to achieve innovation and growth in this era of technology and its evolution, doesn't that preclude, in fact, a true market economy? I think about this a lot in terms of my own industry, health care, where increasing market consolidation and monopolization of services in geographical areas seems a strange bedfellow with industry insistence on micro-level moves made in the name of greater efficiency.

Also, while I do understand the emphasis on macro-level growth, it seems to me there is a dearth of attention to distributional considerations. Having spent three months in Europe recently, I appreciate the profound doldrums being experienced there. That being said, I rarely ran across the levels of wracking poverty I see - and again, deal with on a routine basis in my work in health care delivery - in the United States. No easy answers here, and I know you (AT) have been involved in important work trying to think through a new economic philosophy to better suit our modern age. I appreciate you and all you do.

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Kouros's avatar

Who's better, Airbus or Boeing?

Also, investment in AI and software? You must be out of your mind. How is that improving people's actual lives?

And I really do not think Europeans really, really want the lifestyles of the US and Chinese worker bees as envisioned by the investors and owners - see Eric Schmit of Google (who in his life never worked the way he seems to demand his workers to perform, laughs at the idea of work/life balance) speaking to Stanford students (likely MBAs not sofware engineers): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AtgJhZOhFsQ

What EU lost, and Draghi's report only aludes to and this essay never mentions is the cheap Russian energy and materials and the Russian market for EU products.

I can really see the American butcher knife slaughtering, piece by piece the fat, "lazy" EU pig, with brains full of US induced parasites...

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