Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Euro Zone Recovery and its Impact on American Politics

France and Germany appear to be coming out of their recessions, and bringing the rest of the euro zone economy along with them. East Asia also appears to be on the dramatic rebound. These figures certainly would seem to indicate that I was wrong – at least in the short term - about American recovery coming faster than in Europe because of America’s more flexible labour markets.

The question this leaves me with is what ammunition is going to be left in the Republican arsenal come the next presidential election, or even on the next mid terms. How could they argue for fiscal restraint, and a diminished role for the state, if the countries with the largest public provision of services in the capitalist domain are recovering fastest? I don’t think arguing that state intervention on a European scale is un-American is going to fly when people are out of work and receiving little or nothing from their government.

I will be interested to see if the current European recovery is sustainable, or if there is another shoe to drop in the US, or somewhere else in the world. It would be a double blow to the right in the US if the economy is recovering by mid terms, and if Europe’s recovery continues. Maybe then there will be less ideology, and more common sense in America’s political debates regarding the role of the state.

If Europe is now growing and America is still stuck in a recession, is that going to weaken the Republican case in the mid term elections. If Europe is recovering, then doesn’t that mean that America should be more and not less like Europe?

If this doesn't end up happening, despite a demonstrable solid recovery in Europe, I'm going to put it down to yet another example of hegemonic ossification. Even in the presense of clearly better options, nothing gets done.

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