
While Greece, and Portugal, are quite bad, at 30.7% and 46.6% respectively, it is Spain where the youth unemployment pain is most acute: at 51.4%, more than half of the youth eligible for work does not have a job ...

While Greece, and Portugal, are quite bad, at 30.7% and 46.6% respectively, it is Spain where the youth unemployment pain is most acute: at 51.4%, more than half of the youth eligible for work does not have a job ...






Timo wrote:This is a not-so-hypothetical question for speculation's sake - Suppose the EU does crumble or collapse or simply cease to exist this year. Further suppose that someone was to travel to Europe in autumn 2012, specifically to London, Germany, Austria, and Italy. If imminent doom for Europe proves true, what could such a traveler expect to see politically and economically?

ralfy wrote:"Eurozone will collapse this year, says Nouriel Roubini"
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/fina ... ubini.html


Timo wrote:This is a not-so-hypothetical question for speculation's sake - Suppose the EU does crumble or collapse or simply cease to exist this year. Further suppose that someone was to travel to Europe in autumn 2012, specifically to London, Germany, Austria, and Italy. If imminent doom for Europe proves true, what could such a traveler expect to see politically and economically?


ralfy wrote:"Eurozone will collapse this year, says Nouriel Roubini"
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/fina ... ubini.html

German labor market data released Tuesday cast a positive light on the economy not only due to the fall in unemployment, but also due to the steady rise of people paying into the country’s social security system.
The latest data showed that in November the number of individuals with jobs that pay into the social security system increased by 60,000. The data comes a bit behind the unemployment data, which are reported for the current month.
“For a country in which pensions, health care and other benefits are mostly paid out of payroll taxes, this is arguably the single most important statistic,” Berenberg chief economist Holger Schmieding wrote in a note.
Mr. Schmieding calls the number of jobs paying into the social security system “core employment,” and points out that this number of employment has risen by 714,000 on the year in November. This compares with a reduction of 220,000 in unemployment over the same period. In other words, people are re-joining the labor market, who hadn’t even been counted before.
[...]





dsula wrote:ralfy wrote:"Eurozone will collapse this year, says Nouriel Roubini"
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/fina ... ubini.html
Isn't that the same guy who predicted the end of the world due to a commerical real-estate crash by no later than Dec 2008?

Courtesy of Google Translate, please consider French Consumption Drops Most Since 1997
Last year, consumption of French manufactured goods, food and energy fell by 0.5% on average, the largest drop since 1997. Even during the 2008-2009 recession, the decline was not as marked. December was particularly bad (- 0.7%), raising fears of a difficult early 2012 against a backdrop of rising unemployment. Paradoxically, the government relies on the announcement of a social VAT to encourage the French to bring forward purchases before the increase in the rate in October.
... The French economy is slowing far more rapidly than most expected. Increased taxes whether on everyone or just the rich, certainly will not help. Such economically inane programs will intensify the strength and the length of the European recession.


About 160,000 jobs will be lost this year in the commerce sector, according to the National Confederation of Greek Commerce (ESEE) as the constant decline in disposable income has led to a sharp drop in turnover and a steep rise in the number of enterprises shutting down.
The jobs to be lost concern 60,000 employers and 100,000 employees in the sector, ESEE expects. Given the data for a 6.2 percent fall in household consumption in 2011 and the Eurostat forecast for a further decline by 4.3 percent this year, ESEE warns that soon Greece will be in a condition of absolute poverty.
With 60,000 enterprises having shut down since the start of the crisis to date, their number is set to double by the end of this year, ESEE estimates.



SeaGypsy wrote:How is the view up there mate?
SeaGypsy wrote:We mostly discuss things here and leave absolutes to the 'what is' part.
SeaGypsy wrote:There is a heck of a lot going on right now and it's a bit of a waste of time posting if you haven't got a grip. Something you won't find in the MSM. Sorry but not.
We still live in a world of economic war, but working together on a supra-national level eases the destructive part. I think this is underestimated and yes, i do not have a grip on things, nobody has! But we could nevertheless discuss, what concepts would be best to follow...
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