Germany home alone again

Although the Germans may not have noticed it yet.

Talk about a fistful of dollars. Underscoring the mounting friction between Germany and its G-20 partners concerning the question of finanical policy, Germany’s Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said that the US plan to pump $600bn into the US economy was “clueless” and would create “extra problems for the world”.

So, like where’s the problem?

Of course the German coalition government needs to talk tough like this because it has to convince everyone here how austere it really is–it trails the opposition in opinion polls before six state elections next year and needs a success “after alienating German voters by supporting the bailout for Greece in May.” Calling US policy makers clueless is just the icing on the cake.

Can’t wait for the G-20 meeting in Seoul next week. To take a look at “united Europe’s” stand on the matter, I mean. Although if you’d ask President Obama, he’d probably tell you that Europe just doesn’t matter.

“Eine ganze Reihe von Amerikanern betrachte Europa zwar nicht als Problem, allerdings längst auch nicht mehr als Teil der Lösung. Obama scheint dazu zu gehören.”

And thanks a million for this one, Joe:

“You won’t find a lot of Keynesians here,” explained one German economic policymaker in Berlin in September. That will not be news to anyone who has spoken to his counterparts in Washington. In their view, Germany is a skulker, a rotten citizen of the global economy, the macroeconomic equivalent of a juvenile delinquent, or worse. It is a smart aleck in the emergency ward that is the global economy. It is a flouter of the prescriptions of the new Doctor New Deal who sits in the White House. 
 
 
 
 http://www.weeklystandard.com/articles/germany-said-no_513319.html
 
So when Obama administration officials urge Germans to stimulate, they are wrong, but not for the obvious reasons. It is not that they want to impose socialist programs on a capitalist system that is doing well without them. It is that they want to impose demand-stimulating programs on a system that is already absolutely glutted with them. It is as if the administration’s approach were to take as a baseline whatever any given government happens to be spending, and then to insist that the figure should be, say, 10 percent of GDP higher. This is about as reasonable as assuming your child will be half as likely to get pneumonia if you send him off to school wearing two down parkas.

 

3 responses

  1. For Hermannenbeobachters, today has been fun for sure. Along with Schaeuble ranting in several directions at once, we’ve got the Anti-Kernals hitting the train-tracks in Western Germany while in Berlin (the German version of Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood) the Piraten are demanding 1000 Euros a month for any and all Kinder … I mean, Citizens.

    One commenter over at Der Tagesspiegel is amused:

    Niemand muss arbeiten und alle bekommen das “Gehalt” fürs Nichstun vom Staat. Endlich mal eine wirklich gute Idee!

    It’s einer beautiful Tag in Prenzlberg,
    A beautiful day for a Nachbar,
    Vould you be Mein?
    Kould you be Mein?

    It’s a neighborly day in this Wald,
    A neighborly day for ein beauty,
    Vould you be Mein?
    Kould you be Mein?

    I haff always vanted to haff a Nachbar just like Sie,
    I’ve always vanted to liff in a neighborhood mit Sie.

    So let’s make the most of dieser schoene Tag,
    Since we’re Zusammen, we might as well sagen,
    Vould you be Mein?
    Kould you be Mein?
    Von’t you be Mein Nachbar?

    Von’t you please,
    Von’t you please,
    Bitte, von’t you be Mein Nachbar?

    *

  2. Damn, Jeffrey. I’ve always equated it to more of a Disney-Schrebergarten-Garden Gnome-Homeland kind of land, but Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood is right on the money. It’s got that all-important, slightly hallucinogenic touch.

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