Europe or Bust

Discuss culture, living, traveling, relocating, dating or anything related to the European Countries.
Post Reply
momopi
Elite Upper Class Poster
Posts: 4898
Joined: August 31st, 2007, 9:44 pm
Location: Orange County, California

Europe or Bust

Post by momopi »

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld ... 7392.story

From the Los Angeles Times
Europe or Bust
When a strong safety net begins to fray
A slow-motion crisis unfolds in famed welfare states as the middle class feels the pinch of a sagging economy. The French are eating near-expired food, and Italians are shoplifting pasta and Parmesan.
By Sebastian Rotella

March 30, 2009

Reporting from Paris Italian supermarkets report an increase in shoplifting by first-time offenders, especially among the middle class and the elderly. The most popular target for rookie thieves: Parmesan cheese.

French shoppers, famously insistent about freshness, no longer snub foods that are close to the expiration date. Discovering an underground market for almost-expired products fished out of dumpsters, stores decide to keep the spoils on the shelves.

Spanish police detect a shift in car thefts, from luxury brands to the sensible, midrange models now in demand on the black market.

These are the signs of a slow-motion crisis in continental Western Europe. The street-level repercussions of the economic meltdown have been less brutal than in the United States or Eastern Europe, because of the strong government-backed social welfare network in France and its prosperous neighbors. But experts warn that the safety net is starting to fray as the global crisis persists, unemployment rises and benefits run out.

"France lost 90,000 jobs in January alone, a real dramatic jump, and we haven't felt the impact of that yet because those people will get benefits for a while," said Olivier Berthe, who directs Restos de Coeur, a charity that runs soup kitchens for the needy nationwide. "We get more and more clients, and the worry is that we haven't yet seen all the ones who will be coming."

The charity has served 12% more people this year than during the same period last year. In the rural heartland of France, there has been a sharp increase in demand at soup kitchens as work dries up in agriculture, construction and other sectors.

In a recent French poll, half of the respondents said they could imagine themselves ending up on the street.

If the American dream is opportunity, the European dream is equality. Europeans don't grow up believing that anyone can be elected president or build an empire out of a small business. But they trust the state to help make a middle-class lifestyle widely accessible with solid health and education infrastructures, ironclad labor protections and a generous system for the unemployed and the poor.

In France, the percentage of people beneath the poverty line fell steadily in the last 40 years, from 14% to 6% in 2000. During the last two years, however, the percentage has risen slightly, Berthe said.

No one is predicting that economic woes will produce riots or the kind of government collapses occurring in Eastern Europe. But the quiet repercussions could get louder if factories and companies continue mass firings or shutdowns, Berthe said.

"You could see social and union conflict by the victims and by people who are not in the same situation, but are afraid that they are next," he said.

And the middle class feels the chill. The crisis has changed longtime habits, such as a finicky preference for the freshest foods that led supermarkets to throw out goods before they expired. In recent months, Berthe said, a subculture has developed of scavengers who retrieve and sell the products. Now, French supermarkets promote sales of close-to-the-limit goods. People snap them up, even if it means forgoing style and variety to eat the same thing for several meals in a row, he said.

In Italy, quiet despair has led to a wave of pilfering by unlikely culprits who do not fit the profile of professional shoplifters, said Giuseppe Politi, director of the Italian farmers' association. Shoplifting increased 7% this year compared with the first months of 2008, he said in an interview. The trend started with thefts of expensive items, especially Parmesan, then widened.

"The association is worried," Politi said. "Compared to a couple of years ago, we see that people don't steal just Parmesan or meat, which are considered expensive items, but they also steal pasta, which is a relatively cheap item. Supermarkets don't usually report to the police when they catch a senior stealing a product. . . . For many of them, it seems they have only two choices: stealing food or begging in the street."

Italy's economy is not as big as France's. Nonetheless, until recently Italians enjoyed a high-quality lifestyle driven by large and medium industries, thrifty savings habits and a sometimes chaotic but protective social services system. Moreover, experts say, the meltdown last fall did not hit Italy as hard as other countries because its banks and businesses were less plugged in to the global financial sector.

Nonetheless, a survey published by the Corriere della Sera newspaper in November found that more than a third of Italian families had economic problems and their monthly salary lasted only the first three weeks of the month.

In Rome, the clientele has changed at the charity known as Save Mamas, which provides parents with counseling as well as diapers, secondhand children's clothes and powdered milk.

"We started helping mostly foreigners, poor immigrants, but in the last year the number of Italian mothers that come to us increased 25%," said Katia Pacello, a psychologist who runs the project. "It is not in the Italian style to get secondhand clothes for children; they feel ashamed if they do it. Italians tend to call us in particular times of the day, early morning or late at night, admitting that it wasn't an easy thing to do."

Spain also avoided the initial effects of the international crisis, but now leaders say it has aggravated the slump of an economy whose twin engines, real estate and construction, ran out of steam a year or so ago. The unemployment rate has shot up to 16%, twice the European Union average.

Authorities see the result in a spate of insurance fraud and other small-time scams to make fast cash. They also see a shift by car thieves away from luxury models.

The ABC newspaper reported recently that law enforcement officials expected a "notable increase" in crime in the second half of the year as unemployment benefits wound down for workers who lost jobs in late 2008.

"This would be, in great part, a growth in minor crime, robberies with force and intimidation, thefts and frauds, because organized crime acts independently of these economic factors," ABC reported.

On the other hand, the economic collapse has all but wiped out one criminal specialty: gangs that loot Spanish construction sites of machinery and materials such as copper. Authorities report that such thefts have plummeted as construction ground to a halt and the price of copper dropped.
SNS
Freshman Poster
Posts: 89
Joined: July 13th, 2009, 12:26 pm

Re: Europe or Bust

Post by SNS »

momopi wrote:http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld ... 7392.story
If the American dream is opportunity, the European dream is equality. Europeans don't grow up believing that anyone can be elected president or build an empire out of a small business. But they trust the state to help make a middle-class lifestyle widely accessible with solid health and education infrastructures, ironclad labor protections and a generous system for the unemployed and the poor.
Thats one thing i do not like about Europe (I lived there for 3 years) is that they believe in high taxes and nanny governments. If one has business ambition the last place he will want to be is in europe. He busts his ass to make a good living only top get f***ed in the ass by the tax authorities so the slackers can receive welfare. f**k that!

Once one experiences the kindness of western european women, the harsh reality of making a living sets in pretty quick.
Adama
Elite Upper Class Poster
Posts: 6193
Joined: August 23rd, 2009, 2:37 pm

Re: Europe or Bust

Post by Adama »

SNS wrote:
Once one experiences the kindness of western european women, the harsh reality of making a living sets in pretty quick.
Can you clarify this? I dont understand how you mean this.
SNS
Freshman Poster
Posts: 89
Joined: July 13th, 2009, 12:26 pm

Re: Europe or Bust

Post by SNS »

Insidious wrote:
SNS wrote:
Once one experiences the kindness of western european women, the harsh reality of making a living sets in pretty quick.
Can you clarify this? I dont understand how you mean this.
Certainly -- what i mean is that whatever you do to make money in europe you will have to pay higher taxes because there is a stronger 'social services' for everything in life. So if you have a business you will pay a lot of tax, and if you are employed as well you wil pay more tax.

My apologies for the late reply.
Think Different
Junior Poster
Posts: 907
Joined: April 7th, 2010, 9:28 pm
Location: Germany

Post by Think Different »

If I may comment on the last post. It is true, that in Europe taxes tend to be high (except in Switzerland). However, given the current state of the USA and the higher taxes we will be paying (47% of Americans live off the taxes of the highest earners), plus Obama is talking about bringing us the VAT tax (as if state sales taxes weren't enough). So, if you add up personal, sales, and corporate taxes, plus the new health care taxes, we're talking about very similar tax rates in the USA and Europe, with a couple minor differences. 1) University is generally free or nearly free in most of Europe. In the US, if you have a kid now, in 18 years, you can expect to pay $100K or more for each child's college ed. 2) the medical care in Europe may be socialized, but it's comprehensive with a good sense for preventative medicine. No family will in Europe will be allowed to go bankrupt, due to treatment of a lifetime illness (think MS, etc) or something like cancer. In the US that's just not the case. These arguments will soon become less germane as the US becomes a USSA under Obama's socialization programs. That's why I'm heading to Europe with my wife. Plus the education system over there is just better.
User avatar
MrPeabody
Experienced Poster
Posts: 1790
Joined: April 13th, 2008, 11:53 am

Post by MrPeabody »

When I lived in the Netherlands, I got the 30% tax ruling for the high tech visa, and actually was paying less taxes then the US. But, I was paying enough taxes that I didn't need to pay additional taxes to the US under the tax treaty. Americans have been brainwashed to believe that if you aren't working 24 hours a day and willing to accept a miserly 2 weeks of vacation, this makes you a lazy socialist. I worked with engineers in several countries in Europe and found them to be innovative and productive, Their technical competence in many areas exceeds the United States.
Post Reply
  • Similar Topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post

Return to “European Countries”