Germany posts record budget surplus in 1st half of 2014 (user search)
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  Germany posts record budget surplus in 1st half of 2014 (search mode)
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Author Topic: Germany posts record budget surplus in 1st half of 2014  (Read 3771 times)
ingemann
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« on: September 01, 2014, 03:39:46 PM »

That's where you see the important differences between France and Germany. I lived with German people and we had the same kind of incomprehension at the personal level than we have at countries level. ^^

Why does it make you happy to have some money knowing you are not going to do anything with it? Cheesy

Well there's the fable with the ants and the grasshopper.
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ingemann
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« Reply #1 on: September 03, 2014, 11:30:39 AM »

@Landslide Lyndon

I don't mind to be corrected, if i'm wrong. But I fear, that your facts need some straightening. I never talked of policies among the mediteranian countries. I meant the individual policies of france, italy, spain, etc. they all spent (and spend) too much.  This is perverting John Maynard Keynes.

As I see your avatar, my wife has greek parents. So i know a little something about the state of things in Greece. I admire what has been achieved in Greece, but France and Italy will have to go the same way.

And you still don't know what you're talking about. Spain was running surpluses before the 2008 financial crisis. Italy had very small deficits even after that. There was no profligate spending as you say. That's a lie conservatives continue to repeat even though it's been repeatedly discredited.

As for capital flow, nobody talked about handouts. What everyone (even Draghi) asks from Germany and the other northern European countries is to ease monetary policy and let their inflation rise a little because southern Europe is in imminent danger of entering a deflationary vortex.

What you ask are for the Germans to impoverish a generation of German pensionists, whose pension are in long term low interest savings.
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