Nonetheless, the economic data are pitilessly clear. For the past 40 years, Europeans have fallen further and further behind Americans in their standard of living. In 1974, Western Europe, defined as the 15 members of the EU prior to the admission of the former Communist countries in 2004, accounted for 36 percent of world GDP. Today that figure is 26 percent. In 2020 it will be 15 percent. In the same period, the U.S. share of world GDP has remained, and is forecast to remain, fairly steady at around 26 percent.
At the same time, Europe has become accustomed to a high level of structural unemployment. Indeed, if we exclude the United Kingdom, the EU failed to produce a single net private-sector job between 1980 and 1992. Only now, as the U.S. applies a European-style economic strategy based on fiscal stimulus, nationalization, bailouts, quantitative easing, and the regulation of private-sector remuneration, has the rate of unemployment in the U.S. leaped to European levels.
For the past 40 years, Europeans have fallen further and further behind Americans in their standard of living.
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