TheBigShort
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Wage increases across the Eurozone are a good idea.
Wage increases in Ireland at the same time are a bad idea.
Yes, particularly if prices rise to offset oil increases and wage demands follow. If wage demands don't kick in, or are not met, then this will be the most significant factor in keeping inflation subdued.
Wage increases across the Eurozone are a good idea.
Wage increases in Ireland at the same time are a bad idea.
As you said Germany is the biggest trading bloc of the Eurozone ,You are kidding right? The government raided the national pension reserve as soon as things got out of control.
In any case, why the persistent referral to Irish government and Irish wages?
The topic is about the ECB and its attempt to create a 2% inflation rate in the Eurozone.
Germany is the biggest trading bloc of the Eurozone.
I've attached an article that claims that deals to increase wages in Germany will help the ECB to achieve its inflation target of 2%.
I've argued that wages increases are inflationary, and if some inflation is what is desirable, then wage increases are the best to go about it, not QE.
Do you agree, or not?
Oil prices alone could cause inflation to rise to or above the EU's inflation target of 2% without any need for wages to increase.
As someone who can see that higher inflation hits the people who have to spend all of there wages to live the hardest .I don't agree with you unless you are prepared to to take home less money to fund a system like they have in Germany for Workers long term,
I'm not sure what it is you don't agree with me about? I'm not advocating for higher inflation, the ECB is! It wants 2% inflation, I don't! I never said I did.
What I did say was that wages were inflationary. If the ECB aim (not my aim) is to get 2% inflation, it is my view that policies that induce wage demands are more effective to realizing that aim.
If wages increase by 4% (as the minimum wage in Ireland has done, as the pay deals in Germany will do) and the inflation rate remains subdued, those workers are benefitting.
Where they will lose out is through the continuing depreciation of their currency through QE. Guess what? House prices are unaffordable to many people once more -typically those people who have to spend all their wages to get by.
I'm not suggesting that wage increases should be on-going on a perpetual basis, I'm suggesting that there is scope now, throughout the Eurozone, to raise wages and improve the standard of living for working people. It will also assist the ECB in achieving its inflation target to 2%.
If wages go up the amount people are allowed to borrow also goes up As you said inflation also goes up the only people winning are the people who are already well off,
Hooraay! That settles that then.
Ah boo!not settled.
Ireland is in Eurozone. How can wage increases across the eurozone be good thing and a bad thing at the same time?
In the context of trying to attain an inflationary rate of 2%, I think it is agreeable now that wage increases are an effective way of achieving that.
No, but it leads to a loss of competitiveness, a reduction in exports, an increase in imports and growth based on a consumption bubble rather than wealth generating export growth. That's what turned the real growth of the early 90's into the bubble of the late 90's/ early 00'sSays who?
If wages go up, over and above the rate of inflation, then wage earners benefit - they have more purchasing power. This does not automatically correlate with increased borrowing. In fact it can reduce personal debt levels significantly. I would suggest that, given the experience of the last ten years, personal debt levels will fall first before it starts to increase again. (this is actually occurring at the moment)
Ouch! Very true though.When you look at How the Germans fund for there workers then look at how Ireland fund for there workers future you will see the so called Socialist posters on hear do not care once they are looked after Themselves,
The issue here is that the ECB is trying to reach an inflation rate of 2% across the Eurozone.
The problem with wage increases in the wealth creating private sector is that they are used by the Brethren (bearded or otherwise) to stoke claims for increases in the non-wealth creating State sector.
Since borrowing limits are set as a multiple of incomes as wages increase the price of houses will increase by the same multiple. That is until supply meets demand.Says who?
If wages go up, over and above the rate of inflation, then wage earners benefit - they have more purchasing power. This does not automatically correlate with increased borrowing. In fact it can reduce personal debt levels significantly. I would suggest that, given the experience of the last ten years, personal debt levels will fall first before it starts to increase again. (this is actually occurring at the moment)
I know you don't. That's the problem.How is a €2.6bn spend on Dept of Justice not considering to be wealth creating I just don't know?
You seem awfully concerned about the EU meeting its inflation rate as you keep mentioning this. Do you mind me asking where your interest in inflationary policy has come from?
I'm simply arguing that wages are inflationary. I think that is agreeable?
But we are where we are, as part of the Eurozone, monetary policy has been ceded to the ECB. The ECB wants 2% inflation (why 2%? why not 3%?). It has chosen QE to do this - where is the concept of stability that is ingrained in the fiscal pact now?
To be fair to the Brethren (bearded or otherwise) they only exist because some people see them as Socialist most are bottom feeding capitalist sucking off there brothers and sisters they only reason they exist in Ireland is because the people who don't like them keep electing the same people FF/FG /LAB who feed them,
Wage increases in the Eurozone will increase inflation across the whole zone but we are already paying ourselves more than our mainland counterparts so we should stop and let them catch up.
The problem with wage increases in the wealth creating private sector is that they are used by the Brethren (bearded or otherwise) to stoke claims for increases in the non-wealth creating State sector.
I know you don't. That's the problem.
I agree.I'm simply arguing that wages are inflationary. I think that is agreeable?
I have no idea and I never really got behind the idea of QE at all anyways.But we are where we are, as part of the Eurozone, monetary policy has been ceded to the ECB. The ECB wants 2% inflation (why 2%? why not 3%?). It has chosen QE to do this - where is the concept of stability that is ingrained in the fiscal pact now?
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