Thought this interesting for some insane reason
OG
http://www.spiegel.de/international/...604319,00.html
SPLIT ON THE ECONOMY
'Right Now, I Don't See a Crisis'
Economist Bert Rürup is convinced the German economy is in deep trouble. His colleague Stefan Homburg isn't so sure. With SPIEGEL as referee, the two discuss whether stimulus programs are merely a gigantic waste of money.
SPIEGEL: Mr. Homburg, Mr. Rürup, how long will the crisis last?
Homburg: Right now I don't see a crisis.
Rürup: Excuse me?
Homburg: Real growth was 3.3 percent and 1.3 percent in the second and third quarters of 2008 respectively, impressive numbers compared to the same quarters in the previous year. More recent numbers do not exist, just gloomier forecasts, but they could be wrong.
Norbert Michalke
Stefan Homburg and Bert Rürup don't agree on much when it comes to the economic downturn.
Rürup: Oh, come on! We can see how orders and production have plummeted in large segments of industry since last September, and how quickly the number of short-term workers is growing. If these are not signs of a crisis, what is?
Homburg: The word crisis is too alarmist, in my view. Unemployment is at roughly three million. That is a long way from the five million unemployed we had four years ago, when there was far less public hysteria than today.
Rürup: I disagree with your assessment completely. Despite the economic stimulus programs, the economy will shrink by more than 2 percent this year. This has never happened before in the history of postwar Germany. I would be pleased to see us reach the bottom in the second half of this year.
etc... etc...
OG
http://www.spiegel.de/international/...604319,00.html
SPLIT ON THE ECONOMY
'Right Now, I Don't See a Crisis'
Economist Bert Rürup is convinced the German economy is in deep trouble. His colleague Stefan Homburg isn't so sure. With SPIEGEL as referee, the two discuss whether stimulus programs are merely a gigantic waste of money.
SPIEGEL: Mr. Homburg, Mr. Rürup, how long will the crisis last?
Homburg: Right now I don't see a crisis.
Rürup: Excuse me?
Homburg: Real growth was 3.3 percent and 1.3 percent in the second and third quarters of 2008 respectively, impressive numbers compared to the same quarters in the previous year. More recent numbers do not exist, just gloomier forecasts, but they could be wrong.
Norbert Michalke
Stefan Homburg and Bert Rürup don't agree on much when it comes to the economic downturn.
Rürup: Oh, come on! We can see how orders and production have plummeted in large segments of industry since last September, and how quickly the number of short-term workers is growing. If these are not signs of a crisis, what is?
Homburg: The word crisis is too alarmist, in my view. Unemployment is at roughly three million. That is a long way from the five million unemployed we had four years ago, when there was far less public hysteria than today.
Rürup: I disagree with your assessment completely. Despite the economic stimulus programs, the economy will shrink by more than 2 percent this year. This has never happened before in the history of postwar Germany. I would be pleased to see us reach the bottom in the second half of this year.
etc... etc...
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