Oct 7, 2008

Este comentario de Rothbard me hizo acordar de este artículo del NYT de hace algunos años. Creo que vale la pena volver a leerlo:

No solo Estados Unidos será la economía que más rápido se va recuperar, por su flexibilidad en los mercados laborales y financieros; sino que de los países desarrollados cuál fue el que más creció estos últimos años?

Año USA Europa
2002 2.2% 0.9%
2003 3.1% 0.4%
2004 4.1% 1.7%
2005 4.4% 2.4%
2006 3.5% 1.7%
2007 3.4% 2.8%
2008 2.0% 3.0%

Este informe es muy interesante, como compara Europa con USA.

1 comment:

  1. Keep dreaming... Déficit fiscal solo a nivel federal, y financiado a tasas regaladas. Los estados tienen superávit fiscal. Anónimo no confundas deseos con realidades.

    Es verdad, ya nadie pone un mango ni abre nuevas fábricas en USA, se llevan todo a Asia.

    Honda:

    "The new auto plant in the U.S., which is planned to become operational in 2008, will have annual production capacity of approximately 200,000 units. The related investment is expected to be about US$ 400 million. Employment at this new plant is expected to be more than 1500 associates and boost the company's North America production capacity from 1.4 million to 1.6 million vehicles."

    Hay gente que vive toda la vida opinando en contra de la realidad, y no les pasa nada. No te asustes.

    "Alfa Romeo isn't kidding around about its return to the US market: Fiat Group CEO Sergio Marchionne revealed that Alfa is planning to open a factory in the United States."

    "German carmaker Volkswagen announced on Tuesday it would invest close to €1 billion ($1.59 billion) to build its first factory in the United States after the closure of its last plant 20 years ago. The company said it expects to open a new plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee by 2011. VW plans to produce 150,000 automobiles annually at the site as part of its effort to increase market share in America, which has eroded in recent years."

    "Dell will announce within weeks a plan to build a new manufacturing plant in the United States, as other PC makers continue to send such work overseas, CEO Kevin Rollins said Tuesday in a wide-ranging interview with CNET News.com."

    Seguí participando...

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.