1 MZA Europe GSB April 2, 2002
2 MZA Europe
3 MZA EU Members and Aspirants
4 MZA US. Dollars to Euro
5 MZA The euro-zone recovers
6 MZA EU GDP at constant prices (EUR billions) GDP
7 MZA EU Gross fixed capital formation at constant prices EUR billions)
8 MZA The Big EU Economies and the Rest
9 MZA Why Europe Matters uIn 1998, the European Union had a population of 375m, against 268m in the US and 126m in Japan. uIn 1998, the EU was the world’s largest economy. It generated 30 per cent of world output, against 25 per cent for the US and 18 per cent for Japan. uIn 1999, the EU was the world’s largest merchandise exporter. It generated 19 per cent of world exports (excluding internal trade), against 16 per cent for the US and 10 per cent for Japan. uIn 1999, the EU was the world’s second largest merchandise importer. It imported 19 per cent of world imports, against 24 per cent for the US and Japan’s 7 per cent.
10 MZA EU standards of living compared
11 MZA How incomes compare inside the EU
12 MZA Productivity growth slows
13 MZA The US moves ahead in the late 1990s
14 MZA Productivity picture is mixed
15 MZA But one size fails to fit all
16 MZA Jobs and costs in US and EU
17 MZA EU’s high labour costs
18 MZA EU - not enough jobs
19 MZA But unemployment is falling
20 MZA EU - jobs for prime-aged adults
21 MZA EU - but not for young and old
22 MZA Welfare states are expensive
23 MZA But someone has to pay
24 MZA Inflation converges
25 MZA So do interest rates
26 MZA Fiscal deficits contract