Quote from Butterball:
After tax net income does not equal unit labor costs. Unit labor costs are the ratio of total labor costs divided by real quantum of output.
The Germans managed to drop their unit labor costs by some 10% over the last 10 years while the PIGS ran then up 10-20%. I am sure they have taken some steps in the right direction and are in the 2nd inning of becoming more competitive but there's still a long way to go. Unfortunately for the PIGS they were dumb enough to sign themselves to the slavery chains of the EUR zone. The Peseta, Lira and Drachma would take care of the competitiveness problem. Just like the Pound does for the Brits.
Krugman - like him or not - wrote a piece recently comparing the UK and Italy's challenges with productivity in light of one tied to the EUR it can't print and one having a flexible exchange rate:
'Britain has achieved a 15 percent relative deflation via depreciation; it would take incredibly painful deflation for Italy to achieve the same.'
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/05/italy-and-the-uk/
I understand but are there any statistics that prove this advantage for the British has actually gained them anything besides not coming under pressure from the financial markets?
Has export risen? Has unemployment dropped?
Mind you Spain never had more tourists visiting then this summer so even when fundamentals would seem to improve for them to result in more fiscal health is another question isnt it.
