Is it just me or is that a slightly odd (if technically correct) use of ‘Outgrow’, colloquially it’d usually mean to become too big for, which in context would make the headline suggest that the Euro area would become bigger than the US economy, when obviously they do simply mean grow slightly more rapidly than.
US news outlets seem to do an interesting number in mangling language sometimes.
A bit misleading title but it’s nice to see the robustness of EU economy is finally paying off.
Would somebody have a good reference on the size of different economical sectors? Perhaps also how they are growing? In Sweden, apparently, one driver for growth have been digital games. It makes you wonder from where the economical growth stems.
TL:DR: The ECB has more room to keep the accommodative monetary policies going while the US Fed is about to hit the brakes pretty hard. Mainly due to high inflation in the US. Basically growth needs to go down before inflation will. Euro area still has a lot of inflation but not quite as much as the US so the monetary policies are more palatable to the general public than they are in the US.
Also one US democratic senator is pretty damn determined to kill our clean energy bill so that’s also gonna hamper our growth prospects.
“Dogs of the AMS, The Euro area will outgrow the U.S. economy over the next two years. Can’t you see? To protect the life cycle!” – Goldman
I honestly thought it was already the case but that the comparison was somehow misleading because well EU isn’t anything like a country
Please let’s not sweeten the economy too much, inflation is terrible. It destroys everything so slowly and most peopme can’t see it, they blane other things.
I really really hope they stay on the safe side and control inflation above all.
We will see in 2 years, I still believe I will personally gain more the US market in 2 years but I might be mistaken. At least I’m not only invested in one market like some people I know.
Well not unless a war in Ukraine is arranged to prevent this.
So far, it has recorded a tremendously lower growth rate than that of the United States, so it’s not that great.
incidentally, that’s right around the time Bulgaria is looking to join – COINCIDENCE??!?
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Is it just me or is that a slightly odd (if technically correct) use of ‘Outgrow’, colloquially it’d usually mean to become too big for, which in context would make the headline suggest that the Euro area would become bigger than the US economy, when obviously they do simply mean grow slightly more rapidly than.
US news outlets seem to do an interesting number in mangling language sometimes.
A bit misleading title but it’s nice to see the robustness of EU economy is finally paying off.
Would somebody have a good reference on the size of different economical sectors? Perhaps also how they are growing? In Sweden, apparently, one driver for growth have been digital games. It makes you wonder from where the economical growth stems.
TL:DR: The ECB has more room to keep the accommodative monetary policies going while the US Fed is about to hit the brakes pretty hard. Mainly due to high inflation in the US. Basically growth needs to go down before inflation will. Euro area still has a lot of inflation but not quite as much as the US so the monetary policies are more palatable to the general public than they are in the US.
Also one US democratic senator is pretty damn determined to kill our clean energy bill so that’s also gonna hamper our growth prospects.
“Dogs of the AMS, The Euro area will outgrow the U.S. economy over the next two years. Can’t you see? To protect the life cycle!” – Goldman
I honestly thought it was already the case but that the comparison was somehow misleading because well EU isn’t anything like a country
Please let’s not sweeten the economy too much, inflation is terrible. It destroys everything so slowly and most peopme can’t see it, they blane other things.
I really really hope they stay on the safe side and control inflation above all.
We will see in 2 years, I still believe I will personally gain more the US market in 2 years but I might be mistaken. At least I’m not only invested in one market like some people I know.
Well not unless a war in Ukraine is arranged to prevent this.
So far, it has recorded a tremendously lower growth rate than that of the United States, so it’s not that great.
incidentally, that’s right around the time Bulgaria is looking to join – COINCIDENCE??!?