It is clear that many European governments have not worked with their private sector businesses and citizens to focus on their economies. Instead, they fell victim to UN schemes aimed at empowering the UN to advance UN Agenda 21. The EU morphed from a post-war Trading Partnership into a globalist government that lives in an ideological bubble.
The EU increased sales taxes to 20%, temporarily halted fishing, encouraged the Muslim invasion in 2015, took on debt to lower their fossil fuel use, built wind and solar, doubled their energy costs, built their tourist-oriented train systems, paid 0 interest on their debt, printed money to cause inflation and increased their Debt to GDP.
There are 41 countries on my European country list
The EU has 27 member countries: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Republic of Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain and Sweden.
There are 14 European countries are not EU member countries and include: Russia, UK, Switzerland, Norway, Albania, Andorra, Belarus, Bosnia, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Moldova, Monico, Montenegro, Kosovo, Ukraine, Serbia
I put some countries that show up as European on my Middle East List: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey.
41 European
countries are listed.
24 European
countries have Trade Deficits.
14 European
countries have Trade Surpluses.
3 had no trade data
6 European
countries have a Debt to GDP under 30%.
25 European
countries have a a Debt to GDP from 30% to 90%.
7 European countries have a Debt to GDP over 90%.
It is true that Covid disrupted the tourism revenue in Europe and Biden inflicted global inflation by restricting US energy production and invited wars in Ukraine and Israel.
IMF
Estimates for 2023
Country $NGDP $Per Capita
Population Debt to GDP Trade Bal
Germany $4.430T $52,824
83.295m
66.1% +$16.6B
UK $3.332T $48,912 67.737m
97.1% -53B bp
France $3.049T $46,315
64.757m
112% -101B
Italy $2.186T $34,146
58.871m 137% +35.4B
Russia $1.862T $13,006
144.444m 17.2%
+$140B
Spain $1.582T $33,090
47.520m
112% -$43.74B
Netherlands $1.093T
$61,770
17.618m
46.8%
+$96.43B
Switzerland $905.6B
$102,865 8.797m
41.4%
+45.23B
Poland $842.2B $22,393 41.026m 49.3% +$3.7B
Belgium $627.5B $53,657
11.686m 104%
-$13.99B
Sweden $597.1B $55,216
10.612m
32.9% +3.8B sek
Ireland $589.6B $112,248
5.057m 44.4%
+$96B
Norway $543.8B $99,266 5.474m 44.3% +$4.9B
Austria $526.2B $58,013
8.959m 77.8%
+1.699B
Denmark $520.8B $71,402
5.911m
29.8% +$42.02B
Romania $350.4B $18,413 19.893m
47.2%
-2.174B
Czech
Rep $335.2B $30,475 10.495m
44.0% +$122.8B
Finland $305.7B $54,507 5.546m 73.3%
-$7.73B
Portugal $276.4B $26,879 10.248m
112% -$6.40B
Greece $242.4B $23,173 10.341m
160% -31.1B
Hungary $203.8B $21,075
9.604m 73.9%
-$293.8M
Ukraine $173.4B $5,225
36.745m 78.4% -$27.37B
Slovakia $133.0B $24,471 5.795m 57.8% -$6.66B
Bulgaria $103.1B $16,087 6.687m
20.0% +$0.72B
Luxembourg
$89.1B $135,605
654.8k
24.7% +$28.8B
Croatia $80.2B $20,877 4.009m
68.8% -$1.2B
Lithuania $79.4B $28,482 2.718m 38.1%
-$5.35B
Serbia $75.0B $11,301 7.149m
55.1% -$6.79B
Belarus $68.9B $7,477 9.498m
32.8% -$2.4B
Slovenia $68.4B $32,350 2.120m 72.3% -$1.335B
Latvia $46.7B $24,929 1.830m 41.0% -$2.39B
Estonia $41.8B $30,998 1.323m
19.6% -$0.21B
Iceland $30.5B $78,837 375.3k
68.9% -$0.20B
Bosnia $26.9B $7,778 3.211m
20.3% -$3.59B
Albania $21.9B $8,057 2.832m 59.2% -$4.5B
Malta $20.3B $38,715 535.1k 52.3% -4.6B
Moldova $16.0B $6,411
3.436m
32.1% -4.2B
Macedonia $15.8B
$7,672 2.086m
51.0% -2.8B
Monico na na 36.3k na
na
Andorra $3.692B na 80.1k na
na
San Marino
$1.998B na 33.6k
na na
Total
EU $19.35T
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)_per_capita
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_European_countries_by_population
https://tradingeconomics.com/country-list/government-debt-to-gdp?continent=europe
Trade balance: goggle search.
This data gives us a look at how countries are dealing with their basic economies. The cost of providing water, food and shelter and living standards vary widely. Countries with the largest populations and the least resources are more difficult to manage. Maintaining law and order is required.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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