7 ways the US is beating Europe – POLITICO

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We didn’t need him to tell us that. The numbers speak for themselves. Sure, Europe’s cities are unmatched, its architecture gorgeous, food and wine delicious ― and who doesn’t like taking all of August off the way many Europeans do? To say nothing of universal health care. But the economics don’t look good. POLITICO took a closer look at the numbers.

1. Americans are richer

Setting clichés about money and happiness aside, Americans are, on average, richer than Europeans. That’s been true for a long time, but the worrying thing for the EU is that the gap is getting wider. In 1990, U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) per capita was 16 percent higher than the eurozone’s. By 2023, the difference had doubled, to more than 30 percent. 

2. Americans are wiser

More money means, all things being equal, more spending in science and research. But all things aren’t equal. In fact, the government and the private sector in the U.S. spend more proportionally of their already-larger GDP on them than Europe does. Figuring out how to mobilize more private money to accelerate European research and development is one of the big points of the Draghi report. As it is, “many European entrepreneurs prefer to seek financing from U.S. venture capitalists and scale up in the U.S. market,” it warned. 

3. Americans are more creative

Measuring the pace of technological development isn’t easy. But looking at a few proxies, it does seem like the U.S. is ahead. Let’s be clear: Europeans are no slouches. But when it comes to the share of science and technology articles published in the top scientific journals, the U.S. comes out well ahead. Look out though, as China is on the rise — and now the EU is behind it too.

4. Americans have more energy

Sometimes you just get lucky. America’s luck has a name: the Permian basin. Millions of years ago, this chunk of territory stretching from Texas into New Mexico was under water and teeming with plant life. Now, all that accumulated organic matter has transformed into good ol’ Texas crude. It’s made the U.S. the world’s top producer of oil and natural gas. As a result, American industry benefits from power prices that are a third of those in Europe, giving a jolt to manufacturing.

5. Americans are more productive

Time is money. American workers consistently produce more per hour worked than Europeans do. For a while that gap was closing — but it’s widened once more. U.S. productivity can, in part, be explained by its fast adoption and development of digital technology, an area where Europe has lagged behind.



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