Andrew Hammel Profile picture
Sep 9 28 tweets 4 min read
1/ I think many Germans don't realize how the energy crisis directly threatens Germany's future as a prosperous country. Germany has a huge bureaucracy and social-welfare apparatus, and provides comparatively generous subsidies for the arts.
2/ Universities are free, which means the taxpayer pays for them, and lots of vocational training is also heavily subsidized.

Where does all the money to pay for this come from?
3/ If you ask the typical lefty voter, they have only the vaguest idea: Big companies and the rich people in modernist villas who always turn out to be the real killer on German crime shows.
4/ The German media do a terrible job conveying the basic principles of economics and management to viewers and listeners, so most Germans who aren’t engineers or executives or factory workers or otherwise directly involved in producing goods don’t really understand where…
5/ …Germany’s wealth comes from.

But no, the only reason Germany can afford all these dead-weight investments which don’t yield any returns (or only indirect, generalized, time-delayed returns) is because Germany makes things people want to buy.
6/ That's what brings the money in. Germany doesn't have many natural resources (at least, that it is willing to recover), so those don't bring in the cash. Germany's exports are the main, nearly the exclusive, source of its wealth.
7/ Germany has much higher manufacturing costs than many other comparable countries, and the only way it can keep competitive is through a well-educated workforce, efficiency, high technology, and high quality.
8/ That's what generates enough value added to make it worthwhile to produce something in Germany, rather than in Hungary or China or the US or Russia, where all input costs are cheaper.
9/ But the energy crisis has the potential to nearly or completely destroy this competitive advantage.
10/ When energy costs are merely three times what they are in a competitive country such as the USA or Romania or China (depending on the product), German efficiency and technical quality and brand reputation can make up for that.
11/ When energy costs rise to *10* times or even *15* times those of competitive countries, and the markets become convinced this is a lasting situation, Germany becomes unsustainable. It becomes impossible to manufacture high value-added products for a profit within Germany.
12/ They may be *designed* in Germany, but they won't be made there. It will just be too expensive, period. There’s no way to make the numbers work.

And this leads to long-term erosion of the tax base.
13/ Gradually the money dries up for things which aren't vital to the survival of the country. And what are those things vital to the survival of the country? Massive government subsidies *to make energy and food affordable to the average person*.
14/ This is where much of the budget of many developing countries goes right now: to subsidies on diesel and wheat and rice which enable ordinary people to be able to pay their (artificially reduced) bills.
15/ Half of the time you read about riots in places like Indonesia or Egypt, the cause is the government being forced to reduce subsidies on food and energy, often by a mandate from the IMF.
16/ Once Germany reaches the point where it has to subsidize energy and food to prevent social unrest – something it’s about to start doing right now – then money for non-essential things dries up.
17/ Those things include generous welfare, arts subsidies, free education, generous pensions, etc. There will be even more privatizations, and many arts institutions will simply go bankrupt.
18/ Train travel might become something reserved (even more) for the well-off, since (1) subsidies which keep the Deutsche Bahn (even remotely) affordable will disappear; and (2) the average German consumer will not have enough disposable income to pay for a *non-subsidized*…
19/ …train ticket. Universities will gradually wither on the vine unless they introduce tuition fees, and even then, they’ll shut down entire degree programs which don’t channel graduates into well-paying jobs.

Goodbye humanities, it was nice knowing you.
20/ Sorry regional symphony orchestra, we can’t afford you anymore. Bye-bye small museum, you’re becoming an Aldi. And sorry 2nd-oldest church in Hepperhausen, there’s no money to maintain you anymore.
21/ We can just barely afford the 1st-oldest church, which we have to keep up because it’s a tourist attraction, and we are desperate for every tourist dollar.
22/ And all those state-funded “streetworkers” and “night buses” providing basic assistance to the growing numbers of homeless? Sorry, you’ll have to find money elsewhere.
23/ And then Germany will find itself in the trap many developing countries find themselves in: It will lack the productive industries needed to support the subsidies which it must continue paying to avoid social chaos.
24/ It will go further and further into the red, and will need help from outside entities. And those entities will point out that the only way out of the red is to cut the broad subsidies for basic survival.
25/ Which Germany won’t be able to do without plunging millions of people into genuine, real, not-enough-food-to-eat poverty.

Germany will survive, of course, but it will keep getting steadily poorer and poorer.
26/ And that is very bad for a country’s psyche, since humans regret what they have lost much more bitterly than they regret losing a chance to get something they’ve never had. Deaths of despair will increase, as they did in Russia in the 1990s.
27/ *This* is why the energy crisis poses a grave threat to Germany’s future as a prosperous country. There is still a way to avert it, but certainly not with the strategies currently favored by the administration. We’ll see whether the EU can pull a rabbit out of the hat.
28/ I’m not optimistic.

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More from @AndrewHammel1

Sep 10
1/ Germany’s economy is now being run by Robert Habeck, a man who studied literature in college, has never run a business, and is most known (aside from being a Green party politician) as an author of children’s books.
2/ This is the person who is responsible for shepherding Germany through the worst economic crisis it’s faced since the 1970s. And he’s crumbling visibly under the pressure.
How did this happen?
3/ To understand, you must understand an important feature of Germany’s political system, which it shares with some (but not all) parliamentary democracies: Cabinet ministers are appointed to their posts *without regard* to whether they actually have any experience or…
Read 24 tweets
Sep 7
1/ Here's a transcript of an exchange from last night between German TV talk-show host Sandra Maischberger and Robert Habeck, the Green Party Economics Minister.
2/ Maischberger asks Habeck what will happen when German energy prices skyrocket 4x-5x during the winter months, when natural-gas use is at its highest:

Maischberger: "Do you expect a wave of insolvencies at the end of this winter?"

Habeck: "No, I don't.
3/ I can imagine that certain industries will simply stop producing for the time being. Not become insolvent, but, I mean ... Right now, I don't get to shop for rolls anymore, uh, let alone have breakfast in the morning in peace.
Read 9 tweets
Jul 9
Short 🧵. Here's a progressive left-wing German journalist (@ardenthistorian) claiming that there are Red states in the USA which have passed laws mandating that schoolteachers teach "both sides" of the Holocaust. This ties in to one of the most bizarre misunderstandings
of American culture you see in Germany. Left-wing Germans frequently claim, whether implicitly or explicitly, that right-wing Americans must have some kind of sympathy for Hitler because Hitler was right-wing. It sounds almost too childish to be believed, but you do encounter it.
And so we're invited to believe that "red" states passed laws requiring teachers to give students arguments in favor of the Holocaust, slavery, disenfranchising women, etc. Because, of course, American right-wingers secretly favor these things.
Read 14 tweets
Apr 8, 2021
1/ What would I have done to contain Covid if I were King of Europe? In the first phase, when we didn't know much about the disease, lockdowns until enough data had been gathered about risk/mortality/treatment, etc. Pour billions into vaccines starting Day 1, perhaps
2/ announcing a contest. During the late Spring/summer lull, which happens with all respiratory viruses, begin aggressive contact tracing. Temporarily suspend data-privacy regulations and create a vigorous, workable tracing app. Setting the GDPR aside is a whole lot
3/ less of a rights violation than a lockdown, isn't it? Organize massive track and trace teams to figure out where the virus is most likely to circulate. At the same time, during the summer, create thousands of portable container ICU beds and a staff of well-paid
Read 14 tweets
Apr 7, 2021
1/ Most lockdown supporters don't understand cost-benefit policy analysis. The question is not whether lockdowns reduce Covid rates. The answer to that is a clear "yes": how could they not? Banning movement reduces infections, much like banning cars would reduce traffic deaths.
2/ The question is whether lockdowns prevent enough additional Covid cases *as compared to other policies*, such as warnings and advice. The question is also whether lockdowns prevent significantly more Covid cases than *the normal response of average citizens* to rising case
3/ numbers. The vast majority of people will react to rising case numbers by limiting travel and taking precautions on their own. How much does a formal government lockdown add to these voluntary precautions? What is the *marginal* added effect of lockdowns over government advice
Read 9 tweets
Apr 6, 2021
@transatlantic @DavidVickery1 See, the problem with your reasoning is that whenever cases *fall* after governments impose lockdowns or other restrictions, you always attribute that to the lockdown. When cases *rise* after loosening, you attribute that to the loosening.
When cases *rise* after lockdowns, you say they would have risen further without them. When they *fall* after loosening, that just means other factors hindered the spread. It's a classic of selective biased reasoning, heads I win, tails you lose.
I'm inviting you to take the long-term perspective based on longitudinal time-series data, not random noisy news blips here and there. And when you look at that data thoroughly, as I have (and you haven't), it emerges that there is *no clear relationship* between
Read 5 tweets

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