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View Full Version : Europe's labour laws and welfare systems make workers lazy, says Chinese finance chief



Teh One Who Knocks
11-08-2011, 04:40 PM
Jin Liqun said Europeans should stop 'languishing on the beach' and work harder
By Simon Duke - The Daily Mail


http://i.imgur.com/ZK6K2.jpg

China has accused European workers of being ‘slothful’ and ‘indolent’ after refusing to put any of its vast resources into rescuing the euro.

The head of the Chinese state’s overseas investment arm said he would only help Europe if it reformed its ‘outdated’ labour laws and welfare systems.

Jin Liqun, chairman of the board of supervisors of China Investment Corporation, said Europeans should stop ‘languishing on the beach’ and work harder it they want to drag the eurozone out of its downward spiral.

And he said Europeans have become too reliant on state handouts and should stop looking to outside sources to tackle the debt crisis threatening the euro.

The broadside will deal yet another blow to Europe’s efforts to prevent the crisis in Greece from tearing apart the single currency.

At last week’s G20 summit of the world’s largest economies in Cannes, China rebuffed requests to put its financial might behind a comprehensive rescue plan to shore up the debt-laden countries on the eurozone’s periphery.

European leaders had hoped the world’s second largest economy would help underwrite a significant expansion of its £380billion bailout fund.

But Mr Jin scotched any prospect of China coming to their aid with a candid critique of European working practices.

In an interview on the Al Jazeera TV station, he said: ‘I think if you look at the troubles which have happened in European countries, this is purely because of the accumulated troubles of their worn-out welfare societies.

‘Labour laws are outdated, the labour laws induce sloth, indolence rather than hard working. The incentive system is totally out of whack.’

Mr Jin, a Boston University graduate, said root-and-branch reform of European welfare systems was urgently required.

Generous safety nets merely discouraged workers who have lost their jobs from finding full-time employment.

He said: ‘The welfare system is good for any society to reduce the gap, to help those who happen to have disadvantages, to enjoy a good life, but a welfare society should not induce people not to work hard.

‘If you look at the European countries over the last five or six decades, you will find this system will have to be adjusted.’

Huge discrepancies in social welfare systems were an obstacle to fostering the closer ties between eurozone members that many economists believe are the only long-term solution to the crisis.

Mr Jin said: ‘Why should for instance, within eurozone, why should some members’ people have to work to 65, even longer, whereas in some other countries they are happily retiring at 55, languishing on the beach. This is unfair.’

Acid Trip
11-08-2011, 05:16 PM
Duh!

Deepsepia
11-08-2011, 05:23 PM
Strange then that German runs a balance of trade surplus in manufactured goods, including with China.

Loser
11-08-2011, 06:47 PM
China has accused European workers of being ‘slothful’ and ‘indolent’ after refusing to put any of its vast resources into rescuing the euro.

The head of the Chinese state’s overseas investment arm said he would only help Europe if it reformed its ‘outdated’ labour laws and welfare systems.

Jin Liqun, chairman of the board of supervisors of China Investment Corporation, said Europeans should stop ‘languishing on the beach’ and work harder it they want to drag the eurozone out of its downward spiral.

And he said Europeans have become too reliant on state handouts and should stop looking to outside sources to tackle the debt crisis threatening the euro.



Wow, change every instance of europe with america/n and it's 100% true :lol:

FBD
11-08-2011, 08:02 PM
Strange then that German runs a balance of trade surplus in manufactured goods, including with China.

What of the rest of Europe? The Germans are the ones ostensibly backstopping the entire fkn euro. (american banks and shit aside.) You cant honestly compare Germany to the PIIGS for example.

Hal-9000
11-08-2011, 08:19 PM
I'll read this when I get back from my afternoon work nap..

perrhaps
11-08-2011, 09:28 PM
Interesting. My wife works as a supervisor for a privately-owned multinational corporation that has production plants in every continent except Antartica. The company, which has its headquarters in Germany, recently pulled over $15 million of machinery from its European plants, and shipped it here to Pennsylvania.

Why? Because the company is fed up with Germany and Frances' labor laws, coupled with horrendous production results there as opposed to here.