Comments
RandomActOfMindless t1_j9u0dck wrote
TDK must be winning the cassette wars.
jsakic99 t1_j9u1q4n wrote
I was always a Maxell guy myself. No one made a better chromium-dioxide tape.
Test19s t1_j9u4ku9 wrote
God damn the 2020s. Liberal trade makes everyone more prosperous, and countries like Germany having to source more raw materials locally decreases their carrying capacity.
Test19s t1_j9u4p9o wrote
How does Germany have both a labour shortage and falling real wages? Something doesn’t work there unless we’re seeing the country’s economic carrying capacity shrink faster than its workforce.
Reasonable_Ticket_84 t1_j9ucd9r wrote
>Something doesn’t work there
Simple, the same problem in the US. The rich are getting richer, they are refusing to pay their employees more and will even still try to cut wages to increase profit.
Then they cry "nobody wants to work anymore" for the next decade.
Test19s t1_j9ud7e1 wrote
Can’t they literally just raise wages a bit without their business model collapsing?
[deleted] t1_j9uf0jf wrote
PromeForces t1_j9ujori wrote
If this happened in the UK, people would just blame Brexit.
trolls_brigade t1_j9v0aya wrote
And they would be right since UK does not depend on Russian NG.
WorldlyNotice t1_j9v9tpy wrote
Yes, but Directors and Shareholders like money.
mata_dan t1_j9y1h36 wrote
Doesn't most of the developed world have a labour shortage and falling real wages? Germany are the most developed that also have a big reliance on gas so it makes sense.
Test19s t1_j9z2e52 wrote
Shrinking workforce + shrinking aggregate supply?
autotldr t1_j9tzz9w wrote
This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 84%. (I'm a bot)
> The German chemicals company BASF has said it will cut 2,600 jobs as Europe's largest economy braces for recession triggered by the energy crisis that intensified after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine a year ago.
> The year was "Dominated by the consequences of the war in Ukraine and in particular by increased raw material and energy prices", BASF said in a statement on Friday.
> "Continuing large price increases and the ongoing energy crisis had a negative effect on the German economy towards the end of the year," the office said.
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