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Saturday, June 09, 2007
Wayne Winegarden :: Townhall.com Columnist
Economizing Energy: Free Markets or Government Decrees
by Wayne Winegarden
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In April of this year, the Wall Street Journal ran a front page story on Denmark titled “How Denmark Paved Way To Energy Independence”. The article claims that “Through a wide variety of government-driven initiatives, this small northern European country has overcome one thorny challenge of global warming: how to dramatically reduce energy consumption while maintaining a solid growth rate and low unemployment rate”.

While “solid” growth and “low” unemployment are not particularly precise terms, these claims are important. If they are correct, the Danish model would make a great case study for the U.S. as Congress begins its debate on the proper policy response to global warming. So let’s look at the evidence.

Gross Domestic Product is the broadest measure of an economy’s performance. If the Danish model delivers “solid” economic growth, then the evidence should be clearly visible in its GDP data. Between 1997 and 2006, GDP growth in Denmark, adjusted for inflation, grew an average 2.2 percent according to Eurostat (the EU statistical agency). This growth rate compared very favorably to Japan, which only grew 1.1 percent over this same time period.

However, average growth across the EU was 2.4 percent. In the United Kingdom, average growth in real GDP was an even higher 2.8 percent; while the United States economy grew at an even faster pace of 3.2 percent per year. In fact, out of the 35 countries that Eurostat tracks, which include all of the nations in the EU plus Japan, the United States, and a few other countries, Denmark’s average economic growth rate was the 7th worst. Although solid is a vague term, it is probably safe to assume that scoring in the bottom 20 percent is not a “solid” performance.

The story is the same for another core economic variable, productivity. Productivity is the ability to produce more output with the same amount of resources. Productivity growth is indispensable for a country’s future economic growth and especially future growth in workers incomes. One common measure of productivity is labor productivity per employee, or the amount of output that one employee can generate. Denmark’s performance on this measure has been less than stellar as well.

Labor productivity in the EU has been declining between 1997 and 2006, according to Eurostat. Denmark has been able to exceed this dreadful performance – labor productivity has actually grown in Denmark approximately 0.2 percent per year. This performance lags Eurostat’s measure of labor productivity in the U.S., however, as well as high growth European countries such as the United Kingdom and Ireland.

Slower productivity growth should be leading to slower growth in incomes for the average citizen of Denmark – and it has. The growth in Euro compensation of employees in Denmark has exceeded the growth in Euro compensation of employees compared to the EU. It has also lagged the growth in compensation in the U.S., U.K., and Ireland.

All of these figures starkly contrast the top-line message that Denmark has found a way to ensure solid economic growth while simultaneously drastically reducing energy consumption by government fiat. Government regulations that force the economy to use less energy come with a cost in terms of potential economic growth. Continued...

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About The Author

Wayne H. Winegarden Ph.D. is a partner in the firm Arduin, Laffer & Moore Econometrics.

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Goshawk
I tried. It is way too long, but I get the gist. The arguments have merit, but not all politicians are behind immigration. But I can see some of them, like that JackSS john mccain, probably feel that they have enough money that they can simply buy votes.

One of my main rants about immigration is that when the population becomes large and ignorant enough, winning an election becomes a function of money and marketing. The truth, more specifically a congressman's stance on issues, no longer matters. They can lie through their teeth and as long as they have enough money behind them, they can sway an ignorant electorate with sound bites and glittery ads.

There is no doubt, Shamnesty will destroy America as we know it. It may be our only hope is an overwhelming vote in 08 for anti-immigration candidates who promise to repeal shamnesty. It is too bad there isn't a mechanism for pushing this agenda nationwide.

Nick in Austin
You really should take your time and read what is in the article linked below. It's far deeper than what you decribe. and all politicians are behind it.

http://www.cis.org/articles/2006/back706.html
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