The New York Times (here) is reporting that the recent collapse of the French government will "...further burden its weak economy" and have ripple effects across Europe. The analysis, however, might be confusing cause and effect. Weakness in the European Union (EU) economies, to include France, might be creating the observed political instability. What I want to explore, starting with France, is whether we are observing the emergence of Steady State Economies in the EU, and that this should not be confused with "weakness". Business commentators and economists, at least in the US, seem convinced that economies can grow forever or, at least, for the foreseeable future. For example, the DICE model (a neoclassical integrated assessment model) grows forever unless a limit is put on technological change. So, it is no surprise that the FR20 (France Twentieth Century model, the dashed blue line marked FR) driven by the US Economy grows forever (dashed red line marked US in the graphic above). Unfortunately, for neoclassical economic theory, this is not the best description of the current French economy using the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC).
Three other models, the Random Walk (RW, dashed blue), the Business As Usual (BAU, black line) and the EU model (right beneath it) are probably what classical economists would identify as the Steady State Economy. Growth reaches an asymptote around 2100. Finally, the FR20 model is driven into collapse mode by the World System (dotted green line).
If you prefer central tendencies in your forecasts, then you probably would conclude that the Steady State Economy is the most likely future. If you are a techno-optimist, you will probably prefer the US-driven future. If you are a Degrowth advocate, you will probably prefer the FR or the W scenario.
Without committing myself to some unknowable future, it seems clear to me that the steady-state and collapse scenarios will not be accepted without resistance. Demonstrators will take to the streets, governments will fall, right-wing political groups will grow in appeal and we will enter a period of chaos. Maybe this is why the Infinite-growth scenario is so appealing.
Notes
FR1 is the dominant state variable of the FR20 system with data taken from the World Development Indicators (WDI). The methodology used to create forecasts is similar to the one used by the Atlanta Federal Reserves GDPNow app. Prediction intervals are generated using a Bootstrap algorithm in the R programming language.
The FR1 state variable was created from the following weighted indicators (the first row of the Measurement Matrix) and explain 98% of the variation.
The first six indicators in standard scores are taken from the World Development Indicators (WDI). KOF = KOF Index of Globalization, EF = Ecological Footprint, HDI = Human Development Index. The second two components: FR2=(CO2+EF-KOF) and FR3 = (LU-L-N-HDI) describe environmental and Unemployment Error Correction Controllers (ECCs).
You can run the FRL20-BAU model here.
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