[lord what rot........]

[NYTimes]
June 8, 2003
Why America Outpaces Europe (Clue: The God Factor)
By NIALL FERGUSON


OXFORD, England - It was almost a century ago that the German sociologist
Max Weber published his influential essay "The Protestant Ethic and the
Spirit of Capitalism." In it, Weber argued that modern capitalism was
"born from the spirit of Christian asceticism" in its specifically
Protestant form - in other words, there was a link between the
self-denying ethos of the Protestant sects and the behavior patterns
associated with capitalism, above all hard work.

Many scholars have built careers out of criticizing Weber's thesis. Yet
the experience of Western Europe in the past quarter-century offers an
unexpected confirmation of it. To put it bluntly, we are witnessing the
decline and fall of the Protestant work ethic in Europe. This represents
the stunning triumph of secularization in Western Europe - the
simultaneous decline of both Protestantism and its unique work ethic.

Just as Weber's 1904 visit to the United States convinced him that his
thesis was right, anyone visiting New York today would have a similar
experience. For in the pious, industrious United States, the Protestant
work ethic is alive and well. Its death is a peculiarly European
phenomenon - and has grim implications for the future of the European
Union on the eve of its eastward expansion, perhaps most economically
disastrous for the "new" Europe.

Many economists have missed this vindication of Weber because they are
focused on measures of productivity, like output per hour worked. On that
basis, the Western European economies have spent most of the past
half-century spectacularly catching up with the United States.

But what the productivity numbers don't reveal is the dramatic divergence
over two decades between the amount of time Americans work and the amount
of time Western Europeans work. By American standards, Western Europeans
are astonishingly idle.

According to a recent study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development, the average working American spends 1,976 hours a year on
the job. The average German works just 1,535 - 22 percent less. The Dutch
and Norwegians put in even fewer hours. Even the British do 10 percent
less work than their trans-Atlantic cousins. Between 1979 and 1999, the
average American working year lengthened by 50 hours, or nearly 3 percent.
But the average German working year shrank by 12 percent.

Yet even these figures understate the extent of European idleness, because
a larger proportion of Americans work. Between 1973 and 1998 the
percentage of the American population in employment rose from 41 percent
to 49 percent. But in Germany and France the percentage fell, ending up at
44 and 39 percent. Unemployment rates in most Northern European countries
are also markedly higher than in the United States.

Then there are the strikes. Between 1992 and 2001, the Spanish economy
lost, on average, 271 days per 1,000 employees as a result of strikes. For
Denmark, Italy, Finland, Ireland and France, the figures range between 80
and 120 days, compared with fewer than 50 for the United States.

All this is the real reason that the American economy has surged ahead of
its European competitors in the past two decades. It is not about
efficiency. It is simply that Americans work more. Europeans take longer
holidays and retire earlier; and many more European workers are either
unemployed or on strike.

How to explain this sharp divergence? Why have West Europeans opted for
shorter working days, weeks, months, years and lives? This is where
Weber's thesis comes up trumps: the countries where the least work is done
in Europe turn out to be those that were once predominantly Protestant.
While the overwhelmingly Catholic French and Italians work about 15 to 20
percent fewer hours a year than Americans, the more Protestant Germans and
Dutch and the wholly Protestant Norwegians work 25 to 30 percent less.

What clinches the Weber thesis is that Northern Europe's declines in
working hours coincide almost exactly with steep declines in religious
observance. In the Netherlands, Britain, Germany, Sweden and Denmark, less
than 10 percent of the population now attend church at least once a month,
a dramatic decline since the 1960's. (Only in Catholic Italy and Ireland
do more than a third of the population go to church on a monthly basis.)
In the recent Gallup Millennium Survey of religious attitudes, 49 percent
of Danes, 52 percent of Norwegians and 55 percent of Swedes said God did
not matter to them. In North America, by comparison, 82 percent of
respondents said God was "very important."

So the decline of work in Northern Europe has occurred more or less
simultaneously with the decline of Protestantism. Quod erat demonstrandum
indeed!

Weber's vindication has profound implications for the next year's
enlargement of the European Union, when the Baltic States, Hungary,
Poland, Slovenia and the Czech and Slovak Republics will become full
European Union members.

A crucial feature of this enlargement, compared with those of the 1970's
and 1980's, is that the material gap between old and new members is far
wider this time. In 1974, the richest old member (Luxembourg) was twice as
rich as the poorest new member (Ireland) in terms of per capita gross
domestic product. Today, the average Luxembourgeois is more than five
times richer than the poorest new member (Lithuania).

The impact of adopting the European Union's economic and social rules is
bound to be far greater for this generation of new Europeans. They should
remember what happened in the 1990's to the East Germans, who initially
celebrated their accession to the vastly richer West German Federal
Republic, only to discover it meant unemployment for roughly a third of
the work force.

This is where productivity statistics matter. Even after more than a
decade of free-market reforms, productivity levels in the Czech Republic,
Poland, Slovakia and Hungary are as low as one third of the French level.
What this means is that unless wages in those countries are set at around
a third of French levels, their workers will not be able to compete.

East Europeans are currently able to compensate for their low productivity
by working longer hours. The average Czech worker does more than 2,000
hours of work a year - a figure steadily rising since the collapse of
Communism, even as working hours in Western Europe were declining.
Unfortunately, European Union labor legislation will reverse this, to
prevent what the West Europeans disingenuously call "social dumping" - the
competition from low-wage economies. Czechs will be obliged to work less
by a combination of legal entitlements to a shorter working week, longer
holidays, higher minimum wages and generous unemployment benefits when
their employers go bust because of all this.

The question is how much the Czechs will care about the ensuing enforced
leisure. Like nearly all the 10 new members of the European Union, the
Czech Republic is a predominantly Catholic country. (The exceptions are
Protestant Estonia and Latvia.) But one striking consequence of 40-plus
years of socialist rule in Eastern Europe has been a decline of religious
belief almost as marked as that in Northern Europe.

According to Gallup, 48 percent of Western Europeans almost never go to
church, but the figure for Eastern Europe is just a bit less, at 44
percent. Meanwhile, 64 percent of Czechs regard God as not mattering at
all - a higher rate than even in Sweden. In this respect the difference
between "old" and "new" Europe may turn out to be less than many Americans
now believe. Enlargement of the European Union may simply confirm the
eastward spread of the leisure preference in an increasingly work-shy and
Godless European continent.

The loser will be the European economy, which will continue to fall behind
the United States in terms of its absolute annual output. The winner will
be the spirit of secularized sloth, which has finally slain the Protestant
work ethic in Europe - and Max Weber, whose famous thesis celebrates its
centenary by attaining the status of verity.

Niall Ferguson is a professor of financial history at the Stern School of
Business, New York University, and a senior research fellow of Jesus
College, Oxford. He is the author of "Empire: The Rise and Demise of the
British World Order and the Lessons for Global Power."

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