My question for today is what makes the United States different from the Eurozone?
One suggestion offered in the article that piqued my interest in the topic (here) offers the suggestion that federal transfer taxes keep America more homogeneous. In fact, when you look at the data, there is absolutely no correlation between per capita taxes paid to the government vs per capita expenditures received. However, there is a strong negative correlation between income per capita and the ratio of taxes paid vs expenditures received.
While I'm not sure that is the whole picture, it is certain that the US is more homogeneous.
Here is a listing of Eurozone countries by GDP per capita:
Population | Nominal GDP | GDP/capita | |
491,702 | 52,449 | 106668 | |
4,517,758 | 227,193 | 50289 | |
16,481,139 | 792,128 | 48063 | |
8,356,707 | 384,908 | 46060 | |
5,325,115 | 237,512 | 44602 | |
10,741,048 | 468,522 | 43620 | |
82,062,249 | 3,346,702 | 40782 | |
60,090,430 | 2,112,780 | 35160 | |
64,105,125 | 2,112,780 | 32958 | |
45,853,045 | 1,460,250 | 31846 | |
801,622 | 24,910 | 31074 | |
11,262,539 | 329,924 | 29294 | |
2,053,393 | 48,477 | 23608 | |
10,631,800 | 227,676 | 21415 | |
412,614 | 7,449 | 18053 | |
5,411,062 | 87,642 | 16197 | |
328,597,348 | 12,455,979 | 37907 |
Look at that range! The US states range only from Connecticut at 54,397 to Mississippi at 30,103.
This same divergence is seen in debt to GDP ratios. In the Eurozone, Debt to GDP ranges from 115% for Italy to 14% for Luxembourg. These countries likely differ in their reliance on imports and exports as well. State debt to GDP ratios are all below 20%, although that is because the federal government takes on much of the debt. However, this makes state defaults far less severe because the federal government can bail them out and it is simply a smaller dollar amount.
The Eurozone got this way through centuries of different economic climate and policy. Meanwhile, the US has generally had the same climate and policies throughout the states throughout its history. While all the US states probably need similar treatment, it may be that the eurozone is just too heterogeneous for one currency.