European Job Vacancies
Here’s a chart which made us sit up and reflect on how things differ across the larger European economies. Looking at job vacancies in 2020 at the time of the pandemic versus today, France and Germany have approximately 15% more jobs on offer whereas Spain has 53% more and Italy a stonking 68% more. Cynics might say that Spain and Italy started from a low post pandemic point but that would not be fair in the case of Spain where the economy has performed especially strongly in the past 2 years. The UK on the other hand has seen a decline of 20% in job vacancies in the same period. Successive anti business measures, changes in employment law and tax increases do have a real impact as Chancellor Reeves is now (maybe) starting to discover. But for those looking for jobs in the UK, there are far fewer jobs in the UK and across the EU there are 10 million people looking so there’s more than a lot of competition for European jobs.
EUR/USD 1.1716.
Weirdly Happy
The 50 happiest countries in the world appeared last week on the socials in one of those tables that we try not to look at but inevitably are drawn towards. Firstly, it should be said that of the top 50 happy countries, the range between the very happiest and the least happy is 25%, so we are talking about apparently minute differences between those 50 countries. Quite a few posts about Singapore which comes in at Number 34 with many people questioning how that could possibly be correct given Singapore’s top of the table status in the GDP per capita stakes. Hmmm. Weirdly, of the 7 very happiest countries, 5 are the Nordics: Finland, Denmark, Iceland, Sweden, and Norway. All that Nordic Noir literature, miserable Bergmanesque film, lack of winter sunlight, and proclivity to sink industrial quantities of alcohol all add up to making the Nordic countries terribly happy. Go figure.
EUR/GBP 0.8764.