ABSTRACT

Estimates of the comparative health of the North American and Western European economies and societies have had their fashion cycles – from ServainSchreiber’s warnings that Europe was falling behind, rather than catching up with, American technological leadership in the 1960s, to European exasperation over American trade and budget deficits in the 1970s, to anxieties over Eurosclerosis in the early 1980s and over the American loss of international competitiveness in the late 1980s. At present, by all accounts, the sick man is again Europe, which has been experiencing higher unemployment and much lower rates of job creation over the last two decades or so. The main problem is a rising level of long-term unemployment that mainly affects unskilled workers and, in most countries, young job seekers with low levels of schooling.