Citazione Originariamente Scritto da gmork Visualizza Messaggio
considerato come va la spagna forse per noi è meglio restare senza governo
Economists argue that Spain’s protracted political uncertainty has indeed had a negative impact on growth, but that any drag has been more than compensated by other factors. “Spain has everything working in its favour right now — from cheap oil and low interest rates to a great year for the tourism sector and last year’s tax cuts, which have helped domestic demand. With all that and the reforms that were done by the government in the past, the economy is flying on autopilot, says Federico Steinberg, economist at Real Instituto Elcano, a think-tank.

“You don’t need to pass a law every week for the economy to function.”
Jesús Fernández-Villaverde, economics professor at Pennsylvania university, makes a similar point, but also warns of the longer-term damage created by the current impasse. “A modern state is a well-oiled machine that can run itself for quite a long time without major problems,” he says.

“The real question is not about the resilience of the Spanish economy this year but about the costs in the medium and long-term. The real cost is that we are not reforming the education system, we are not improving the labour market and we are not taking measures to raise productivity for the next 10-15 years.
https://www.ft.com/content/4a09a4e6-706e-11e6-9ac1-1055824ca907 (grassetto mio)

Il discorso mio e' appunto questo.
Il governo deve pianificare sul lungo termine senza intervenire continuamente nel breve. Per far questo un governo deve essere stabile ed avere abbastanza margine di azione. (tralascio il discorso della competenza perche' involve soprattutto la visione politica)

La Spagna al momento funziona perche' pare sia merito della pianificazione pre crisi e al momento nessuno tocca niente finche' funziona, ma al contempo non ha nessuno che pianifica per il prossimo futuro e quindi garantisca la stabilita'.