
Government aid in Germany continues, as elsewhere in the world, to improve economic conditions while maintaining a high standard.
It’s more like swimming in a water you’ve been swimming in for decades, and in which more and more people are also coming to swim. The bottom line is that there’s no more room to swim, and you can hardly stop in this water because it’s so crowded.
So, the economic sense in which all nations, advanced or not, run is similar to that water filled with people. In such conditions, should we continue to stay in this water, or should we look for new water, and therefore a new economic engine?
The German nation, which, like all other nations, continues to seek the ability to have more room in this overexpanded pool, finds itself faced with the same barriers and the same ceiling. However, the German nation does have assets, notably its senior citizens, who are perceived as a weakness for the country’s economy, and who are not yet being used as the driving force behind Germany’s economic recovery. At the same time, the major problem of energy still weighs heavily on Germany’s economic balance, which is not yet as strong as it should be. These two major pillars, seniors and energy, should give Germany a new and lasting direction for its economy.

