That more or less explains everything one needs to know about the "fixing" of Europe.As a pharmaceutical salesman in Greece for 17 years, Tilemachos Karachalios wore a suit, drove a company car and had an expense account. He now mops schools in Sweden, forced from his home by Greece’s economic crisis.
“It was a very good job,” said Karachalios, 40, of his former life. “Now I clean Swedish s---.”
Of course, those who saw our chart from yesterday which showed Greek unemployment rising by 1% in one month to a record 24.4% will hardly find this surprising.
For all those others who need a personal anecdote to grasp just how fixed Europe is, we hand it off to Bloomberg.
Karachalios, who left behind his 6-year-old daughter to be raised by his parents, is one of thousands fleeing Greece’s record 24 percent unemployment and austerity measures that threaten to undermine growth. The number of Greeks seeking permission to settle in Sweden, where there are more jobs and a stable economy, almost doubled to 1,093 last year from 2010, and is on pace to increase again this year.
“I’m trying to survive,” Karachalios said in an interview in Stockholm. “It’s difficult here, very difficult. I would prefer to stay in Greece. But we don’t have jobs.”
Greece is in its fifth year of recession, with the economy expected to contract 6.9 percent this year, the same as in 2011, according to the Athens-based Foundation for Economic and Industrial Research. Since 2008, the number of jobless has more than tripled to a record 1.22 million as of June, out of a total population of 10.8 million.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/bright-future-greeksnow-i-clean-swedish-shit
When the shit hits the fan here. Where are American's going to go for jobs? Canada? Canada has a population of just 34 million. Mexico? hahaha if you think racism is bad here, just wait until you try getting a job waiting tables as a GRINGO! How long would you last before some drug dealer shot you because his girlfriend commented on your blue eyes.
ReplyDelete24% is an awfully high and scary level. On the other hand, from what I know of the Greek economy and the behavior of workers, it can get difficult to conjer up a lot of sympathy.
ReplyDeleteJean