“Melonie’s Italy, 4th largest exporter in the world. Macron’s is sinking in 7th position.” Charles SANNAT's editorial

“Melonie’s Italy, 4th largest exporter in the world. Macron’s is sinking in 7th position.” Charles SANNAT's editorial
“Melonie’s Italy, 4th largest exporter in the world. Macron’s France is sinking in 7th position.” Charles SANNAT's editorial

My dear impertinent ones, dear impertinent ones,

Bravo.

Really.

I believe we can all stand up and applaud the results of the almost 8 years of “reign” of Bruno Le Maire, the naughty writer from Bercy, more concerned with observing the “brown bulges” of women with horny crotches , than by the economic future of our entire nation and therefore of its inhabitants, all under the “mastery” of the conductor of the Palace, known as the Mozart of finance.

While Macron's is sinking economically, crumbling under debt, Melonie's Italy has become the 4th world exporter.

On the one hand, a woman who thinks so badly and to whom our national Macron will teach a lesson.

On the other hand, a Mozart of finance and the camp of good, praised for too many years by a beholden and servile press which has prevented any debate, confiscated any possibility of criticism and therefore destroyed a counter-power if necessary.

Take the time to read this article from Le Figaro (source here) which I have wanted to talk to you about for a long time and which you will have seen the little publicity which has been made around this information.

“In the agony of old Europe depicted by Mario Draghi during the presentation of his report on its competitiveness, some will necessarily be more spared than others. But maybe not the ones you think. This is evidenced by the dynamism of an Italian industry which manages, in the face of the Chinese steamroller, to maintain its competitiveness over the long term. Even if German exports are still 2.5 times more important than those of Italy, they defy popular analyzes of the general state of its economy.”

Certainly, major suppliers to German industry, automotive equipment manufacturers and the mechanical industry of Northern Italy are today suffering from the breakdown of the sector, north of the Alps. But this economic trough masks a new reality: the link with Germany has become less vital, a decorrelation being at work as shown by a Confindustria study cited by La Repubblica. If Germany remains the main customer of Italian exporters, the latter have strongly expanded towards the United States, on the way to becoming their first destination. In fact, they have expanded their markets.

Better: Italian companies have demonstrated astonishing resilience over the last ten years when we have seen the cards of world trade being reshuffled, as shown by data from the WTO (World Trade Organization). Their exports have been particularly dynamic, increasing by 48% between 2016 and 2023, compared to only 28% for France, and 27% for Germany. And Italy's manufacturing surpluses are increasingly substantial, reaching 116 billion euros in 2022.

“For ten years,” notes Marco Fortis, director of the Edison Foundation, “Italy has been the only European country to have maintained its market share in world trade in the face of the rise of China.” With 5% of world exports, it went from 7th place ten years ago to 4th place, behind China, the United States and Germany. In ten years, it has therefore overtaken France, South Korea and, in recent months, even ahead of Japan. During this time, France moved from 5th to 7th place. Even Germany, which generated 14% of global exports ten years ago, saw its market share decline to 12.6%.”

Voilà.

Melonie's Italy is number 4.

Macron's France demoted to 7th place.

I tell you differently.

Italy is doing much better than us!

Italy sells more wine… than France!

“According to aggregations carried out by the Edison Foundation based on data from the International Trade Center (ITC), a United Nations agency on world trade, in Italy seven large sectors today generate 408 billion dollars in exports, and 206 billion in surplus.

Namely, fashion (85 billion in exports, including 32 billion in surplus), furniture and construction materials (25 billion, including 17), food products and wine (51 billion). This year, Italy should overtake France on the top step of the world podium of wine producers with more than 40 million hectoliters. Followed by processed metals (29 billion, including 17 billion in surplus), machines (117 billion, including 58 billion), luxury pleasure boats (42 billion, including 25 billion), medicines and components of cosmetic products (59 billion). ).”

“Italy achieves more surpluses in these seven sectors than Germany in automobiles and machine tools combined,” notes Marco Fortis.

In France we pay for assistance and social services. In Italy, we work, we invest in production tools.

High labor productivity

“Companies, helped by the “industrial plan 4.0” launched in 2016 by the government of Matteo Renzi, which included a hyper-shock absorber for investments in digital, aid on intellectual property and increased tax credits for research, have invested heavily in their automation. “This industrial policy, the most important that Italy has known for 40 years, was decisive in the boom in investment in machinery and the growth in productivity of our industry,” estimates Marco Fortis. In fact, investment in machinery in Italy has jumped 59% since the Industry 4.0 reform, going from 5.7% of GDP to 7.3% in 2023, compared to 6.6% in Germany, and 5.2% in France. And according to the World Robotics database, in 2022, Italy had 23,000 robots, compared to 16,000 in the United States and only 8,000 in France.”

Straighten the country? Simple.

It's easy to straighten out France.

Get everyone back to work, which is easy to say but much less easy to do.

Restore ambition and excellence at all levels, because everyone must be good for a country to succeed.

Bring common sense to what concerns personal responsibility and fair solidarity.

Put resources back not on assistance, but on investment in productivity.

A healthy, prosperous, productive economy. Made. Sold. Exchange.

Companies without factories and sales of telephone minutes are nonsense.

A healthy and prosperous economy invests in the future, trains its young people and puts everyone to work.

Finally, those who claim their right to be lazy have every right to do so. But with their own money, not with that of others.

You will then see that in 5 years, this country will regain desire, life, and happiness.

It's already too late, but all is not lost.

Get ready!

Charles SANNAT

“Insolentiae” means “impertinence” in Latin
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