Paul Krugman dismantles the pervasive fear that Europe is economically collapsing by revealing a statistical illusion: the gap in productivity growth is real, but the gap in living standards is not. He argues that conventional metrics fail because they ignore how the United States dominates the high-growth tech sector while Europe excels in applying those technologies to improve daily life. For busy readers tracking global stability, this reframing suggests that the West is not fracturing into two unequal hemispheres, but rather diverging in how it chooses to spend the dividends of progress.
The Illusion of Decline
Krugman begins by challenging the "conventional narrative of clear relative decline," noting that while Americans possess more material goods, Europeans enjoy more time and security. He writes, "Americans, however, have more stuff, that is, material goods... Europeans, on the other hand, have more time, working shorter hours and taking more vacations." This distinction is crucial because it separates the volume of production from the value of life. The author points out that even the ominous Draghi report, which warns of a loss of competitiveness, starts by praising Europe's social achievements. This framing effectively neutralizes the alarmist tone often found in policy circles.
However, the core of Krugman's argument rests on a statistical paradox. He observes that when economists compare GDP using constant prices, Europe appears to be falling behind. But when they adjust for purchasing power parity (PPP)—which accounts for what money actually buys in each country—the gap vanishes. "If you want to claim that between 2000 and 2024 European productivity fell far behind U.S. productivity, then, as I said earlier, I do not think that word 'productivity' means what you think it means," Krugman asserts. This is a bold claim, yet it holds up under scrutiny because it exposes how static price indices can distort the reality of consumer welfare.
If you want to claim that between 2000 and 2024 European productivity fell far behind U.S. productivity, then, as I said earlier, I do not think that word "productivity" means what you think it means.
The Tech Sector Distortion
The explanation for this paradox lies in the concentration of innovation. Krugman notes that progress in the 21st century is "highly concentrated in a relatively small sector — the 'tech' or information technology (IT) sector." The United States, benefiting from historical network effects and clusters like Silicon Valley, dominates this specific slice of the economy. He explains that while IT accounts for only 8 percent of U.S. value added, it is responsible for almost half of U.S. productivity growth. Because competition in this sector drives prices down, the benefits are passed to consumers rather than inflating wage gaps. "Most of the benefits of technological progress in IT are passed on to the rest of the economy," he writes, illustrating that a country doesn't need to produce the fastest computers to benefit from them.
This dynamic creates a scenario where the U.S. shows higher measured productivity growth simply because it hosts the industries where prices are falling fastest. Europe, by contrast, may have slower measured growth but maintains its relative purchasing power. Krugman draws a parallel to regional disparities within the U.S., noting, "The difference in measured productivity growth between California and the rest of the US is wider than the difference between the US and Europe, yet that difference isn't the source of constant agonizing by U.S. states." This comparison is a powerful rhetorical device, stripping the issue of its geopolitical panic and revealing it as a standard economic phenomenon.
Critics might argue that this analysis underestimates the long-term strategic risks of not leading the AI revolution. If Europe cannot generate its own tech giants, it may eventually lose the ability to shape the standards and regulations of the digital age, regardless of current purchasing power. Krugman acknowledges that "Europe isn't in the game" regarding the race to dominate AI, but he counters that the primary benefit comes from applying technology, not just creating it.
What Actually Matters
Ultimately, the piece serves as a corrective to the anxiety surrounding European stagnation. Krugman concludes that while market fragmentation remains a genuine concern, the narrative of a collapsing continent is overstated. He writes, "The big benefits of IT come from applying it, rather than creating it," suggesting that Europe's strength lies in its ability to integrate innovation into its social fabric. The author's use of the Balassa-Samuelson effect—where productivity gains in tradable sectors lower prices for non-tradable goods—is implicit here, providing a robust theoretical backbone to his data-driven claims. By focusing on the value of output at current prices rather than constant historical prices, he offers a more accurate picture of the standard of living.
The benefits of the vast increase in productivity in the IT sector are passed through to the rest of the economy.
Bottom Line
Krugman's strongest move is exposing how the choice of statistical method dictates the narrative of decline, proving that Europe's purchasing power has remained stable despite slower measured productivity growth. The argument's vulnerability lies in its optimism about the long-term sustainability of importing technological leadership without domestic innovation hubs. Readers should watch for whether Europe can maintain its social model if the global tech landscape shifts toward protectionism or if the benefits of AI fail to translate into broad-based consumer price reductions.