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by mschuster91 1607 days ago
> You're pointing to a dynamic of urban decay and "broken windows effect", which is the exact opposite of gentrification.

Both go together hand-in-hand, you cannot have gentrification without an area that picks up those driven out by it.

> and the lower-skilled end of the labor market is the one that bears the greatest burden by far from the kind of onerous labor regulation and taxation that is especially common in France.

> Germany used to be in the same boat, but they enacted reforms in the early 2000s that provided for some degree of much-needed flexibility for these marginalized workers.

When comparing the employment sector in France and in Germany where the Schröder government introduced the infamous "Hartz IV" reforms in 2006, one clear thing pops out: France has a significantly lower rate of ultra-low-wage employment (8.6%) compared to Germany (20.7%). The "flexibility" only helped the ultra-low-wage employment sector to explode, a trend that only got reversed in the last few years before COVID hit [2].

[1]: https://www.destatis.de/Europa/DE/Thema/Bevoelkerung-Arbeit-...

[2]: https://de.statista.com/statistik/daten/studie/161881/umfrag...