I honestly agree with a lot of what you’re saying. At the beginning, I thought the situation wasn’t going to be this bad, or at least that the adjustment would be shorter. But it’s hard to ignore what’s happening now, more and more companies closing, businesses struggling, and entire sectors shrinking.
The clothing issue is a perfect example. Prices here are just unreal. It makes no sense that locally produced clothes are often more expensive than imported ones, and that says a lot about how distorted things are. At some point it stops being about “competitiveness” and becomes a structural problem.
And that’s where I think the focus is off. Instead of spending time on laws that don’t really impact everyday economic activity (like the glaciers law debate right now), there should be a serious discussion about the tax system. The current tax burden is clearly suffocating a lot of industries.
If nearly half of a product’s price goes to taxes and fixed costs, how is any local business supposed to compete , not just with China, but with anyone?
I get that reforms take time and that cutting spending is part of the process, but without a real overhaul of the tax structure, it’s hard to see how some sectors are supposed to recover. At this point, it feels pretty clear that what’s needed isn’t just adjustment, but a smarter, more targeted economic strategy.