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There is something almost disarmingly simple about the idea. Take two things people feel every day—how fast prices are rising, and how hard it is to find work—and add them together. The result is what economists came to call the misery index, a rough measure of how strained everyday life feels.
The concept is usually linked to Arthur Okun, who in the 1960s tried to capture, in one number, the pressure ordinary households experience. Inflation erodes purchasing power; unemployment undermines security. Add the two, and you get a snapshot—imperfect, but intuitive—of economic discomfort.
Europe in the 1970s: When Energy Shock Became Social Change
Although the misery index was born in the United States, its logic applied just as much to Europe in the 1970s. The turning point was the Oliecrisis van 1973, when geopolitical tensions abruptly restricted oil supply and sent prices soaring.
What followed was stagflation: rising prices, slowing growth, and growing unemployment.
In southern Europe, the effects were especially intense. Italy struggled with inflation and instability. Spain, emerging from the rule of Francisco Franco, faced economic hardship alongside political transformation. Greece, after the fall of military rule, confronted both economic fragility and institutional rebuilding.
The crisis reshaped not only economies, but societies.
Today: Shock, Uncertainty—and a Structural Transformation
Today’s pressures are again rooted in disruption, but the mechanism is broader.
The instability around the Strait of Hormuz—linked to the war between United States and Iran—has exposed how vulnerable global energy flows remain. As in the 1970s, higher energy costs ripple through transport, food, and industry.
But the deeper effect lies in uncertainty.
When companies cannot reliably predict costs, supply chains, or geopolitical risks, they hesitate. Investment slows. Expansion plans are postponed. Hiring becomes cautious.
And this is where a second, quieter transformation intersects with the story.
At the same time, the rapid growth of the AI sector is beginning to reshape entire industries. Automation and AI-driven processes promise efficiency and new forms of productivity—but they also create friction in labour markets. Jobs are redefined, some disappear, others require new skills that are unevenly distributed.
This matters for the misery index in a subtle but important way:
inflation may be driven by external shocks
unemployment may increasingly be shaped by structural change
The result is a more complex dynamic than in the 1970s. Economic strain is no longer just cyclical—it is also transitional.
The Return of Unemployment—But in a New Form
Unemployment does not rise overnight after a shock. It follows.
As uncertainty persists:
companies delay hiring
investment weakens
sectors under pressure begin to shed jobs
But unlike the past, this process now overlaps with technological change.
Some jobs may not return—not because demand disappears, but because they are replaced or transformed. At the same time, new roles emerge, often requiring different skills or located in different regions.
This creates a paradox:
labour shortages in some sectors
rising unemployment or insecurity in others
From the perspective of the misery index, this is crucial. The “unemployment” component becomes less uniform, more fragmented—and potentially more persistent.
Southern Europe—and Increasingly the Rest—on the Fault Line
Countries like Greece, Italy, and Spain remain more exposed to rising costs and structural weaknesses. Higher youth unemployment and lower income buffers amplify the impact of both economic shocks and technological change.
But the divide between north and south is no longer as clear-cut as it once was.
The combination of geopolitical instability and AI-driven transformation affects all of Europe:
industrial regions face restructuring
service sectors undergo automation
regional inequalities may deepen
The result is not a single crisis, but overlapping pressures.
What Comes Next: A Slow-Burning Adjustment
If instability in global energy routes continues, and technological change accelerates, Europe may face a prolonged period of adjustment rather than a sharp crisis.
First comes the price shock.
Then comes the employment shift.
Overlaying both is structural transformation.
This is not a replay of the 1970s—but it rhymes with it.
A Simple Index in a Complex Age
The misery index remains a powerful idea because it captures something fundamental: how economic conditions are experienced.
But today, it needs to be read differently.
Inflation still matters.
Unemployment still matters.
But beneath both lies a deeper layer of change—uncertainty and transformation.
The real question is no longer just how high the index will rise, but how societies adapt to what lies behind it.
And that is where today’s story diverges from the past: not just in the shocks we face, but in the scale of change unfolding at the same time.
