What matters is growth rate(dynamic) not size(static).
And if you objectively look at GDP growth/shrinkage (2007-2012), it varies. Which goes back to what I've said about looking at these EU countries being akin to American states, so diversity should be expected.
Some countries, in spite of just how socialist they might be, have done well: Luxemburg (11.8%), Switzerland (40%), Norway (27.4%), Sweden (13.4%), Poland (14.8%), Belgium (5.4%), etc. So don't pretend like it's just ol' wise Germany (2.2%) amongst a see of clueless socialists over there.
Plenty of them are rather stagnant: France (.9%), Finland (1.6%), etc.
A lot of them are hurting, big time: United Kingdom (-13.7%), Italy (-5.4%), Spain (-6.4%), Portugal (-6.4%), Ireland (-19.0%)
The European Union as a whole was hit hard, like everyone else, in 2007 but--as a whole--completely rebounded by 2011 (+3.5%), until their European hit in 2012.
A few thoughts on the matter: you haven't named any causes outside of "socialism," which is just too brand and useless. Is is the retirement? Is it a mortgage crisis? Is is the demographic trends? I won't pretend that the myriad economies challenges of like 800 million people stem solely from "socialism." I just won't accept that as a real argument. Ireland's problems aren't Spain's problems. Portugal's problems aren't Finland's problems.
And I won't be so arrogant and state that everything we do is better, even if at a national level some of them have made very poor decisions--which is obviously true. On the whole they just straight up kick our asses on a local government level, I'll say that much.
...and in germany, they do well because of the evil corporate automation which results in a more efficient worker (higher per capita output) - as a result, they have kept their manufacturing base.
Which is just totally absent elsewhere in Europe? Seems to simple to be true.
And I don't think "evil corporate automation" is a thing. But that doesn't mean that I don't recognize the obvious effects it has.
Corporatism is what is evil, not efficiency.
The German question is: If or when the cost of regulation will catch up to the productivity gained.
I think the German question is "are we better off out of the Euro so we don't suffer for the risky banking policies of Ireland, Portugal, etc?"