See
Bernie's Right—America Should Be More Like Sweden: But not in the way he thinks by Johan Norberg writing for Reason. Excerpts:
"when President Barack Obama visited Sweden in 2013, the three big
Swedish trade unions sent him a letter requesting a meeting. Their
agenda: a discussion of "how to promote free trade." The chairman of the
largest Social Democratic trade union scolded the American president
for his insufficient commitment to the free flow of goods."
"Being more like modern Sweden actually means deregulation, free trade, a
national school voucher system, partially privatized pensions, no
property tax, no inheritance tax, and much lower corporate taxes."
"Sweden and the other Scandinavian countries have experimented with very
big government and semi-socialist ideas. There's just one problem: That
experiment coincided almost perfectly with the region's only sustained
period of economic decline over the last 100 years."
"the 1970s. Until that decade, Sweden and Denmark had grown much faster
than other European countries and had become richer than most other
countries on the planet, in large part by limiting government and
embracing markets."
"During its laissez faire period, between 1850 and 1950, Swedish
income per capita increased eightfold as the population doubled. Infant
mortality fell from 15 to 2 percent, and life expectancy increased by a
whopping 28 years. And all this happened before the welfare state was
even a glint in the taxman's eye.
As late as 1950, total taxes as a percent of GDP in Denmark and
Sweden were not just lower than in other European countries but lower
than in the U.S.: 20 and 19 percent, respectively, vs. 24 percent in
America.
It was at this point, when we Scandinavians had satisfied our thirst,
that we thought that we could turn our backs to the well. We began to
regulate. We increased taxes and beefed up the public sector. It's easy
to see how foreigners observing the implementation of these unorthodox
policies might confuse cause and effect. But those who think the
semi-socialism made us rich would also probably look at a snapshot of
Bill Gates and conclude that you become the world's wealthiest man by
giving your money away."
"Sweden took democratic socialist policies further than its neighbors,
and as a result its economy fell more steeply. Slowly but steadily the
policies of Prime Ministers Tage Erlander and Olof Palme eroded
productivity and the long-renowned Scandinavian work ethic. In 1970,
Sweden was 25 percent richer than the OECD average. Twenty years later,
the average had almost caught up with us. Once the fourth richest
country on the planet, Sweden was now the fourteenth.
It was a disaster for entrepreneurship and employment. During this
time, not a single job was created in the private sector (on net),
despite a growing population. As of 2000, just one of the 50 biggest
Swedish companies had been founded after 1970."
"As the Social Democratic finance minister Bosse Ringholm admitted in
2002: "If Sweden would have had the same growth rates as the OECD
average since 1970, our common resources would have been so much bigger
that it would be the equivalent of 20,000 SEK ($2,400) more per
household per month."
During this brief Bolivarian turn, many Swedish intellectuals feared
that their country would become an Orwellian nightmare. The Social
Democrats toyed with an incredibly unpopular plan to socialize private
businesses, and Parliament implemented a general rule saying that any
economic transaction that had the intention of lowering one's taxes was
illegal even if the transaction itself was legal. IKEA founder Ingvar
Kamprad and many other entrepreneurs, plus all of our famous sports
stars, fled the country.
Sweden's most famous author, Vilhelm Moberg, wrote that the
government was out of control, and that we were turning into a third way
between democracy and dictatorship "where everybody is discontented and
disappointed." Our most famous film director, Ingmar Bergman, was
snatched by the police at the Royal Theatre on charges of tax crimes
(later dropped). He had a nervous breakdown and left the country."
"Kjell-Olof Feldt, the Social Democratic minister of finance from 1983
to 1990, admitted in a 1992 book that some of the government's program
was "unsustainable," some of the policies "absurd," and the tax system
"perverse." These policies also collapsed after a debt- and
inflation-fuelled boom in the late 1980s.
Whatever these unsustainable and perverse policies did, they did not
help the working people that Sanders claims to represent. Real wages in
Sweden fell by around 5 percent between 1975 and 1995. Nominal wages
increased, but runaway inflation devoured it."
"But in the early 1990s Sweden began to abandon its brief detour into
Bernienomics. It deregulated, privatized, reduced taxes, and opened the
public sector to private providers. The two decades that followed saw
real wages increase by almost 70 percent."
"Between 1975 and 2005, Sweden improved its score on the Fraser
Institute's Economic Freedom of the World Index by 2.3 points on a
10-point scale. Denmark's score went up by 1.7. This can be compared to
Germany's 0.9 and the United States' 0.5"
"The legacy of Scandinavia's third way—its still-high public spending and
high taxes, at least compared to the U.S.—has dwindled to fairly normal
European levels. The governments provide the citizens with health care,
child care, free colleges, and subsidized parental and medical leave.
We Scandinavians have our quarrels with these systems and how they
function, but at least they have not ruined our societies; indicators of
living standards and health are impressive."
"Sweden and Denmark are more economically free than the United States
when it comes to legal structure and property rights, sound money, free
trade, business regulation, and credit market regulations. We don't have
the multitude of occupational licensing laws that block competition in
the United States."
"Sweden and Denmark take in lots of revenue via highly regressive
value-added taxes at a normal rate of 25 percent of sales—the only tax
where the rich and poor pay exactly the same amount in kronor. On the
other hand, the corporate tax is just 22 and 23.5 percent respectively,
compared to the U.S. rate of 35 percent.
In fact, rich people in Sweden enjoy several economic advantages not
offered to their lower-class counterparts. Sweden always admitted very
generous tax deductions for capital costs. Labor regulations are
tailored to benefit big companies. To attract highly educated
specialists from abroad, Sweden now has a beneficial "expert tax" for
them, which shields 25 percent of their wages from taxation for a
three-year period. "Sure, it is unfair, but we have no better solution,"
the Social Democratic minister of finance said in 2000, when he
implemented special tax exemptions for individuals and families who
owned a large share of a listed company.
Unlike Sanders, Scandinavian socialists have concluded that you can
have a big government or you can make the rich pay for it all, but you
can't do both."
"There is a cultural background that explains some of our success,
going even further back than the laissez faire period in the late 19th
and early 20th century, a culture of social trust, comparative lack of
corruption, and a Lutheran work ethic. This may reflect a long history
of internal stability, scant levels of feudalism, and a strong tradition
of trading.
Two Scandinavian economists, Andreas Bergh and Christian Bjørnskov,
have documented that a high degree of trust is an old legacy, and that
descendants of those who emigrated from Scandinavia 100 years before the
welfare state are also more trusting. Their conclusion is that trust in
others and social cohesion creates the welfare state rather than the
other way around, since it is more tempting to give power to politicians
and money to strangers if you believe that they are decent people who
would never cheat the system."
"The proportion of Swedes who say that it is never OK to accept benefits
to which one is not entitled is still high, but has been reduced from 82
percent in the early 1980s to 55 percent now.
Some erosion of these attitudes could be seen in the early 2000s,
when the number of Swedes on sick leave exploded. Even though we were
objectively healthier than almost any other population, we were off sick
more than anybody else. Often during large sporting events,
coincidentally. During the Soccer World Cup in 2002, the number of men
taking short-term sick leaves increased by 41 percent, whereas it did
not change for women. God knows what would have happened had Sweden made
it past the final eight.
In Sweden, we are experiencing these problems in the form of
increased unemployment among immigrants. Now the employment gap between
natives and foreign-born in Sweden is twice the European Union average,
even though we express less racist and discriminatory attitudes than
others. In response, Swedish politicians have recently decided to
abandon liberal immigration policies and do whatever they can to scare
people away.
It was easier to have a one-size-fits-all approach when we were all
alike, from the same background, with the same faith and attitude and a
similar education. We need a more flexible model now that we are
becoming a little bit more like…well, the United States.
Gunnar and Alva Myrdal, the two leading Social Democratic thinkers of
the 20th century, thought that the Scandinavian countries were uniquely
suited for experimenting with high taxes and redistribution. They had
homogenous populations with a strong work ethic, non-corrupt civil
services, a high degree of trust in bureaucracies and politicians—and
competitive free trade economies to foot the bill. If it did not work
there, they suggested, it would be difficult to think it could work
anywhere.
For now, the Swedish experiment in socialism continues along, in a
much-altered form and buoyed by a healthy dose of economic
liberalization. But attempting to transplant the Nordic 1970s model to
the U.S. could have disastrous effects in a country with a less
hospitable underlying culture. More government in the U.S. would not get
you a big version of Sweden. It would get you a big version of the U.S.
Postal Service."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.