The Nordic countries
The next supermodel
Politicians from both right and left could learn
from the Nordic countries
Feb 2nd 2013
The Economist
SMALLISH countries are often in the vanguard when it comes to reforming
government. In the 1980s Britain was out in the lead, thanks to Thatcherism and
privatisation. Tiny Singapore has long been a role model for many reformers.
Now the Nordic countries are likely to assume a similar role.
That is partly because the four main Nordics—Sweden, Denmark, Norway and
Finland—are doing rather well. If you had to be reborn anywhere in the world as
a person with average talents and income, you would want to be a Viking. The
Nordics cluster at the top of league tables of everything from economic
competitiveness to social health to happiness. They have avoided both southern
Europe’s economic sclerosis and America’s extreme inequality. Development
theorists have taken to calling successful modernisation “getting to Denmark”.
Meanwhile a region that was once synonymous with do-it-yourself furniture and
Abba has even become a cultural haven, home to “The Killing”, Noma and “Angry
Birds”.
As our special report this week explains, some of this is down to lucky timing: the
Nordics cleverly managed to have their debt crisis in the 1990s. But the second
reason why the Nordic model is in vogue is more interesting. To politicians
around the world—especially in the debt-ridden West—they offer a blueprint of
how to reform the public sector, making the state far more efficient and
responsive.
From Pippi Longstocking to private schools
The idea of lean Nordic government will come as a shock both to French
leftists who dream of socialist Scandinavia and to American conservatives who
fear that Barack Obama is bent on “Swedenisation”. They are out of date. In the
1970s and 1980s the Nordics were indeed tax-and-spend countries. Sweden’s
public spending reached 67% of GDP in 1993. Astrid Lindgren, the inventor of
Pippi Longstocking, was forced to pay more than 100% of her income in taxes.
But tax-and-spend did not work: Sweden fell from being the fourth-richest
country in the world in 1970 to the 14th in 1993.
Since then
the Nordics have changed course—mainly to the right. Government’s share of GDP
in Sweden, which has dropped by around 18 percentage points, is lower than
France’s and could soon be lower than Britain’s. Taxes have been cut: the
corporate rate is 22%, far lower than America’s. The Nordics have focused on
balancing the books. While Mr Obama and Congress dither over entitlement
reform, Sweden has reformed its pension system (see Free exchange). Its budget deficit is 0.3% of GDP; America’s is 7%.
On public services the Nordics have been similarly pragmatic. So long as
public services work, they do not mind who provides them. Denmark and Norway
allow private firms to run public hospitals. Sweden has a universal system of
school vouchers, with private for-profit schools competing with public schools.
Denmark also has vouchers—but ones that you can top up. When it comes to
choice, Milton Friedman would be more at home in Stockholm than in Washington,
DC.
All Western politicians claim to promote transparency and technology.
The Nordics can do so with more justification than most. The performance of all
schools and hospitals is measured. Governments are forced to operate in the
harsh light of day: Sweden gives everyone access to official records.
Politicians are vilified if they get off their bicycles and into official
limousines. The home of Skype and Spotify is also a leader in e-government: you
can pay your taxes with an SMS message.
This may sound like enhanced Thatcherism, but the Nordics also offer
something for the progressive left by proving that it is possible to combine
competitive capitalism with a large state: they employ 30% of their workforce
in the public sector, compared with an OECD average of 15%. They are stout
free-traders who resist the temptation to intervene even to protect iconic
companies: Sweden let Saab go bankrupt and Volvo is now owned by China’s
Geeley. But they also focus on the long term—most obviously through Norway’s
$600 billion sovereign-wealth fund—and they look for ways to temper
capitalism’s harsher effects. Denmark, for instance, has a system of
“flexicurity” that makes it easier for employers to sack people but provides
support and training for the unemployed, and Finland organises venture-capital
networks.
The sour part of the smorgasbord
The new Nordic model is not perfect. Public spending as a proportion of
GDP in these countries is still higher than this newspaper would like, or
indeed than will be sustainable. Their levels of taxation still encourage
entrepreneurs to move abroad: London is full of clever young Swedes. Too many
people—especially immigrants—live off benefits. The pressures that have forced
their governments to cut spending, such as growing global competition, will
force more change. The Nordics are bloated compared with Singapore, and they
have not focused enough on means-testing benefits.
All the same, ever more countries should look to the Nordics. Western
countries will hit the limits of big government, as Sweden did. When Angela
Merkel worries that the European Union has 7% of the world’s population but
half of its social spending, the Nordics are part of the answer. They also show
that EU countries can be genuine economic successes. And as the Asians
introduce welfare states they too will look to the Nordics: Norway is a
particular focus of the Chinese.
The main lesson to learn from the Nordics is not ideological but
practical. The state is popular not because it is big but because it works. A
Swede pays tax more willingly than a Californian because he gets decent schools
and free health care. The Nordics have pushed far-reaching reforms past unions
and business lobbies. The proof is there. You can inject market mechanisms into
the welfare state to sharpen its performance. You can put entitlement
programmes on sound foundations to avoid beggaring future generations. But you
need to be willing to root out corruption and vested interests. And you must be
ready to abandon tired orthodoxies of the left and right and forage for good
ideas across the political spectrum. The world will be studying the Nordic
model for years to come.
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