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In reply to the discussion: Nordic Model: a balance of regulated capitalism, universal social welfare, political democracy, and [View all]jtuck004
(15,882 posts)8. Dark lands: the grim truth behind the 'Scandinavian miracle'
I never take any source as the only truth, so I like to read the other side...it's like dragging a jigsaw puzzle out of 12 boxes of other puzzle's pieces.
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So let's remove those rose-tinted ski goggles and take a closer look at the objects of our infatuation
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Why do the Danes score so highly on international happiness surveys? Well, they do have high levels of trust and social cohesion, and do very nicely from industrial pork products, but according to the OECD they also work fewer hours per year than most of the rest of the world. As a result, productivity is worryingly sluggish. How can they afford all those expensively foraged meals and hand-knitted woollens? Simple, the Danes also have the highest level of private debt in the world (four times as much as the Italians, to put it into context; enough to warrant a warning from the IMF), while more than half of them admit to using the black market to obtain goods and services. Perhaps the Danes' dirtiest secret is that, according to a 2012 report from the Worldwide Fund for Nature, they have the fourth largest per capita ecological footprint in the world. Even ahead of the US. Those offshore windmills may look impressive as you land at Kastrup, but Denmark burns an awful lot of coal. Worth bearing that in mind the next time a Dane wags her finger at your patio heater.
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Presumably the correlative of this is that Denmark has the best public services? According to the OECD's Programme for International Student Assessment rankings (Pisa), Denmark's schools lag behind even the UK's. Its health service is buckling too. (The other day, I turned up at my local A&E to be told that I had to make an appointment, which I can't help feeling rather misunderstands the nature of the service.) According to the World Cancer Research Fund, the Danes have the highest cancer rates on the planet. "But at least the trains run on time!" I hear you say. No, that was Italy under Mussolini. The Danish national rail company has skirted bankruptcy in recent years, and the trains most assuredly do not run on time. Somehow, though, the government still managed to find £2m to fund a two-year tax-scandal investigation largely concerned, as far as I can make out, with the sexual orientation of the prime minister's husband, Stephen Kinnock.
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Other awkward truths? There is more than a whiff of the police state about the fact that Danish policeman refuse to display ID numbers and can refuse to give their names. The Danes are aggressively jingoistic, waving their red-and-white dannebrog at the slightest provocation. Like the Swedes, they embraced privatisation with great enthusiasm (even the ambulance service is privatised); and can seem spectacularly unsophisticated in their race relations (cartoon depictions of black people with big lips and bones through their noses are not uncommon in the national press). And if you think a move across the North Sea would help you escape the paedophiles, racists, crooks and tax-dodging corporations one reads about in the British media on a daily basis, I'm afraid I must disabuse you of that too. Got plenty of them.
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Like the dealer who never touches his own supply, those dirty frackers the Norwegians boast of using only renewable energy sources, all the while amassing the world's largest sovereign wealth fund selling fossil fuels to the rest of us. As Norwegian anthropologist Thomas Hylland Eriksen put it to me when I visited his office in Oslo University: "We've always been used to thinking of ourselves as part of the solution, and with the oil we suddenly became part of the problem. Most people are really in denial."
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http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jan/27/scandinavian-miracle-brutal-truth-denmark-norway-sweden
That last paragraph reminds me of Texas. Bet the drop in prices has them moving around.
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Nordic Model: a balance of regulated capitalism, universal social welfare, political democracy, and [View all]
midnight
Jan 2015
OP
Taking care of all the citizen's in one's country should be what leadership is all about….
midnight
Jan 2015
#9
Onehandle the struggle seems to be the manufactured outcome from the deregulation of the banks.
midnight
Jan 2015
#4
Yes indeed… President Carter took steps to create an energy independent country…
midnight
Jan 2015
#10
I was amazed to have a talk with a bagger relation. I brought up the Nordic model and summed it up.
freshwest
Jan 2015
#7
The author's take on Iceland leaves me wondering if this whole article belongs in The Onion?
Fred Sanders
Jan 2015
#13
I was hoping to show you another article printed a few months ago. However, here is something
midnight
Jan 2015
#15
But how does that help very rich people? Their increasing wealth is the most important
valerief
Jan 2015
#18