Many people in the United States equate federal taxation
with socialism. Some of these same
people will also associate taxation with communism and fascism (Nazism to be
precise)—often in the same sentence.
Consequently, if asked to give an example of a socialist country—other
than their own—they would tend to turn to the Nordic countries with Sweden as
the most likely selection. The Scandinavian
countries would hardly qualify under the academic definition of socialism, but
they are high-tax, big-government countries, and Sweden is the largest, the
best-known, and the most aggressive in social experimentation.
Listening to the local political commentary in the United
States might lead one to conclude that individual liberties are inhibited by
government intervention in one’s life.
It is intriguing and refreshing to encounter the argument that Sweden’s
often intrusive government is designed to maximize individual freedom
(autonomy, to be more precise). How can
this be?
Michael Booth provides the necessary perspective in his
book The Almost Nearly Perfect People: Behind the Myth of the Scandinavian Utopia. Booth is a British writer who married a Danish
woman and lives in Denmark and reports on Scandinavia. He has provided a quick survey of the five
countries he considers to be Scandinavian: Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Iceland,
and Finland. There are no great revelations
to be found here if one is seeking detailed analyses of the future stability—or
lack thereof—of the particular societies.
However, it is interesting, entertaining, and, occasionally, a source of
startling information. He will leave you
wishing to learn more.
Booth provides this brief introduction to recent Swedish
history:
“The accomplishments of
twentieth-century Sweden are legion and, mostly, noble: from its rationalist,
respectful secularism, to its industrial might and economic success and, of
course, its compassionate, all-embracing, shining beacon of a welfare
state. For much of the last hundred
years, Sweden has been seen, and has very much seen itself, as the social
laboratory of the world: a heroic blond collective intent on pioneering better
ways of living, abiding by higher, more modern moral codes, and writing really
catchy four-minute pop songs.”
“Right now, the Swedish model
has the attention of the world’s policymakers and politicians….many a moderate
Western political leader has fantasized about emulating Sweden’s mixed economy
and consensus-driven politics. This
serene Nordic swan always seems to achieve its goals with minimum fuss and
discord: whether it be implementing progressive labor laws, orchestrating an
economic recovery following a banking misadventure, or being very, very good at
tennis, the Swedes never break a sweat.”
It is the size and power of the state, and its influence
on individual lives that is the subject here.
Booth, with his British perspective, is troubled by what he observes.
“Everything I read about the
Swedish Social Democratic government of the last century suggested an organization
that was driven by one single, overarching goal: to sever the traditional, some
would say natural, ties between its citizens, be they those that bound children
to their parents, workers to their employers, wives to their husbands, or the
elderly to their families. Instead,
individuals were encouraged—mostly by financial incentive or disincentive, but
also through legislation, propaganda, and social pressure—to ‘take their place
in the collective,’ as one commentator rather ominously put it, and become
dependent on the government.”
Swedes who believe in their current system do not agree
with this dystopian picture. They
present this description:
“….the real aim of the Swedish
government was to liberate its citizens from one another, to set them free and
allow them to become fully autonomous, independent entities in charge of their
own destinies. Far from being the
collectivist sheep their neighbors perceive them to be….the Swedes are ‘hyper-individualists’—more
so even than the Americans—and that they are ‘devoted to the pursuit of
personal autonomy’.”
This has the scent of state-sponsored
libertarianism. Could there be such a
thing? What do the Swedes mean by “personal
autonomy?”
The key to understanding the Swedish position is to
recognize that all social, organizational, religious, or family ties generate
restrictions on behavior. These restrictions can be harmful if they force a wife
to remain in an unhappy marriage because of economic reasons, or if a child’s
ability to attend a university and study whatever she wishes is constrained by
the economic circumstances and whims of her parents, or if the elderly must depend
on the good will of their children in order to be comfortable in their later
years. Women are provided with all the
support they need to both work and have a family. An extensive system of childcare allows women
to make what choices they wish. Booth
suggests that this readily available day care is also a way in which children
are encouraged to become less dependent on family ties and thus more
autonomous.
Booth provides these quotes from various observers of the
Swedish system.
“….The main objective is not to
be dependent on your family, the wife shouldn’t be dependent on her husband,
the children should be autonomous when they are eighteen, old people should not
be dependent on their children taking care of them, and therefore to a large extent
the state steps in and provides these things.”
“…the point here is not that the
state is saying this is how you should live your life, but it is providing you
with the support structure. Society is
unequal and people don’t have the same opportunities, but we are trying to lift
everybody to the same level so they can achieve the same kind of freedom and
self-realization, which only a small group could do previously.”
“The American wants the freedom
to do, the Swede wants the freedom to be.”
Granting such power and influence to a government can be
risky. Not all peoples would be so
willing to cooperate and negotiate consensus solutions. Nevertheless, the assumption that all
government is harmful and limits personal freedom is ridiculous.
The basic components of an efficient welfare state are
the provision of free or very inexpensive education, healthcare, childcare, pensions,
and an income floor. All of these come
at the cost of a high tax rate. It was
argued in Taxation, Redistribution, and Social Insurance that such high taxes can be a good investment,
particularly for middle-class families, if the taxes provide that class of
benefits.
Have the Scandinavians benefited from their welfare
states? Are they satisfied with their
lives? Are they happy? Booth is dubious about surveys that tally
self-reported claims of “happiness.” Can
the Scandinavians be trusted to convey satisfaction in the same way as the
people of other countries? Nevertheless,
Booth admits that one Scandinavian country or another is always at the top of
the list when these polls are taken.
“….to win one happiness survey
may be regarded as good fortune, to win virtually every one since 1973 is
convincing grounds for a definitive anthropological thesis.”
In addition, the Scandinavian countries are also on the top
of the list when economic mobility is tallied.
These are places where a person born rich could end up poor, and a
person born poor could end up rich. What
a concept!
And the children seem to be thriving under all that
state-provided care.
“UNICEF….recently awarded Sweden
more first places in its child well-being survey than any other country
(Denmark and Finland were second and third)….”
Certainly, not everyone will agree, but if I could have
lived my life not worrying about how my own education would be paid for, paid
my taxes and not worried about how my children’s education would be paid for or
about how to pay for healthcare, and not have to worry about income in
retirement, I would have responded much more positively to one of those
happiness surveys. And I would have felt
like I had had much more personal freedom.
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