CECIL RHODES ONCE remarked that “to be born an Englishman is to win
first prize in the lottery of life.” Today the same thing could be said
of being born Nordic. The Nordic countries have not only largely escaped
the economic problems that are convulsing the Mediterranean world; they
have also largely escaped the social ills that plague America. On any
measure of the health of a society—from economic indicators like
productivity and innovation to social ones like inequality and crime—the
Nordic countries are gathered near the top (see table).
Why has this remote, thinly populated region, with its freezing
winters and expanses of wilderness, proved so successful? There was a
time when most of its population would have unhesitatingly praised their
government, which for most of the 20th century meant the social
democrats in one of their various national guises. The government had
provided the people with cradle-to-grave welfare services, rescuing them
from the brutal life of their 19th-century forebears, and stepped in to
save the capitalist economies from their periodic crises.
But free-marketers have poked holes in the pro-government
explanation and offered a powerful alternative. In the period from 1870
to 1970 the Nordic countries were among the world’s fastest-growing
countries, thanks to a series of pro-business reforms such as the
establishment of banks and the privatisation of forests. But in the
1970s and 1980s the undisciplined growth of government caused the
reforms to run into the sands. Free-marketers put the region’s
impressive recent performance down to its determination to reduce
government spending and set entrepreneurs free.
Government’s role in improving equality is also being questioned.
Andreas Bergh, of Sweden’s Research Institute of Industrial Economics,
argues that the compression of Swedish incomes took place before the
arrival of the welfare state, which was a consequence rather than a
cause of the region’s prosperity—and almost killed the goose that laid
the golden eggs.
This special report has supported some of the free-marketers’
arguments. The Nordic countries had got into the habit of spending more
on welfare than they could afford and of relying more on a handful of
giant companies than was wise. They are right to try to trim their
states and make life easier for business. But it would be wrong to
ignore the role of government entirely.
The Nordic countries pride themselves on the honesty and transparency
of their governments. Nordic governments are subject to rigorous
scrutiny: for example, in Sweden everyone has access to all official
records. Politicians are vilified if they get off their bicycles and
into official limousines.
The Nordics have added two other important qualities to transparency:
pragmatism and tough-mindedness. On discovering that the old social
democratic consensus was no longer working, they let it go with
remarkably little fuss and introduced new ideas from across the
political spectrum. They also proved utterly determined in pushing
through reforms. It is a grave error to mistake Nordic niceness for
softheadedness.
Pragmatism explains why the new consensus has quickly replaced the
old one. Few Swedish Social Democratic politicians, for instance, want
to dismantle the conservative reforms put in place in recent years. It
also explains why Nordic countries can often seem to be amalgams of
left- and right-wing policies.
Pragmatism also explains why the Nordics are continuing to upgrade
their model. They still have plenty of problems. Their governments
remain too big and their private sectors too small. Their taxes are
still too high and some of their benefits too generous. The Danish
system of flexicurity puts too much emphasis on security and not enough
on flexibility. Norway’s oil boom is threatening to destroy the work
ethic. It is a bad sign that over 6% of the workforce are on sick leave
at any one time and around 9% of the working-age population live on
disability pensions. But the Nordics are continuing to introduce
structural reforms, perhaps a bit too slowly but stolidly and
relentlessly. And they are doing all this without sacrificing what makes
the Nordic model so valuable: the ability to invest in human capital
and protect people from the disruptions that are part of the capitalist
system.
Getting to Denmark
Most of the rich world now faces the same problems that the Nordics
faced in the early 1990s—out-of-control public spending and overgenerous
entitlement programmes. Southern Europe needs a dose of Nordic
tough-mindedness if it is to get its finances under control. And America
needs a dose of Nordic pragmatism if it is to have any chance of
reining in entitlements and reforming the public sector.
The Nordics are hardly blushing violets when it comes to advertising
the virtues of their model. Nordic think-tanks produce detailed studies
in English about how they reformed their states. Nordic politicians
fight their corner in international meetings and Nordic consultants sell
their public-sector expertise around the world. Dag Detter played a
leading role in restructuring the Swedish state’s commercial portfolio
in the 1990s, representing more than a quarter of the business sector.
He has since advised governments in Asia and across Europe.
Yet it is hard to see the Nordic model of government spreading quickly, mainly because the Nordic talent for government is
sui generis.
Nordic government arose from a combination of difficult geography and
benign history. All the Nordic countries have small populations, which
means that members of the ruling elites have to get on with each other.
Their monarchs lived in relatively modest places and their barons had to
strike bargains with independent-minded peasants and seafarers.
They embraced liberalism early. Sweden guaranteed freedom of the
press in 1766, and from the 1840s onwards it abolished preference for
aristocrats in handing out top government jobs and created a
meritocratic and corruption-free civil service. They also embraced
Protestantism—a religion that reduces the church to a helpmate and
emphasises the direct relationship between the individual and his God.
One of the Lutheran church’s main priorities was teaching peasants to
read.
The combination of geography and history has provided Nordic
governments with two powerful resources: trust in strangers and belief
in individual rights. A Eurobarometer survey of broad social trust (as
opposed to trust in immediate family) showed the Nordics in leading
positions (see chart below). Economists say that high levels of trust
result in lower transaction costs—there is no need to resort to
American-style lawsuits or Italian-style quid-pro-quo deals in order to
get things done. But its virtues go beyond that. Trust means that
high-quality people join the civil service. Citizens pay their taxes and
play by the rules. Government decisions are widely accepted.
The World Values Survey, which has been monitoring values in over 100
countries since 1981, says that the Nordics are the world’s biggest
believers in individual autonomy. The Nordic combination of big
government and individualism may seem odd to some, but according to Lars
Tragardh, of Ersta Skondal University College, Stockholm, the Nordics
have no trouble reconciling the two: they regard the state’s main job as
promoting individual autonomy and social mobility. Any piece of Nordic
social legislation—particularly the family laws of recent years—can be
justified in terms of individual autonomy. Universal free education
allows students of all backgrounds to achieve their potential. Separate
taxation of spouses puts wives on an equal footing with their husbands.
Universal day care for children makes it possible for both parents to
work full-time. Mr Tragardh has a useful phrase to describe this
mentality: “statist individualism”.
Nordic people take this attitude to government with them when they go
abroad. In the 19th and early 20th centuries some 1.3m people, a
quarter of the Swedish population at the time, emigrated, mostly to the
United States. America created an entire genre of jokes about “dumb
Swedes” and their willingness to obey rules. These dumb Swedes created
the best-governed enclaves in America, such as Minnesota. Even today
Americans with Nordic roots are 10% more likely than the average
American to believe that “most people can be trusted”.
Size isn’t everything
Economists frequently express puzzlement about the Nordic countries’
recent economic success, given that their governments are so big.
According to a professional rule of thumb, an increase in tax revenues
as a share of GDP of ten percentage points is usually associated with a
drop in annual growth of half to one percentage point. But such numbers
need to be adjusted to allow for the benefits of honesty and efficiency.
The Italian government, for instance, imposes a heavy burden on society
because the politicians who run it are mainly concerned with extracting
rent rather than providing public services. Goran Persson, a former
Swedish prime minister, once compared Sweden’s economy with a
bumblebee—“with its overly heavy body and little wings, supposedly it
should not be able to fly—but it does.” Today it is fighting fit and
flying better than it has done for decades.