New York Post

Paradise Lost

Bernie Sanders’ socialist utopia doesn’t exist

- rich lowry comments.lowry@nationalre­view.com

SCANDINAVI­A is the American left’s ShangriLa. It is the land of social democracy and of all good things. It is the answer to any objection that new welfare benefits can’t be adopted here. But look how well they work in Sweden.

Bernie Sanders reverted to this article of faith when challenged over his socialism at last week’s Democratic primary debate. He invited America to sit at the knee of Scandinavi­a. “I think we should look to countries like Denmark, like Sweden and Norway,” he said, “and learn from what they have accomplish­ed for their working people.”

There are a couple of things wrong with the Left’s romance with these countries, as Swedish analyst Nima Sanandaji notes in a recent monograph. It doesn’t fully appreciate the sources of Nordic success, or how Scandinavi­a has turned away from the socialism so alluring to its internatio­nal admirers.

The first thing to know is that Scandinavi­a is inhabited by Scandinavi­ans — a hardworkin­g, responsibl­e people who have had high levels of social trust and cohesion for a very long time. These are splendid qualities for any place to have. As Sanandaji points out, Scandinavi­a already had high life expectancy and other health indicators before it expanded its welfare state, and already had more equal societies.

You can take the Scandinavi­ans out of Scandinavi­a, but not the Scandinavi­a out of the Scandinavi­ans. Sure enough, they have thrived here in the United States outside of their socialdemo­cracy hothouse. The descendant­s of Scandinavi­an immigrants have median incomes 20 percent higher than the US average, and their poverty rate is half the average, according to Sanandaji.

No one remembers, but Scandinavi­a wasn’t always a watchword for social democracy. Indeed, Sweden was such a freemarket success story that Republican­s should be citing it in their debates. It started as a poor country in the late 19th century, then achieved takeoff under a dynamic capitalist system into the middle of the 20th century. Its boom coincided with the time when its taxes were lower than those in the United States and the rest of Europe.

When Bernie Sanders and his ilk hold up Scandinavi­a as an exemplar, they are really thinking of a couple of decades beginning in the early 1970s when Sweden and others got their full Sanders on.

In Sweden, the effective marginal tax rate topped 100 percent in some circumstan­ces. There is a reason that IKEA founder Ingvar Kamprad fled the country in 1973. Sweden instituted a scheme to confiscate corporate profits and hand them over to labor unions. The idea was, in the words of a Swedish economist, to have “a market economy with out individual­ist capitalist­s and entreprene­urs.”

This was about as logical as it sounded — and delivered predictabl­e results. The socialist Golden Years weren’t so golden for economic performanc­e. Entreprene­urship plummeted. Job creation and wages sputtered.

The Scandinavi­an story the last few decades has been a turn against socialism. Taxes have fallen and markets liberalize­d. Kamprad returned to Sweden.

It became obvious that generousen­ough welfare benefits can undermine the initiative of even the heartiest Scandinavi­an stock, and these countries have been adjusting accordingl­y. An article in The New York Times a couple of years ago recounted the backlash against welfare dependence in Denmark. It cited a study that projected in 2013 only three of 98 municipali­ties would have a majority of residents working.

If no one will mistake these countries for Texas, they allow enough economic openness to stay vibrant. “Scandinavi­an countries,” Sanandaji writes, “compensate for high taxes and labor market rigidities by following liberal policies in other areas, such as business freedom and openness to trade.” Denmark, of all places, is ranked 11th on the Heritage Foundation’s index of economic freedom, right above the United States.

Nothing will undermine the left’s faith in the Scandinavi­an model, but Bernie Sanders could learn a thing or two from the reformers in the countries that he so admires.

 ??  ?? Not so great after all: Pedestrian­s stand near a poster showing homeless people in Stockholm, Sweden, in August. Bernie Sanders thinks America should follow the path blazed by such Scandinavi­an “utopias.”
Not so great after all: Pedestrian­s stand near a poster showing homeless people in Stockholm, Sweden, in August. Bernie Sanders thinks America should follow the path blazed by such Scandinavi­an “utopias.”
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