dairygirl4u2c Posted May 28, 2013 Share Posted May 28, 2013 (edited) Americans Would Prefer Denmark Social Safety Net & Taxes If Informed Last year Denmark was ranked the happiest country in world. This year Denmark is ranked the second happiest country in the world topped only by Norway. They are both successful high tax, very good social safety net (universal healthcare, unemployment compensation, retraining, free or affordable higher education, etc.) countries. They are both democratic. Denmark and other Scandinavian countries weathered the 2008 Great Depression better than most of Europe and the United States. They did this even with what Americans would consider a bloated public sector. Many will argue that these countries are small in comparison to the US and as such it is not a good comparison. Many will argue that the wealth from North Sea Oil reserves is partly the reason. Many will argue that because these countries are strong welfare states that they are less competitive. The reality is Americans have been lied to or allowed to wallow in their own ignorance. They have been taught to believe fallacies that counter one’s intuition. Once this indoctrination is complete, change towards progress is non-existent or painfully slow. If one is to believe in the economy of scale, America’s size makes efficiency even more possible than in these small countries. America is extremely rich with natural resources, not only oil. The problem is that it is distributed unfairly among the few that ‘stole’ it or bought it on the cheap (e.g.,25 families own 1% of all land and the resources of that land in America). Denmark and other Scandinavian countries’ with strong social safety nets have not made them less competitive. In fact they are way at the top of the list with the United States. Most other countries at the top have strong social safety nets as well. As a society they care more for the social, economic, and health well-being of their fellow citizens than America. One of the reasons Denmark and other Scandinavian countries with strong social safety nets weathered the Great Recession better is that they had a built in stimulus. In America when one loses a job, they get unemployment for a short time (this recession was an exception). That unemployment is much less than wages and runs out quickly. That means the contribution to the economy by that laid off worker makes a recession much worse as much less money is entered into the economy. In countries with strong safety nets, workers get up to 90% of their wages. As such the economic shock from unemployment is mitigated till the economy’s ‘overstock’ is mitigated until increased employment is required. In America we are encouraged to disregard logic and obvious reality for the sake of ideology. The ideology is present to maintain not only a status quo, but a country where only a select few will ever have the opportunity to be wealthy. It is a ‘me first’ and selfish ideology. It is an ideology where wealth is built on the backs of the middle class and the poor, Class Warfare. Independent Senator Bernie Sander’s letter on Denmark is probative. Edited May 28, 2013 by dairygirl4u2c Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Winchester Posted May 28, 2013 Share Posted May 28, 2013 I'd prefer a new Lamborghini. Preferences do not create property rights. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chestertonian Posted May 28, 2013 Share Posted May 28, 2013 “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.†Benjamin Franklin Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chestertonian Posted May 28, 2013 Share Posted May 28, 2013 In America we are encouraged to disregard logic and obvious reality for the sake of ideology. The ideology is present to maintain not only a status quo, but a country where only a select few will ever have the opportunity to be wealthy. It is a ‘me first’ and selfish ideology. They're dumping debt on the few children they're having, and yet they are considered 'unselfish.' Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
centurion Posted May 28, 2013 Share Posted May 28, 2013 Many will argue that these countries are small in comparison to the US and as such it is not a good comparison. Many will argue that the wealth from North Sea Oil reserves is partly the reason. Many will argue that because these countries are strong welfare states that they are less competitive. I wouldn't argue any of these. I would point to them as obvious and fundamental differences between a couple of small European counties and the United States of America. Just as a point of reference: Approx. population of Norway 2013: 5,000,000 Approx. population of Denmark 2013: 5,500,000 Approx. population of United States 2013: 314,000,000 Also, both Denmark and Norway are largely homogenous societies that lack many of our more serious socio-cultural problems. Neither Norway nor Denmark share a roughly 3,000 mile long open-border with an out-of-control neighbor where drug-lords rule as warlords and make their fortunes by running drugs, weapons, and people across said border. Oh, and then there are articles like this: http://www.tnp.no/norway/economy/3584-individual-debt-in-norway-reaches-a-record-level Things are not so perfect in Scandinavia. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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