[With] a reputation for being peaceful,
egalitarian, progressive, liberal and educated, [besides] having excellent
furniture and crime novels, too … Scandinavia
countries just seem to do it better — an idea that supporters and
critics label "Nordic exceptionalism."
The Independent's
Ana Swanson explores the idea of the utopian fantasy that Denmark and its sister nations are made out to be:
But how much truth is there in the popular idea of Nordic exceptionalism? Michael Booth,
a British journalist, examines this question in detail in a recent
book, "The Almost Nearly Perfect People: Behind the Myth of the
Scandinavian Utopia." Booth, a U.K. native who has lived in Scandinavia
for over a decade, plays the part of a cultural interpreter, examining,
poking and prodding the reality of life in Nordic countries from every
angle. Booth finds plenty to question in the rest of the world's
assumptions about the Nordic miracle, but also lots that we can learn
from them.
Why is it that the Nordic model has attracted so many fans, but relatively few visitors?
Denmark is a pretty good place to live but it is by no
stretch of the imagination the utopia many in politics and the media in
the U.S. claim it to be.
We all like to have a "happy place" — somewhere over the
rainbow where we imagine life to be perfect — don’t we? For many, that
place used to be the Mediterranean: we all dreamed of a stone house
among the vines. After the economic crash, I think a lot of people
started to look towards Scandinavia for what they believed to be a less
rampantly capitalistic form of society.
The difference is, few actually actively seek to move to
Scandinavia, for obvious reasons: the weather is appalling, the taxes
are the highest in the world, the cost of living is similarly
ridiculous, the languages are impenetrable, the food is (still) awful
for the most part and, increasingly, these countries are making it very
clear they would prefer foreigners to stay away.
What are some of the biggest misconceptions that you find in how the rest of the world understands the Nordic countries?
Again, I think we've all been guilty of projecting some kind
of utopian fantasy on them. … Denmark … promotes itself as a "green pioneer" and
finger wags at the world about CO2 emissions, and yet it regularly beats
the U.S. and virtually every other country on earth in terms of its per
capita ecological footprint. For all their wind turbines, the Danes
still burn a lot of coal and drive a lot of cars, their country is home
to the world’s largest shipping company (Mærsk), and the region’s
largest air hub.
Sweden is supposedly "neutral" (it’s not, and has not been
for decades), yet since the days when it sold iron ore to Hitler, its
economy has always benefited from its arms industry, which is one of the
world’s largest.
The Norwegians have fallen prey to precisely the same kind of
problems as other oil-rich states: their economy depends far too much
on one industry (oil), they’ve taken their foot off the gas in terms of
their work ethic, and now all young Norwegians want to do is be
"something in the media" or open a cupcake place.
Politicians in the U.S. like Bernie Sanders praise
Denmark for its relative income equality, its free universities,
parental leave, subsidized childcare, and national health system. That
all sounds pretty good, right?
It is fantastic in theory, except that, in Denmark, the
quality of the free education and health care is substandard: They are
way down on the PISA [Programme for International Student Assessment]
educational rankings, have the lowest life expectancy in the region,
and the highest rates of death from cancer. And there is broad consensus
that the economic model of a public sector and welfare state on this
scale is unsustainable. The Danes’ dirty secret is that its
public sector has been propped up by — now dwindling — oil revenues. In
Norway’s case, of course, it’s no secret.
You describe the Danes as having a strong sense
of work-life balance – specifically, being much more focused on life
than work. What are the positives and negatives of that attitude?
Positives: Danes spend more time with their families. Negatives: Danes
spend more times with their families. Plus, they have run up huge
private debt levels, and no one answers the phone on a Friday afternoon.
… One thing that’s often glossed over among outsiders is
the extraordinarily high tax level, which is high for the middle class
as well as the wealthy. Do Danes think that they get their money’s worth
in social services? Do you?
Denmark has the highest direct and indirect taxes in the
world, and you don’t need to be a high earner to make it into the top
tax bracket of 56% (to which you must add 25% value-added tax, the
highest energy taxes in the world, car import duty of 180%, and so on).
How the money is spent is kept deliberately opaque by the authorities.
Danes do tend to feel that they get value for money, but we should not
overlook the fact that the majority of Danes either work for, or receive
benefits from, the welfare state.
Greater numbers of immigrants have been leading to rising
xenophobia in some Nordic countries, as well as higher income
inequality. Do you think these trends say anything about the strength of
the Nordic model?
All of Europe is dealing with this issue, but of course
smaller populations feel more threatened, and cynical right wing
politicians (if you’ll forgive the tautology) take advantage of that
fear. Also, there is no "Nordic model" when it comes to immigration and
integration: there is the Swedish model (open door) and the Danish model
(close the door and put up a "Go Away" sign), which the Norwegians and
Finns are copying.
Denmark has won almost every happiness survey since 1973,
but you describe them in the book as a “frosty, solemn bunch” who take a
lot of anti-depressants. Do they really deserve to be consistently
ranked as the world’s happiest country?
No, it’s a nonsense and, in fact, they have dropped from the
top spot in recent surveys, mostly because they are not as rich as they
once were. The sad take-away from that is, money does, in fact, make you
happy. I don’t think they ever were the "happiest" people in the world,
but you could argue they have been the most "satisfied." They are good
at appreciating the small things in life and making the most of what
they have — a legacy, I think, of experiencing the rough hand of
geopolitics in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Related:
52% of the Norwegian population receives government financial aid; A health care worker in Norway is "not hired as a guard dog but trained to see suffering"
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