-
Website
http://willwilkinson.net/flybottle -
Original page
http://www.willwilkinson.net/flybottle/2008/04/30/the-hong-kong-of-scandinavia/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Robert S. Porter
56 comments · 1 points
-
mfarmer
18 comments · 7 points
-
uknowbetter
362 comments · 19 points
-
huadpe
40 comments · 1 points
-
Vangel
78 comments · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Bernanke and the Pringles Problem
4 days ago · 17 comments
-
What Progressive Redistribution Is For
6 days ago · 23 comments
-
Can “the Big Cutoff” Settle the Science?
2 weeks ago · 57 comments
-
When You’re in a Liquidity Trap…
5 days ago · 12 comments
-
Climategate
3 weeks ago · 62 comments
-
Bernanke and the Pringles Problem
"The Scandinavian countries are egalitarian. They have universal unions, high minimum wages, and a strong welfare state. But they also are highly open. They practice free trade. Business there is free to import, export, and outsource. Business there is free to hire and fire. And yet the Scandinavians enjoy, most of the time, the lowest unemployment rates in Europe.
The secret is in the wages. If you are a business in Sweden or Norway, there is one thing you are not free to do. You are not free to cut your wages. You are not free to compete by going after cut-rate workers, either native or immigrant. You are not free to undercut the union rate. Successful businesses must, therefore, find other ways to compete. They do it by keeping productivity high. This means that advanced industries thrive in Scandinavia, while backward ones die out. (And that progressive businessmen prosper, while reactionaries fade away.) As a result, the economies stay competitive. The tax and welfare systems then make sure that everyone has enough to live on."
Sounds like Mutualism. Indeed it's overlooked by most.