The OP represents what I take to be Freethought. In Freethought one tries to look at issues without looking through a partclar -ism.
In the OP some try to shoehorn a country like Sweden into a dictionary definition of socialism amd the USA in old Marxist terms.
The better approach is to say Sweden is a successful system with attributes a, b, and c that differentiates from say the American system with attributes d,e,f. Therefore Sweden is bettor or worse than the American system for reasons a,b,c.
If we do nor get down to specifics it is a never ending philosophical debate on meaning.
Horse shit. The Nordic Model goes straight back to the Kanslergade Agreement, which was
overtly and officially, a compromise package that included the most pressing priorities of several different parties, some of them being socialist. It constitutes a compromise between socialism and capitalism, but socialism was clearly a part of that compromise. To deny this would reflect a stunning ignorance of history.
en.wikipedia.org
If you want to know who to thank for making sure that that compromise happened, you can thank Thorvald Stauning, who remains one of the most effective statesmen in European history. He is a model of statesmanship because he used compromise to create a better system than any of the parties in his government could have created by themselves. He turned his government into a united team, and that team realized that their first responsibility was toward the common people of Denmark, not toward partisan loyalties.
However, that great Danish statesman also happened to be a socialist.
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But this was a feature of German socialism as well, and socialism in Eastern Europe. In these countries the unions see themselves as partners with the capitalist and the goal of the union is to enrich both parties. Its still like this in these areas.
In England, USA and France trade unions had an adversarial tradition where the goal was to bleed the capitalist as much as possible. It led to situations where capitalists were forced to enter into agreements making them uncompetitive. The American train union is the most famous example. Ensuring that a guy was hired to shuffle coal, regardless if the train was electric or not. And other craziness.
Trade unions were adversarial in the USA because the owners were adversarial at first (and many still are). Hell, the GOP is anti-union still.
I think capitalists have always been adversarial to labourunions. In Scandinavia they only cooperate with the unions because they have to.
In Scandinavia, they have a tradition of honoring the compromise agreement that made peace between the owners of capital and labor. This is a very important part of their history, and it would be a fool that overlooked its significance. These partly symbolic political victories have a tremendous long-term impact that outlives their immediate significance.
The Scandinavian states are good places to do business precisely because the trade unions have traditionally been on the side of helping the businesses they work for prosper as long as the pay and working conditions are reasonable.
Well, Scandinavians have a history of honouring any agreement. We're often called naive by other people. This goes right through all of society. The mechanics of this is perhaps the hardest thing for non-Scandinavians to understand about Sweden.
In the olden days (1960 and before) if you were rumoured to have broken an agreement the rest of society would conspire to freeze you out and cutting you off from polite society. This can ruin your life. Swedish culture is all about being passive aggressive and leaving those who don't conform in the cold. If you are seen as untrustworthy or worse, not normal, superficially everybody is nice to you. But nobody will do business with you. Or hire you. Or have sex with you.
It's still like this. but it's slowly changing. I think it's due to the recent decades immigration. Non-ethnic Swedes who continually violate agreements with zero repercussion annoy ethnic Swedes. Its hard to bully someone into obedience who doesn't have the social skills to understand they're being bullied. Immigrants. The social rules are complicated, very subtle, absolute and are almost never taught to immigrants.
It's hard to overstate how extreme Swedish culture is. It's bizarre. As a Swede, you don't understand how strange it is until you have lived elsewhere for a bit.
Anyway... this is why capitalists and workers get along so well in Sweden. They are so good at compromising and getting along with each other because because the social cost of being seen as greedy is extremely high.
Especially for rich people. Social pressures are inverted. The higher your status, the less things you can get away with. It's called "the Law of Jante". In Sweden you can tell whose the boss because he's the guy kissing the most ass. The lower your status the more people will be kind to you, and people compete in status by being the most kind to others, and refuse others help. This makes the capitalists extremely unwilling to mistreat their workers.
I am aware of the Law of Jante. I have met other Scandinavians, and some of them I have met believe that the idea that this is uniquely Scandinavian is at least slightly exaggerated.
We, in English-speaking culture, have a similar concept to the idea that you should keep your agreements. We call it honor. I am not sure that there is a uniquely English concept of honor, but among the English aristocracy, there was a very strong concept of chivalry. A man's adherence to the concept of chivalry was not just a measure of his trustworthiness, but it was a value of his worth as a man...basically, if you said that a person fell short of any of the values in the code of chivalry, you were insinuating that that person may as well be a eunuch.
The code of chivalry goes:
- Thou shalt believe all that the Church teaches and thou shalt observe all its directions.
- Thou shalt defend the Church.
- Thou shalt respect all weaknesses, and shalt constitute thyself the defender of them.
- Thou shalt love the country in which thou wast born.
- Thou shalt not recoil before thine enemy.
- Thou shalt make war against the infidel without cessation and without mercy.
- Thou shalt perform scrupulously thy feudal duties, if they be not contrary to the laws of God.
- Thou shalt never lie, and shalt remain faithful to thy pledged word.
- Thou shalt be generous, and give largesse to everyone.
- Thou shalt be everywhere and always the champion of the Right and the Good against Injustice and Evil.
While the concept was not strictly British, the stories of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table made the British aristocracy obsessed with any value-system that would make them seem to be more the "knight in shining armor." Whether or not it was uniquely British, it caught on.
Therefore, the British, at least, do have as much of a cultural and historical reason why they should value keeping an agreement just as much as any Scandinavian if you want to go that route.
I don't. I really consider "codes of honor" like the "Law of Jante" or the "Chivalric code" to be of equally dubious significance. I think it is slightly more useful to look at specific events, specific organizations, and specific historical leaders.
By the way, about 24.7% of British labor is unionized. You can thank the Fabian society for that much. The Fabian Society's efforts eventually helped lead to the rise of the British Labour Party, so I do think that they were significant in the history of the British labor movement.
The Fabian Society's views were very simple: ideally, a union should do as little as possible to disrupt business, and they should only use strike actions when they are sure that the sins of a company are grievous enough to warrant "striking hard." They had the view that, if a union could possibly coexist peacefully with the owners of a company, then they should. Major strikes should therefore only be used in cases where it is clear that sympathy for the strike action would be almost universal, and they should have real consequences.
Their philosophy worked reasonably well because the UK has one of the highest rates of union representation in the entire world:
Across most developed nations, labor union membership is getting rarer. Back in 1985, 30 percent of workers in OECD countries were labor union members and that has now fallen to just 17 percent. Which countries have the highest and lowest levels of membership today?
www.forbes.com
In any case, you choose to attribute the Kanslergade Agreement to the Law of Jante, and I disagree with you..
I would look into the history of one of the most important political parties that helped to form the Kanslergade Agreement. The
Radikale Venstre party was an important centrist party in the history of Swedish politics, and at the time of the Kanslergade Agreement, Staunting was a member of this important kingmaker party.
However, the founding philosophy of the
Radikale Venstre party was actually a mixture of both British and American ideas.
*tail-swishes* Yes, Denmark owes part of their awesome to a dirty American. The founding ideas of the
Radikale Venstre party were derived from the British statesman John Stuart Mill and the American economist Henry George!
John Stuart Mill was one of the founders of British feminist philosophy and of modern third-way economics. John Stuart Mill actually started off as more "libertarian" (as modern assholes would put it), but over the course of his career, he came to steadily include some socialist ideals into his way of thinking. He always supported free markets, but in the end, he was not a purist. He was open to socialist ideas as long as someone could prove that those socialist ideas did something to genuinely make people's lives better. In other words, he helped to found the modern progressive movement in Anglo-American politics.
Henry George was actually a unique type of socialist. He would not fit in anywhere in 21st Century politics, but I must admit that I find many things about his views to be very attractive. I am attracted more, in principle, to a tax on property than I am to a tax on income. I would need to hear a sound economic argument for the effectiveness of a Georgist taxation scheme in order to endorse it in actual practice, though.
I argue that
Radikale Venstre ultimately ended up playing the all-important kingmaker role that led to the Kanslergade Agreement.
While I believe that your "Law of Jante" might or might not have had some kind of an influence, I have met at least as many Swedish people that scoff the idea as Swedish people that endorse it. In my opinion, you might as well say, "Of course, you can trust an Englishman. They live according to a knightly code of chivalry." British people are also no longer settling disputes by dueling with pistols or, alternatively, by engaging in boxing matches. I believe that, in many conversations, these themes are vastly exaggerated beyond their actual influence.
There is no reason why other countries should not be just as capable as the Nordic states of finding a middle-ground. We just need to chart a course that is realistic.