Canada is more ‘socialist’ than Scandinavian countries
Advertisement
Read this article for free:
or
Already have an account? Log in here »
To continue reading, please subscribe:
Monthly Digital Subscription
$1 per week for 24 weeks*
- Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
- Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
- Access News Break, our award-winning app
- Play interactive puzzles
*Billed as $4.00 plus GST every four weeks. After 24 weeks, price increases to the regular rate of $19.00 plus GST every four weeks. Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.
Monthly Digital Subscription
$4.75/week*
- Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
- Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
- Access News Break, our award-winning app
- Play interactive puzzles
*Billed as $19 plus GST every four weeks. Cancel any time.
To continue reading, please subscribe:
Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional
$1 for the first 4 weeks*
*Your next subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $16.99 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $23.99 plus GST every four weeks.
Read unlimited articles for free today:
or
Already have an account? Log in here »
Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 06/02/2023 (989 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
Proponents of ever more expensive government social programs often point to other nations, usually in Scandinavia, as places Canada should emulate. These advocates call those nations, erroneously, socialist or social democratic. However, they are not.
It is important to recognize the difference between a typical Scandinavian nation’s general political economy and a genuinely socialist one. The first difference, a key marker of socialism, is that the state dominates the economy — owning majority stakes in all large enterprises (and many smaller ones, too).
By that standard, France, Russia, China, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, India, Brazil and Canada, by their state ownership of many firms and property, are far more “socialist” than Norway, Sweden, Finland or Denmark (Scandinavia), where government control of business is rare.
Governments there do not monopolize power and gas utilities. A Swedish health expert who visited Manitoba in 2000 wryly observed that Manitoba’s government-owned car insurance monopoly reminded him of “East Germany in the 1970s.”
All four Nordic nations have vibrant, dynamic free-market economies and stock and bond markets. They generally refrain from the protectionist policies common in more statist realms. Free trade and commercial freedom are viewed as crucial to economic vitality there, just as in other successful free-market democracies. Ill-informed Canadian politicians conflate government economic intervention with social programs, which is not the same thing.
As to the Nordic nations, Deloitte reports government spending is around half of their total gross domestic product (GDP). This is substantially higher than the approximate 40 per cent level found in the United States and Canada (excluding the outlier years of the recent COVID-19 pandemic). Nordic nations’ spending is mainly on transfer payments, such as income support to low-income people or families.
However, in contrast to North America, Nordic programs are structured to minimize disincentives to seek and hold jobs. Unemployment there is low.
Social supports usually feature training or apprenticeship programs, enhancing employability and reducing the risk of people leaving the Nordic labour force. Their programs also do not penalize newly hired workers by cutting back support or taxing their total income at a high marginal rate.
People leaving welfare there do not face an effective tax rate making wage income lower than the taxpayer-supported dole. Overall support is higher in the Nordic nations, hence the touted “generosity” that our “social justice” warrior-advocates seek here.
Nordic support comes with a high price: personal income-tax rates are steeply progressive in Scandinavia, topping out at 50 per cent in some. Value-added taxes (VAT), which taxes consumption at a high level and are comparable to GST here, are in the 18 per cent range, with few exemptions.
However, corporate income tax rates are competitive with other developed nations — in the high teens or around 20 per cent.
Unlike the self-styled intelligentsia in Canada, Nordic “progressive” voters, and the politicians they support, are neither anti-business nor anti-capitalist. They acknowledge that the free-market economy is the golden goose – and should not be hampered or penalized, nor its profits confiscated. Firms’ free cash flows are reinvested in operations and hiring.
Even Nordic education and health care are market-based, offering school vouchers, which lead to real parental choice between competing schools. Health care is single-payer but consumer-focused, with competing public- and private-sector service providers and sophisticated activity-based/results-based funding for hospitals.
A more expansive, intelligent, competition-oriented, efficient welfare state is not socialism.
Ian Madsen is the senior policy analyst at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.