News

Law

Asset Management

Investment Banking

Wealth

Hedge Funds

People

Newsletters

Events

Lists

After Hours

Despite US disdain for ‘the costs of socialism’, the Swedish model works

British journalist's take on why his adopted country is not the socialist caricature some perceive

Despite US disdain for ‘the costs of socialism’, the Swedish model works

Last year Paul Krugman, the Nobel laureate in economics, had a good laugh at the expense of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, which had felt the strange urge to publish a report on “the opportunity costs of socialism”. Sweden, among other presumptive dangers, was singled out as having a lower gross domestic product per capita and a higher tax-to-GDP ratio than the US. Proof, no doubt, that “socialism” didn’t work.

Socialism, in this case, is in the eye of the beholder and a semantic argument can of course be made that, in the case of Sweden and its Scandinavian neighbours, “social-democratic” is a far more appropriate description of a society intent on proving that an open-market economy is not incompatible with an extended and efficient welfare state.

WSJ Logo