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Sweden: Poorer Than You Think

by William L. Anderson

[Posted May 16, 2002]

One of the enduring myths of the "Third Way" welfare state is that a
nation as a whole can have a high standard of living--even if no one
really has to work--as long as government transfers massive amounts of
wealth from those who are well off to those who are less well off.
For the past four decades, we have been inundated with news stories,
books, and public commentary, all of which have exhorted us to be like
Sweden.

The Swedes, we have been told, enjoy free medical care, generous
welfare benefits, time off from work, and subsidies for just about
everything. When one counters that Swedes pay enormously high taxes,
the standard reply is, "That is true, but look at what they receive
for their payments."

According to a recent study, however, the cat is out of the bag.
Relative to household in the United States, Swedish family income is
considerably less. In fact, the study concludes, average income in
Sweden is less than average income for black Americans, which comprise
the lowest-income socioeconomic group in this country.

The research came from the Swedish Institute of Trade, which,
according to Reuters, "compared official U.S. and Swedish statistics
on household income as well as gross domestic product, private
consumption and retail spending per capita between 1980 and 1999."

The study used "fixed prices and purchasing power parity adjusted
data," and found that "the median household income in Sweden at the
end of the 1990s was the equivalent of $26,800, compared with a median
of $39,400 for U.S. households." Furthermore, the study points out
that Swedish productivity has fallen rapidly relative to per capital
productivity in the USA.

In defense of the Swedes, let me first say that simple comparisons of
income can be deceiving. While I have never been to Sweden (even
though I have relatives there), I would think that even the poorest
sections of Stockholm and other Swedish cities are more livable and
attractive than what one finds in many U.S. cities. Even with the high
taxes, I think I would rather live in downtown Stockholm than in
downtown Detroit or Newark.

However, the study alerts us to something that is much more important,
and that is that the European welfare states are not making their
citizens wealthier. Over time, the cracks in these relatively wealthy
nations are growing larger, and if the disease is not arrested, much
of Europe will tumble off into real poverty in the not-so-distant
future. Europeans--and, most likely, Americans--seem destined to learn
the hard way that large, seemingly intractable welfare systems have
their way of destroying the Goose that Laid the Golden Eggs.

While people can debate the present condition of Swedes in Stockholm
versus blacks in Harlem, there is a deep issue here that people seem
to forget when it comes to welfare states: they are destructive at
their roots. Advocates of welfarism concentrate only upon distribution
while vilifying production. Such a state of affairs cannot go on
forever as governments are forced to cannibalize their own capital
structure over time in order to make the system to continue to work.

The premises of the welfare state are as follows: (1) free markets, if
not regulated by the state, lead to continuing inequality, as wealth
becomes increasingly concentrated in the hands of a few people, while
more and more people become poorer; (2) the only way to combat this
problem is for the state to take a large portion of earnings from the
wealthy and distribute it among others; and (3) such distribution
actually enables the economy to grow, since growing concentration
means that fewer people will have the ability to consume the products
that are created within a private-market system.

Karl Marx developed the first premise into his theories, calling this
the "internal contradiction" of capitalism. However, the statement
contains its own internal contradictions, as it creates an impossible
scenario.

As Ludwig von Mises and Murray Rothbard have pointed out, in a
private-market society, individuals cannot gain wealth unless they
produce goods that are demanded by large numbers of people. For
example, it was Henry Ford who became rich producing cars, not the
producers of early luxury automobiles that were accessible only to the
wealthiest people in American society. Ford developed a method in
which he could create cars that most people could afford, yet keep his
costs low enough to where he could still make a profit. The most
successful producers in our economy have been those people who make
goods accessible to people across all socioeconomic levels.

Wal-Mart, which is another example, became the largest corporation in
this country--and one of the most successful--by creating a retail
system that would enable large numbers of people to conveniently do
their shopping. In fact, Wal-Mart began its route to success by
building discount stores in rural areas and small towns that were
shunned by larger department stores and enterprises like the
now-bankrupt Kmart.

Therefore, it seems that if producers are becoming wealthier, it can
only occur if consumers are purchasing on a large scale what the the
producers are producing. The first statement justifying the welfare
state does not have a good causal mechanism, for it does not explain
how this transfer of wealth from poor to rich takes place, especially
since it makes the implicit assumption that the voluntary purchase of
goods is actually a wealth transfer.  Such a statement turns the
age-old theory of exchange--that economic exchanges create mutual
beneficiaries--upon its head.

If anything, wealth transfers inhibit economic growth, not increase
it. For one, it violently penalizes entrepreneurs for being
successful. By accusing those who create wealth of actually being the
ones who destroy wealth, welfarists do violence to language itself. If
enough people are punished for creating wealth, less wealth will be
created in the future. The more government impedes the creation and
distribution of wealth, the less that will be created, which means
that those people who are on the margins--that is, those who are less
productive--are the first to be hurt. Thus, the welfare state actually
makes the poor worse off in the long run.

This notion that the welfare state actually "helps" an economy is also
bogus. As I stated earlier, consumption of goods must first take place
before producers can reap the rewards from creating them. Furthermore,
welfare regimes that attack business enterprises by  confiscating
their profits also impede future capital formation.

This became quite apparent to me in 1982 when I went to Central
Europe, including what was then East Berlin, the capital of the former
communist East Germany. While East Berlin was likened to being the
"Paris" of the then-communist world, it was more like a huge time warp
in which one was placed back in 1948. The entire city was shabby, and
what new construction there was had the appearance and attractiveness
of a typical American public housing project.

While the western portion of Germany was better kept and more modern
than its eastern counterpart, it was still like traveling back to the
1960s. West Germany had a well-developed welfare state by then, having
shunned its earlier model as an engine of free enterprise. A close
friend who is a dentist brought this point home to me.

Like other medical care, dentistry in Germany is run on socialist
principles. That means that individuals do not pay directly for dental
(or medical) care, which is provided by the state. My friends, who
were vacationing in Germany, visited a number of dental offices and
found that the facilities looked like dentist offices in the United
States four decades ago. In other words, the German dentists are still
depending upon old capital.

One of the worst aspects of socialism, economically speaking, is that
it has the perverse tendency to turn new capital from an asset--as is
the case in a free-market economy--into a liability. German dentists
have no incentive to purchase more modern equipment, since it is
expensive and patients have nowhere else to go. In fact, wherever
socialist medicine has been practiced for a long time, one can readily
see deterioration of capital stock.

For many years, Sweden, like its European counterparts, has been
eating its capital stock instead of replenishing it. Some high-profile
Swedish companies like Volvo have been able to remain well
capitalized, but even those companies are now finding it more
attractive to locate in other nations, where their profits are not so
readily confiscated.

The Swedes and other northern Europeans are somewhat lucky in that
they have had a relatively high standard of living. People in southern
European nations like Italy and Spain--where high taxes and vast
regulatory agencies abound--find themselves to be much poorer and with
no prospects of real improvement.

Unfortunately, many Europeans (like our Canadian neighbors) believe
that a vast welfare apparatus makes them morally superior to nations
that do not have the same scope of benefits. (While one can point out
that the United States has a huge welfare bureaucracy itself, it does
not offer the same "generous," long-term benefits of the European
states.) While they prattle on about their moral superiority and their
egalitarianism, however, something else is happening.  They are slowly
becoming poorer and poorer, and the welfare state cannot save them.
It can only accelerate their downward slide.


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William Anderson, an adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute, teaches
economics at Frostburg State University.  Send him MAIL.  See his
Mises.org Articles Archive.

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