• MPN de soporte
Logo Logo
  • Investigaciones
  • Opinión y Análisis
  • Dibujos animados
  • Podcasts
  • Vídeos
  • Idioma
    • 中文
    • English
    • русский
    • اَلْعَرَبِيَّةُ
    • Français

Instruction Of Students Learning English Looks Bleak

In this April 3, 2013 photo, Duna Lopez, 8, center, whispers into the ear of classmate Mathew Botros, 9, right, during an English class at the Coral Way K-8 Center, in Miami, the nation’s oldest bilingual school. At left is teacher Julia Puentes. Students who speak a language other than English at home are one […]

abril 15th, 2013
Associated Press
abril 15th, 2013
Por Associated Press

In this April 3, 2013 photo, Duna Lopez, 8, center, whispers into the ear of classmate Mathew Botros, 9, right, during an English class at the Coral Way K-8 Center, in Miami, the nation’s oldest bilingual school. At left is teacher Julia Puentes. Students who speak a language other than English at home are one […]

Lea el artículo completo

Five Ways The President’s Budget Would Change Medicare

In this April 8, 2013, photo, copies of President Barack Obama’s budget plan for fiscal year 2014 are prepared for delivery at the U.S. Government Printing Office in Washington. Obama is sending Congress on Wednesday, April 10, his long-awaited budget, an effort to achieve an elusive «grand bargain» to tame run-away deficits that have soared […]

abril 15th, 2013
Mary Agnes Carey
abril 15th, 2013
Por Mary Agnes Carey

In this April 8, 2013, photo, copies of President Barack Obama’s budget plan for fiscal year 2014 are prepared for delivery at the U.S. Government Printing Office in Washington. Obama is sending Congress on Wednesday, April 10, his long-awaited budget, an effort to achieve an elusive «grand bargain» to tame run-away deficits that have soared […]

Lea el artículo completo

Everything We Know About What’s Happened Under Sequestration

Children participate in the annual White House Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Monday, April 1, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) When the annual White House Easter Egg Hunt faced cancellation this year due to the package of mandatory budget cuts known as sequestration, the National Park Service kicked […]

abril 13th, 2013
Theodoric Meyer, ProPublica
abril 13th, 2013
Por Theodoric Meyer, ProPublica

Children participate in the annual White House Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Monday, April 1, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) When the annual White House Easter Egg Hunt faced cancellation this year due to the package of mandatory budget cuts known as sequestration, the National Park Service kicked […]

Lea el artículo completo

Sweden’s Lessons On Inequality

The most equal country in the developing world, Sweden survived the collapse of socialism to become a capitalist model.

Michael Moran

STOCKHOLM, Sweden — As recently as the early 1990s, the idea that Sweden could be a model of anything except socialism gone awry would have been laughable.

Sweden’s debt-to-GDP was staggering when compared to other advanced industrial nations, topping 70 percent in 1992 and headed ever upward. Nearly 60 percent of all economic activity was generated by either government or government-owned enterprises. Meanwhile, the full employment mantra of its socialist model was coming apart at the seams as government simply could not borrow or print enough money to bridge the gap. The Swedish jobless rate shot from less than 2 percent in 1988 to more than 10 percent in 1993.

Even renowned global brands — Saab, Volvo and Electrolux — were failing. By 1993, Sweden’s banks were effectively bankrupt.

But Sweden today barely resembles its former self. As the Economist magazine wrote last year, “The streets of Stockholm are awash in the blood of sacred cows.”

A century of pursuing political neutrality and aggressive egalitarian socialism has more recently been leavened by economic reforms and market liberalizations, lighting a fire under the economy. After a modest dip during 2008, the economy has outperformed the US and even Germany since.

Most importantly, the growth has not led to the kind of spike in income inequality that accompanied growth spurts in many other western countries since the 1980s. Sweden’s reforms caused inequality of income to grow over the past 20 years. As measured by the Gini coefficient, the world’s standard measure of household equality, Sweden went from a .21 to a .25 – still the best in the developed world. For the US, the numbers are staggering. From a Gini rating of .31 in 1975, the current ranking (adjusted for taxes and benefits) is .38.

How did Sweden do it? The answer is a mix of carefully introduced competitive pressures on services previously run by government, from schools to health to pensions, and an intelligent and forceful response to a banking crisis in the early 1990s that had a lot in common with the one that followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

There was no «radical shock» akin to the market reforms applied to the states of the former Warsaw Pact in Europe after 1989. Rather, Sweden embarked on a gradual recalibration of government spending, a lowering of top tax rates — to «only» 57 percent at the top — without a kind of offloading of social responsibility that characterized earlier market reform efforts in Thatcher’s Britain or Reagan’s America. The result is a country and a Nordic region, given that its neighbors have followed suit, that no longer resembles the socialist «Third Way» economy of the late 1970s.

Not just Sweden, but also Denmark, Finland and Norway are thriving, and it turns out its quirky mix of social democracy, communitarianism and advanced capitalism has produced the most socially mobile, consistently robust and fiscally sound nations in the world. While some of its old state champions have been sold — Saab to a Dutch firm, Volvo to China — new powerhouses like IKEA and H&M have mixed corporate responsibility with an intense focus on cost controls — and high profits.

Sweden’s banks, flat on their back in 1993, are now rated by the European Union’s chief banking regulator as the strongest on the continent.

While there are many lessons from Sweden’s experience applicable in the West, there also is an apples and oranges problem.

For one thing, Sweden is a relatively small economy at $500 billion in GDP, compared to the $15.7 trillion in US annual output. It’s also a much more homogeneous society. A recent spike in immigration from the Middle East and Eastern Europe notwithstanding, most Swedes are, well, Swedish.

The large influx of immigrants into the US that began in the late 1980s certainly did much to prevent fiscal problems; by raising the US birth rate, for instance, immigrants have prevented the current debate about Social Security from being a question of collapse and merely one of finding a way to make it more sustainable; and a few founded world-beating companies, like Russian immigrant Sergey Brin at Google or Taiwan-born Jerry Yang of Yahoo, adding billions to US GDP.

But immigration on such a scale attracts people at both the top and bottom of the skills pool, meaning that some will go on to found S&P 500 firms or win Nobel Prizes, while many other lag in educational achievement and earnings. Taken together, this phenomenon naturally pushes up inequality rankings.

Sweden also has handled the age of globalized finance very differently and indeed, it might be argued, a lot more intelligently.

Back in 1992, Sweden suffered its own real estate bubble-fueled banking crisis. Facing the same kind of domino-effect collapse on a smaller scale, Swedish regulators demanded banks write down losses, provide major relief to underwater homeowners and issue warrants — in effect, voting rights on their boards of directors — the government. Once the bad debts were sold back onto the market, Swedish taxpayers rather than bank shareholders were the primary beneficiaries, and taxpayers made more when the government exited from its stake in the banks later in the 1990s.

Reflecting on the Swedish crisis in 2008, as the US and UK were trying to structure their own bailouts, Urban Backstrom, a senior Swedish finance ministry official at the time, warned that a guiding principle was that the “public will not support a plan if you leave the former shareholders with anything.” By and large, the American version, TARP, left shareholders, including bank executives, completely intact — to this day a source of serious criticism of former US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and his team.

While the Swedish government insisted that banks pay a proper tab for their drinking binge, it simultaneously opened up other markets which had been over regulated, selling state shares in major enterprises, introducing school vouchers and private, rather than state-run pension programs. The country also broke the state’s hold on its central bank (with the US Federal Reserve as a model).

“These decisive economic liberalizations, and not socialism, are what laid the foundations for Sweden’s success over the last 15 years,” says Jonny Munkhammar, a member of parliament for Sweden’s center-right Moderate Party who wrote a book about the Swedish reforms.

Could the United States emulate even some of this? The question is complex and shot through with the competing ideological dogmas that each party bring to the table. Indeed, it might be said that there is something from both sides to loathe in the modern Swedish model. For the American Left, the idea that market liberalization is a significant part of the Swedish story shatters a simplistic devotion to redistributive policy. For the American Right, Sweden’s heavy handed devotion to regulation and a top tax rate of 57 percent for multimillionaires would be a hard pill to swallow.

Then again, national insolvency and an ever rising gap between rich and poor in America are two nasty pills in their own right. At least at the margins, the Swedes have something more than their legendary blonde hair going for them.  

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/groundtruth/sweden-lessons-income-inequality

abril 13th, 2013
Michael Moran
abril 13th, 2013
Por Michael Moran

The most equal country in the developing world, Sweden survived the collapse of socialism to become a capitalist model.

Michael Moran

STOCKHOLM, Sweden — As recently as the early 1990s, the idea that Sweden could be a model of anything except socialism gone awry would have been laughable.

Sweden’s debt-to-GDP was staggering when compared to other advanced industrial nations, topping 70 percent in 1992 and headed ever upward. Nearly 60 percent of all economic activity was generated by either government or government-owned enterprises. Meanwhile, the full employment mantra of its socialist model was coming apart at the seams as government simply could not borrow or print enough money to bridge the gap. The Swedish jobless rate shot from less than 2 percent in 1988 to more than 10 percent in 1993.

Even renowned global brands — Saab, Volvo and Electrolux — were failing. By 1993, Sweden’s banks were effectively bankrupt.

But Sweden today barely resembles its former self. As the Economist magazine wrote last year, “The streets of Stockholm are awash in the blood of sacred cows.”

A century of pursuing political neutrality and aggressive egalitarian socialism has more recently been leavened by economic reforms and market liberalizations, lighting a fire under the economy. After a modest dip during 2008, the economy has outperformed the US and even Germany since.

Most importantly, the growth has not led to the kind of spike in income inequality that accompanied growth spurts in many other western countries since the 1980s. Sweden’s reforms caused inequality of income to grow over the past 20 years. As measured by the Gini coefficient, the world’s standard measure of household equality, Sweden went from a .21 to a .25 – still the best in the developed world. For the US, the numbers are staggering. From a Gini rating of .31 in 1975, the current ranking (adjusted for taxes and benefits) is .38.

How did Sweden do it? The answer is a mix of carefully introduced competitive pressures on services previously run by government, from schools to health to pensions, and an intelligent and forceful response to a banking crisis in the early 1990s that had a lot in common with the one that followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

There was no «radical shock» akin to the market reforms applied to the states of the former Warsaw Pact in Europe after 1989. Rather, Sweden embarked on a gradual recalibration of government spending, a lowering of top tax rates — to «only» 57 percent at the top — without a kind of offloading of social responsibility that characterized earlier market reform efforts in Thatcher’s Britain or Reagan’s America. The result is a country and a Nordic region, given that its neighbors have followed suit, that no longer resembles the socialist «Third Way» economy of the late 1970s.

Not just Sweden, but also Denmark, Finland and Norway are thriving, and it turns out its quirky mix of social democracy, communitarianism and advanced capitalism has produced the most socially mobile, consistently robust and fiscally sound nations in the world. While some of its old state champions have been sold — Saab to a Dutch firm, Volvo to China — new powerhouses like IKEA and H&M have mixed corporate responsibility with an intense focus on cost controls — and high profits.

Sweden’s banks, flat on their back in 1993, are now rated by the European Union’s chief banking regulator as the strongest on the continent.

While there are many lessons from Sweden’s experience applicable in the West, there also is an apples and oranges problem.

For one thing, Sweden is a relatively small economy at $500 billion in GDP, compared to the $15.7 trillion in US annual output. It’s also a much more homogeneous society. A recent spike in immigration from the Middle East and Eastern Europe notwithstanding, most Swedes are, well, Swedish.

The large influx of immigrants into the US that began in the late 1980s certainly did much to prevent fiscal problems; by raising the US birth rate, for instance, immigrants have prevented the current debate about Social Security from being a question of collapse and merely one of finding a way to make it more sustainable; and a few founded world-beating companies, like Russian immigrant Sergey Brin at Google or Taiwan-born Jerry Yang of Yahoo, adding billions to US GDP.

But immigration on such a scale attracts people at both the top and bottom of the skills pool, meaning that some will go on to found S&P 500 firms or win Nobel Prizes, while many other lag in educational achievement and earnings. Taken together, this phenomenon naturally pushes up inequality rankings.

Sweden also has handled the age of globalized finance very differently and indeed, it might be argued, a lot more intelligently.

Back in 1992, Sweden suffered its own real estate bubble-fueled banking crisis. Facing the same kind of domino-effect collapse on a smaller scale, Swedish regulators demanded banks write down losses, provide major relief to underwater homeowners and issue warrants — in effect, voting rights on their boards of directors — the government. Once the bad debts were sold back onto the market, Swedish taxpayers rather than bank shareholders were the primary beneficiaries, and taxpayers made more when the government exited from its stake in the banks later in the 1990s.

Reflecting on the Swedish crisis in 2008, as the US and UK were trying to structure their own bailouts, Urban Backstrom, a senior Swedish finance ministry official at the time, warned that a guiding principle was that the “public will not support a plan if you leave the former shareholders with anything.” By and large, the American version, TARP, left shareholders, including bank executives, completely intact — to this day a source of serious criticism of former US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and his team.

While the Swedish government insisted that banks pay a proper tab for their drinking binge, it simultaneously opened up other markets which had been over regulated, selling state shares in major enterprises, introducing school vouchers and private, rather than state-run pension programs. The country also broke the state’s hold on its central bank (with the US Federal Reserve as a model).

“These decisive economic liberalizations, and not socialism, are what laid the foundations for Sweden’s success over the last 15 years,” says Jonny Munkhammar, a member of parliament for Sweden’s center-right Moderate Party who wrote a book about the Swedish reforms.

Could the United States emulate even some of this? The question is complex and shot through with the competing ideological dogmas that each party bring to the table. Indeed, it might be said that there is something from both sides to loathe in the modern Swedish model. For the American Left, the idea that market liberalization is a significant part of the Swedish story shatters a simplistic devotion to redistributive policy. For the American Right, Sweden’s heavy handed devotion to regulation and a top tax rate of 57 percent for multimillionaires would be a hard pill to swallow.

Then again, national insolvency and an ever rising gap between rich and poor in America are two nasty pills in their own right. At least at the margins, the Swedes have something more than their legendary blonde hair going for them.  

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/groundtruth/sweden-lessons-income-inequality

Lea el artículo completo

Are CA Prisons Punishing Inmates Based On Race?

Signs decrying solitary confinement adorn the entrance to California’s San Quentin State Prison during a Feb. 20, 2012 protest. An overcrowded prison system and a race-based identification system are accused of leading to increased numbers of inmates being confined in their cells.(Photo/@bastique via Flickr) In several men’s prisons across California, colored signs hang above cell […]

abril 12th, 2013
Christie Thompson
abril 12th, 2013
Por Christie Thompson

Signs decrying solitary confinement adorn the entrance to California’s San Quentin State Prison during a Feb. 20, 2012 protest. An overcrowded prison system and a race-based identification system are accused of leading to increased numbers of inmates being confined in their cells.(Photo/@bastique via Flickr) In several men’s prisons across California, colored signs hang above cell […]

Lea el artículo completo

Red neonazi descubierta en una prisión alemana

Frederick Reese Alemania se ha encontrado, desde el final de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, en extremos a veces conflictivos con respecto a su pasado con el nazismo. Por un lado, el nazismo está prohibido en Alemania; Los símbolos del Tercer Reich están prohibidos, el partido tiene prohibido ocupar cargos públicos e incluso la negación pública […]

abril 12th, 2013
Frederick Reese
abril 12th, 2013
Por Frederick Reese

Frederick Reese Alemania se ha encontrado, desde el final de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, en extremos a veces conflictivos con respecto a su pasado con el nazismo. Por un lado, el nazismo está prohibido en Alemania; Los símbolos del Tercer Reich están prohibidos, el partido tiene prohibido ocupar cargos públicos e incluso la negación pública […]

Lea el artículo completo

'Si Se Puede!' Miles de personas se reúnen en todo Estados Unidos por una reforma migratoria

Las familias de inmigrantes protestan en Minneapolis el 10 de abril, pidiendo una reforma migratoria. (Foto / Martin Michaels) [/ caption] [soundcloud id = '87432911'] “Aunque estamos aquí en el frío, debes saber que en todo el país hay manifestaciones como esta en todas partes. El momento es absolutamente ahora para una reforma migratoria integral […]

abril 11th, 2013
Martin Michaels
abril 11th, 2013
Por Martin Michaels

Las familias de inmigrantes protestan en Minneapolis el 10 de abril, pidiendo una reforma migratoria. (Foto / Martin Michaels) [/ caption] [soundcloud id = '87432911'] “Aunque estamos aquí en el frío, debes saber que en todo el país hay manifestaciones como esta en todas partes. El momento es absolutamente ahora para una reforma migratoria integral […]

Lea el artículo completo
  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 447
  • 448
  • 449
  • 450
  • 451
  • …
  • 456
  • Next Page »
  • Contáctenos
  • Archives
  • About Us
  • Política de privacidad
© 2025 MintPress News