Why Denmark is a great nation

Politicians in the USA don’t normally try to learn from other countries, but Democrats have now taken a keen interest in Denmark. There are developmental implications for other countries.

As I recently stated here in a blogpost dealing with the Sustainable Development Goals, I’ve lately kept returning to the topic of what makes a nation great. Some leaders – consider Vladimir Putin of Russia – emphasise military strength and foreign-policy clout. All too often they miss an important point, however. Inclusive prosperity stabilises a country’s political system, leads to a strong sense of national solidarity and lays a basis for further healthy developments. This is a form of greatness that matters very much.Lately, leading politicians of the USA have tackled this issue too. Bernie Sanders, who declares himself to be a socialist and wants to become the presidential candidate for the Democratic party in the USA, recently declared that Denmark is what he considers a good society. This choice is interesting, not least because Denmark has mostly been ruled by centre-right governments in the past two decades. At the same time, Denmark is certainly great in the sense of broad-based and shared prosperity. By the way, Hillary Clinton, Sanders’ main rival and the most likely person to win the nomination, said she “loved” Denmark.


Vox.com, an innovative website that specialises in what it calls policy journalism, summed up what Democrats like about Denmark:

As www.vox.com assesses accurately, Denmark and the other Scandinavian countries prove that free-market radicalism is empirically wrong. No, high taxes do not necessarily drive away achievers,  social protection does not make everybody else become lazy and, yes, governments services can be efficient and effective. What makes Scandinavian nations great is not that they have abandoned capitalism, but that they regulate markets intelligently, and that obviously has a bearing on development policies. While it is necessary to have a strong private sector, as all Scandinavian countries have, state institutions matter too, and not only in the sense of ensuring the rule of law. Building social and physical infrastructure matters as well.

This is easier said then done, however, because strong institutions are needed. Building such institutions, from national revenue services to good primary schools, is a major developmental task. It must not be postponed until the private sector supposedly makes a nation rich, it must be tackled early on because success will make the private sector stronger, not weaker.

  • Full disclosure: With my wife and kinds, I spent my summer vacations in Denmark. We liked it a lot, but the country is not a substitute for paradise. For example, I find the current government’s xenophobic stance on migrants and refugees worrysome, and the Social Democrats’ stance in the past election was not that different.   
     

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