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Published byJonathan Ferguson Modified over 9 years ago
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How Well is the Nordic Model Functioning? Lars Calmfors Nordic Council: press lunch 28/10-2014
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Background Study for the Nordic Council co-ordinated by ETLA in Finland: The Nordic Model – Challenged but Capable of Reform Not so easy to define the Nordic Model
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Combinations of average living standard and equality
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Employment rate, percentage of population 20-64 years old
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Employment rate, percentage of females 20-64 years old
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Sources of income equalisation relative to the US
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Trade union density, percentage of employees
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Net income replacement rate for short-term unemployed (first year), per cent
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Total tax revenue, percentage of GDP
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R&D expenditure, percentage of GDP
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Public expenditure and education outcomes
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Organisational change and new technology
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GDP per employed person, 1991 = 100
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Challenges for the Nordic model 1.Maintain high productivity growth - lower productivity growth during the international crisis - falling productivity in Sweden and Norway already before the crisis - international debate 2. Financing of public services - ageing population - Wagner’s law - Baumol’s disease
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Challenges for the Nordic model cont. 3. Employment - technological change reduces demand for low- skilled - globalisation - non-European immigrants 4. Income distribution - increasing inequality from a low level 5. Adjustment capability - Finland: Nokia, steel industry, forest industry
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Total 8,0 15-19 år 32,1 20-24 år 14,0 25-34 år 5,6 35-54 år 3,7 55-64 år 3,8 Education Primary 13,4 Secondary 5,1 Tertiary 3,8 Country of origin Outside Europe 16,0 Europe outside Sweden 8,7 Sweden 5,2 Unemployment in Sweden 2013
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How can challenges be met? 1. Productivity - combination of selective and general policies - subsidisation of researchers and researchers in the business sector rather than of research per se 2. Financing of public services - longer working life - retirement age should be indexed to life expectancy - earlier labour market entry for young people: graduation bonus dependent on age 3. Employment - school system: focus on weak pupils - higher wages for teachers and more wage dispersion in the profession - accept larger wage differentials (education cannot solve all problems) 4. Trade-off between efficiency and income distribuation objectives - wage differentials - tax system - Swedish Earned Income Tax Credit
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Requirements on policy Improvements can be made in tax policy - property tax - equal taxation of capital income - uniform VAT Active labour market programmes - earlier focus: weak groups - new focus employers and matching
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Differences in wage and PISA results(90/10) Källor: PISA 2014 och Eurostat Structure of Earnings Survey 2010
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Wage dispersion in Sweden Percentilkvoter
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Real disposable income for employed and non-employed in Sweden, respectively
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The degree of trust
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