ully
ully
Yea, we are all the poorer for it and will join EU in crappy healthcare.
This friend of yours can have no education. I jsut showed you a graph of the Norwegian tax level which has been constant, more or less since 1970 at 43- 44% of GDP.
Do you understand what that means?
That means that the sum of taxes of the total GDP is 44%. In USA it is 25% - but then you don't get all that public service included, - as 'free' health care, pensions, education for your kids through university etc.
Most music festivals are privately funded, but might get 10.000 $ support from a local government. not the state. The Norwegian Public Lottery (not the State, your friend does not seem to understand what is happening around him) is heavily subsidizing the Oslo Opera and other up street cultural events. So, the cheapest place to see & hear Placido Domingo is in Oslo. Air fair from NY included.
That means that the number of public employees are far less than some 60%. More like 38 - 40%
Statoil is a private company. It's stock can be bought on the NYSE. The Norwegian government do have a share or two. That's smart, isn't it? Our pension fund owns about 1,5% of all the publicly noted shares - in the world...
Everything is outsourced in the oil industry. But not only to American companies. We have negotiated the oil rights with other OECD nations and are obliged to also use their services.
Norway has come on top on several living standard studies made by The World Bank, UN and OECD. Together with Sweden, Finland, Denmark etc. High on this list is Cananda. USA is far down on the list.
How can this be?
But we do send patients to foreign hospitals!
The Swedes who have a public health care system like us have a very efficient bypass heart operation facility that is often used by us.
We even send Norwegian/Pakistani to Pakistani hospitals because they are specialists on certain inherited deceases which is typical among Pakistanis etc. Why we are not using US health facilities can only be that they are not competitive or don't have the expertise we seek.
That Norwegian roads are bad, that I can agree upon. Not very unlike the poor quality of - American roads. The problem that both Norwegians and Americans have to face is that we have to keep up a good infrastructure with a small - relatively speaking, population.
About your friend's education, again: you must urge him to get his school money back. 'The 3000 people working for our IRS' (the real figure will be more like 1000 - it's all computerized today) costs 400 million US$...? These figures are wildly exagerated. But we practically have a flat tax! Income below 12.000 $ is tax free, though. It's when you buy things you pay taxes over here.
If you have noticed, the US politicians are looking at increasing the VAT/sales tax in USA. Even the tiny 25% of GDP you pay in taxes are all too little. Much due to an all too expensive health care cost (and extravagant defence). With the US public dept running into figures impossible to pay back the only future I see for Americans are, read my lips:
Higher taxes!
With an interest of only 1,5% - 3% of GDP will go to serving this huge debt. Tell that to the daydreamers at the tea parties. It is only one way out of the US financial chaos: Pay more taxes!
Sure, there is a lot of complaints on poor building quality of many local schools and collages particularly here in Oslo where we have a conservative local government. I suspect that they let the schools run down so they (friends of the Conservative Party) can buy them cheap and sell them on again with a profit.
But collage is (practically) free here in Norway! How does that compare to USA? As long as you are qualified your education through university is free.
Compare!
Sure, there is many things that makes USA a pleasant place to live. But not when it comes to government, health care, law and order, education, pensions and other 'public' services that we take for granted.
What makes USA pleasant is the climate, the beautiful scenery and the nice people....
The whole point of free market capitalism is for all GDP growth to go into the pockets of the top 1%? Is that what you are saying? If not, please clarify.
Yea, we are all the poorer for it and will join EU in crappy healthcare.
Farm equipment maker Deere expects after-tax expenses to rise by $150 million this year as a result of the health care reform law President Barack Obama signed this week.
Caterpillar Inc. said Wednesday it will take a $100 million charge to earnings this quarter to reflect additional taxes stemming from newly enacted U.S. health-care legislation.
That's a quarter of a billlion from just two companies.
“From our point of view, a tax increase like this cannot come at a worse time,” said Jim Dugan, a Caterpillar spokesman.
Doesn't look good for hiring anytime soon. Oh well, just the after effects, right?
Socialism doesn't mean mediocrity. Look at Norway. They're a socialist hellhole... yet their per-capita GDP is $10,000 higher than the US!
Now that also Caterpillar USA has to pay what health care costs, the football field of competition has never been more level.
(...) Bottom line is this: the majority of Americans don't want to be Europeans. (...)
But America is a conservative nation: nearly twice as many people call themselves conservatives as liberals (40 percent to 20 percent.) (Sources: Newsweek, Washington Post, ABC News -- all liberal.)
Call me conceited, if you want, but:
Unfortunately, this "survey" is 98,5% unscholarly and more incoherent than a nice classroom essay.
If the populace was really conservative, then they would repeal progressive laws.
But usually (always? there are probably a few counterexamples) the progressive laws stick around. Social security, medicare, minimum wage, abolishing child labour, giving women the vote, Roe v Wade, etc... if the populace really wanted to repeal those things, they have the power to do so, USA is a democracy.
The fact is, people grow to like the progressive laws and programs, that's why nobody repeals them.
I keep seeing these sorts of comments, but with nothing to back it up. (...) Come on guys, you can do better than this, step up your game! 😉
I referenced liberal media, is that unscholarly enough for you? Or, what does that say about the liberal media? Hehe...
(Wall St. Journal)
By PHIL GRAMM
copy+paste is BORING.
In Europe/Canada/Australia/Asia/Russia... you cannot convince that way.