Why Can't We Be Like the Finns?
by Robert G. Kaiser
Published on Monday, August 29, 2005 by the Providence Journal (Rhode Island)
Finland is a leading example of the northern European view that a successful, competitive society should provide basic social services to all its citizens at affordable prices or at no cost. This isn't controversial in Finland; it's taken for granted. For a patriotic American like me, the Finns present a difficult challenge: If we Americans are so rich and so smart, why can't we treat our citizens as well as the Finns do?
...Finland is regularly cited as among the world's best in a variety of indexes and comparisons.
For example:
* The World Economic Forum, in Davos, Switzerland, ranks Finland's the most competitive economy in the world.
* Yale and Columbia universities rank nations in a "sustainability index," which measures a country's ability to "protect the natural environment over the next several decades." Finland ranks first.
* Statistics of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development show that Finland invests more of its gross domestic product in research and development than any other country but Sweden.|
* Finnish 15-year-olds score first in the industrial world on tests of their academic abilities.
* According to a global survey by Transparency International, Finland is perceived as the least corrupt country. (The United States is tied for 17th.)
* Finns read newspapers and take books out of libraries at rates as high as or higher than all other countries.
* Finland trains more musicians, per capita, than any other country.
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