
Will
the welfare be rearranged?
In all
the Western welfare-democracies the debate is going on in these years: Is it possible to rearrange the welfare, and
if it is possible, is it necessary then to make substantial changes or just
larger or smaller adjustments? In all
the countries the welfare is financed partly by the insurance principle partly
tax-financed. The taxes are mainly income tax and value added taxation. In
Norway 1.3 mio. live on public transfers (2005), of which 625,000 are
pensioners of age (Norway’s population 4.4 mio.), in Germany the official
unemployment (2005) on about 10 p.c. has to be doubled in reality, when the
expelled ones without any connection to the insurance arrangement on the German
labour market are counted in.
The
international competition that has to be called globalisation these years
pushes the development further. The developing countries, the Eastern countries
and the Far East begin to supply products and labour to much lower prices
respectively much lower wages compared with those of the old
welfare-democracies.
The
official accounted Danish working force that should include the number who
supply their working force on the labour market has to be corrected, because
expelled ones – over the years a very varying but always increasing group – from
the group of receivers of unemployment funds, and then transferred to social
security or early retirement pension without having any other handicaps than
those of the community have to be counted in in working force as unemployed:
Table 1
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År 2001: |
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Population |
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Working
force: |
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2,900,000 |
>= |
3,300,000 |
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Receivers
of transfers in the working ages: |
1,100,000 |
<= |
700,000 |
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Other
receivers of transfers: |
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722,000 |
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722.000 |
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Public
employed: |
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850,000 |
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850,000 |
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Employed
by saleable production: |
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950,000 |
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1.050,000 |
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The
official number in the working force has been reduced by more than 30,000 in
period 2001-2005. The official number outside the working force in the working
ages 15-66 years old has increased by more than 50,000 in the same period. The
Danish Welfare Commission maintains that there still are 200,000 more in the
working force than outside the working force. Here we have to remember that
about 1 mio are 18 years old or younger. Only a part of those are included in
the figure 1,1000,000 in table 1. Close on 40 p.c. or 440,000 of the 1,1000,000
on public transfers in table 1 are immigrants, descendants of immigrants,
naturalized or descendants of naturalized (se below).
To this
must be added the question of ageing that has resulted in a skew age
distribution with an increasing part of elderly. This contributes
further to the support-problem. The Danish model of welfare has ostensible been
constructed to equalize the payments between yielder and receiver on lifetime-basic.
This will not be possible in future with a continuous smaller working force and
a continuously increased number outside the working force in the working ages.
It is even further impossible to finance the existing arrangement, when the development
of the population continues with:
The
immigrants receive 40 p. c. of social security, the former Minister Social
Security maintained. May 1st 2005 Aarhus Municipality (the second
largest city of Denmark), according to www.filtrat.dk
: ’58 p. c. of the immigrants on social
security etc. are unsuited for work – the politicians shocked’.
Even
though the question of ageing among Danish in a distinct minor scale is
corresponded by a relatively very large part of children and young-ones among
the immigrants (35 p. c. are 25 years old or younger) the central issue in a
manageable future will be to finance the consumption of the 1,822,000 receivers
of public transfers plus the 850,000 public employed. For now there are a small
million who provides and sells the saleable production in Denmark.
In
’Yearbook about immigrants in Denmark 2001 – Balance sheet and development’,
Ministry of Interior, 2001, you read officially that 53 p. c. of the
male immigrants from non-Western countries are unemployed or outside the
working force, for females it is 72 p. c. As the part of pensioners by age
among the immigrants still is very small, the mentioned percent-figures will be
found again as an absolute number in the figure 1,100,000 in table 1.
If the
immigration could be corrected the ageing problem in the Danish community,
where the welfare is built on equalization in life-income is making the system
tremendous vulnerable, then the time factor would have caught up with the
restoration, and it must be concluded that the immigration actually has
increased the problem of finances substantially.
Economist,
chairman of a think tank and lecturer Hans Kornoe Rasmussen has at several
occasions like the EU-Commissioner Vladimir Spidla proposed a many times
over increase in the immigration into
EU and with it to Denmark. The Danish Welfare Commission asks, ‘Can increased
immigration solve the support-problem’? Thereafter the commission supposes for
the sake of argument that you could imagine 30,000 extra immigrants from more
developed countries every year form now and for ever (a lot more if they bring their families too) added to the present
10,000 a year from developing countries, and that those would work and pay
taxes here, then the hypothetical problem of finances would have been solved
for the Welfare Commission.
The
Danish State-debt has almost been multiplied by 10 (accounted in constant price
level) in the period 1960-2001. If the technical development – in spite of the
expulsion from labour market – had succeeded to secure enough saleable production
to finance a more than doubled public sector inclusive the transfers of the
expelled ones in the period 1960-2001 while the ageing of population developed quickly
as foreseen from the beginning of the 1970s, and in addition a huge import of
immigrants, of which more than the half just contribute to the opposite of the solutions
of the problems, in spite of a small share of elderly people among the immigrants,
then the international competition still remains. I have to say, this project
does not build on any positive knowledge in so far the agenda was as presented
to the public.
Differences
of structure and competition will been equalized by the market without any state
latitude. The main battlefield is the labour market, the social and ecologic
systems. The labour market suffers under the wage and social-cost-competition
from the employees in the pure zones anywhere, and the ruling national agreements
of wage rates and the least-standards of social levels will inevitably be liquidated.
The market brushes them aside, the employers use their potentials of threat
more and more: they have the possibility to outsource the productions to favourable
wage, social, tax and ecology-cheap
areas in Europe and outside Europe. About 10,000 jobs in Denmark were
outsourced in 2005.
The
enterprises invest if their marginal profit determine the production or
determines an altered/adjusted production. The difference between the costs and
expected revenue (sold quantity multiplied by the price) that these costs
demands for unit by unit, is too small
to employ 700,000-800,000 unemployed of about 2.9 mio. in the official Danish
working force, or 3.3-3.5 mio. of the real fitted for production. If sufficient
difference can be realized at lower level of production, the production is
realized at that lower level including a lower level of employment, if the best
alternative is even worse. It is not when you compare with Danish relations.
Passive earnings outside the production or production abroad is preferred.
Therefore the purchasing power is transferred to private capital outside the
production or invested abroad: Capitalization: http://www.lilliput-information.com/capital.html
Enterprises
do not use price margins to invest, but they use profit-yielding price/cost-
margins. The problem is not one dimensional, but at least two or more even
multidimensional.
The
economic reality is that the producers drive the economy forward, the savings
are looked at as the fuel for this process. The private and the public
consumption are nothing but maintenance and rubbish.
What
the consumers spend does not get the economy going, but it just maintains the
apparatus, eventually put it on the back burner. The other thing has never, and
will never happen. Sometimes you hear the commentators report that the
expenditures spend on private consumption makes up to this or that, and it
amounts to a certain percent of the entire demand. We also hear a lot of
nonsense concerning the expectations of the consumers – that indicates more
about their choise of TV-consumption. To give the reader the impression that
the opposite actually is deciding: In 1920s the American private consumption
was accounted to about 8.5 p. c. of the producers’ expenditures on factors and producer
goods. This means that the total consumption on capital goods to provide,
distribute and deliver goods was 12 times larger than all private consumption.
Today this relation-ship has turned even more skew.
The
problem can certainly not be illustrated just from above and downwards, if by any
chance of solution has to be found in the near future. The saleable production
has to be increased substantially, or the welfare system has to be canceled. A process
that promotes the production is not started by presenting the working force for
the businesses. The possibility is to make the productions in this country more
competitive. The key to this is a substantial wage and tax-adjustment. The
latest four years the problems have just grown bigger, a reduced working force
and more to provide for in the working ages (as mentioned above). The problem
has just become even more difficult to solve for the last four years. Nevertheless,
The Danish Welfare Commission: ‘ it is ambitious to increase the rate employment
substantially more than today. The employment is already quite high in Denmark
compared with other countries.’
It has
to be underlined that some adjustment of the job release scheme concerning the payments
or the time or age-limits, eventually its abolition, or an adjustment the age
of pension or in the social transfer payments do not solve any problem.
The
problem is simply that the cost of the entire tax-financed welfare system are put
in taxes and thereby into the monopolized claims of wages. The leads
automatically to profitable productions, the earnings of which are the conditions
for the welfare system, are made unprofitable.
USA exploited
the advantages of the globalisation already in the beginning of the 1980s with
outsourcing of quite a few wage-heavy productions. At the same time the Chinese
was let to invest in American government bonds for the money they could not
real-invest immediately. In this way a part of a safety net was constructed for
US-dollar at the same time. EU has broad itself into a defensive position, and
chooses protecting duty on varying types of products from low-wage-areas among
other China, as the threats against the retained productions appear.
If we
shall see the welfare system gradually break down caused by lacking finances,
eventually with a last grasp for inflation outside the Euro-zone, and as long as
EU has not stopped it, the near future will bring more and more cheap import products
to our country, perhaps second-rate goods with prices better matching the social-rates
of more and more who will be allocated to social-welfare-transfers to live on,
while we look at a partly derailed sector of education and research, where 2 out 3 educated continuing turn
their eyes toward jobs in the public sector. Exchange of goods and factors of
production included knowledge with the wage-light areas will be topical for
some years to come.
The experiment
to attract well-qualified workers for example to the IT-line in Denmark does
not seem to succeed, most because of the personal income-tax, investigations unveil.
This should be proof enough, but in addition there are several more burdens on
the businesses and on the every hiring.
We have
to conclude, as our own educated people emigrates or turn their eyes toward
jobs in the public sector, immigrants for the late 30 years have definitely
turned to the knowledge-light lines, if not towards the public transfers, and
our unemployed and expelled in the working ages together with about 7,000 Baltics
and Poles (in 2005) cannot fit the everlasting ideology-experiment – the Danish
Utopia – that reality soon shall stop the projects that certainly was not
introduced caused by any popular claims what so ever, but (also) to serve to the
ideological leaders themselves from the beginning.
M. Sc. (Economics) Joern E. Vig, Denmark
November 12th 2005