Happy Taxpayers? Is That A Joke? Maybe Not

avatar

Just hearing about taxes is enough for some people to get goosebumps, let alone paying them. It is certainly understandable as who likes to pay money to the government, right? However, there are people happy to pay taxes, in a country that is known for having some of the highest taxes in the world and the country's tax agency is one of people's most trusted institutions.

Paying Taxes?

Now you may be rolling your eyes, wondering if I'm drunk, crazy, on drugs or all of the above but I assure you, it's not the case. There's at least one country in the world that fits the profile, and that's Sweden.

sweden853150_1920.jpg
Image by Richard Taimalie from Pixabay

But before I go into details, let's see why people hate taxman and don't like to pay taxes.

The most common reason is that they consider it a waste, modern times robbery if you like as they don't see results. Taxes are payed for a reason and funds must be used to make life better, invest in infrastructure, healthcare, education etc. However, in many countries taxpayers money end up in the pockets of government officials, making them even richer, or are poured into endless holes, dead projects are financed just to give companies close to the government the opportunity to milk public funds. After watching public funds draining for years and politicians getting rich, who can blame them, right?

Corruption?

One week ago I did a post about public corruption as it's an interesting topic, even though it's sad what is going on in some countries.

According to Transparency International, Sweden is third on the list along with three other countries (Finland, Singapore, Switzerland), with a Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) of 85, 100 being the highest, meaning very clean.

The study found that corruption in Sweden can mostly be described as being simple in nature, in that most cases involve smaller amounts, conference travel, dining and such. source

If conference travel and dining with certain persons is considered corruption, then in some countries all officials should be jailed.

With very little corruption, Sweden can concentrate on spending taxpayers money on important things.

pagatag100620_1920.jpg
Image by David Mark from Pixabay

What You Get For Your Money

Two major areas I have to mention here, healthcare and education. Let's start with education.

shelf3195135_1920.jpg
Image by Deedee86 from Pixabay

Education

Education in Sweden is free, from bottom to top, even collage and university courses. According to the guy in the video below, you can get several university diplomas for free.

My country Romania has a combined education system at University level. The state will sponsor x amount of places which they pay for and then everyone else has to self fund. The state funded education is limited as it is only for the top students leaving everyone else to find their finances that is required. Once you benefited of state sponsored education, you can't get another one. Only once is available for everyone.

Student loans are handled differently to what we see in other countries around the world. For example a 1000 euro student loan has to be paid back within 24 months. You can opt for a 150 000 euro loan, paid back within 10 years but you need to put your property up as a guarantee.

Let's take the U.S. for example, where education is free up to a certain level, ending with high school. Collage, university education must be paid, students are granted a student loan to allow them to study, that will be repaid after graduation. This means every collage or university graduate is starting life with a huge burden already. No pressure, right?

Healthcare

Healthcare in Sweden is free and I'm pretty sure it's of high quality.

Romania has a funny way of dealing with healthcare. Every employee is insured by default and benefits of free healthcare, which is a joke really, as only a part of medication is covered by your insurance and many times you have to pay for consultations, lab testing as well.

The US is not any different, if you have insurance, you get medical care, up to what your insurance can cover. If you don't have insurance ... well, you're out of luck.

Maternity Leave

In Sweden there's paid maternity leave of 1.5 years available for either the mother or the father.

Romania has a good policy regarding maternity leave. There's a paid maternity leave of two years for one of the parents, that can be extended for another year but with less payment.

The US is the only OECD country without a national statutory paid maternity, paternity or parental leave. The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) enables some employees to take up to 12 weeks unpaid maternity leave but only 60% of workers are eligible. source

Needless to say what this means. Not only you have to go back to work and leave your child at home, you have to pay for someone in case you don't have parents to help. Studies show how important the first years in a child's life is, so leaving your kid with a total stranger or your elderly parents is not always the best solution.

These are only two categories I find important to mention, but I guess I could go on and on about what's good in Sweden and why the system works. Even immigrants are happy to pay taxes as they know what they are paying for.

Sometimes in some countries (ok, most of them) the system is inefficient, sometimes those responsible of managing funds are incompetent, ignorant, sometimes all of the above.

Sweden is a country where people are happy to pay taxes and I hope it stays that way. Sweden can be a model to many countries, applying their system could help in changing things. Will it happen? I don't think I'll live that long to see it, but it would be nice.

pg divider204.png

Don't forget to check your witness list, make sure you're voting Leofinance as well.

If you don't know how to vote, here's a tutorial for you

Search privately, receive better results and get rewarded with the Presearch decentralized search engine, powered by blockchain technology.

Posted Using LeoFinance Beta



0
0
0.000
9 comments
avatar

I’ve read up a bit about Sweden and @minimining has given me a lot to think about and they always brought up in conversations about tax and quality of living! I think that does world a disservice and they are falsely used as a poster child that big government and high tax bases work

Sweden has several things going for it, not participating in world war 2 means It didn’t have to go through refactoring their job market for a war time economy or set up banking to assist they kept on a natural progression. They also benefitted from war as they are a pretty big arms manufacture

They also have a small population needing less resource and exporting more such as gold steel and timber! They are a net exporter and in many cases they like many other European counties have saddled developing nations in Eastern Europe as well as Africa with debt through trade deals that only benefit them.

It works for them, more power to the Swedes but Their setup isn’t something other countries can simply replicate. Simply paying high taxes doesn’t equal prosperity

They too have their problems I am sure I just haven’t dug deep enough to look at what they are yet lol

0
0
0.000
avatar

Simply paying high taxes doesn’t equal prosperity

That is true, much more is needed for that. Stop stealing funds for example is one of them, use funds for what is needed (other than government officials pockets) is another.

Obviously there are no two countries the same in the world, so you can't take one model and apply to the other, but I believe there are things to learn from each country.

Posted Using LeoFinance Beta

0
0
0.000
avatar

Congratulations @erikah! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :

You have been a buzzy bee and published a post every day of the week

You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

To support your work, I also upvoted your post!

Check out the last post from @hivebuzz:

Feedback from the February 1st Hive Power Up Day
0
0
0.000
avatar

I am from sweden and can agree, and disagree with this post.
FIRST
I really dont like the video. I can not say that sweedes LOVE to pay taxes. Who love to pay anything? Do you LOVE to pay your bill for being in hospital? No, but you do it because you need it to get something from it. The question is better - Do you like your taxe system or not?

SECOND
For me it is irrelevant if I pay 5% or 95 % in tax. I know many dont agree. But for me it is most important what I get in my wallet and what I can buy for it. So tax is not the neccessary point - if the taxsystem work good. Look at the avarage salary in sweden and then what you can get for that and you understand it. Yes we have poor people but not at al close to a lot of other poorer countries.

THIRD
Trust. Yes I agree with the post writer. Its all about trust. Do I trust that my money goes to something that help me - I will pay tax and dont hide for the goverment. We have a very big trust. About 90% are voting in election and our taxsystem is a lot of trust in people. But what will happen if people get less and less trust. They will hide money and dont pay tax and then we have a big problem.
And yes. we have extremly low corruption.

FOUR
Yes we get a lot for the tax. BUT humans are not rationall. You can give extremly much, and some will not care anyway. So you can not rely taxsystem at "we give you a lot and think that you will be happy to pay tax".

FIVE
If you trying to avoid tax in sweden- your friends and neighboor will not thiink it is okey. So it is also against ethic law. That is a important thing.

Can it be implemented in other coutries. Well - IF you have a hig trust in your goverment yes. But if you dont have that.....gouverment will pay you a lot and you pay nothing back. They need to print a lot of money to give a alot - the inflation will kill the country.

Greeting from a taxpaying man that pay a compant 100 USD just to calculatie how much tax I need to pay for my cryptotradings.

thanks @chekohler that told me about this post.

0
0
0.000
avatar

LOL I think we all know they not going to let you go for not paying, look at those guys that tried to steal the Swedish crown jewels

0
0
0.000
avatar

Or the guy that did not declare crypto swaps correct and have to pay 1 000 000 usd. Feel sorry for him

0
0
0.000