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Upside-down World: Sweden Rejects American-style Bailouts in Favor of Free Market, NY Times Rejects Sweden

by: Scott Martin   posted: 2009-03-23 16:42:00
Viewed 624 times. 0 Comments.

The world has turned completely upside down when Sweden of all places rejects the new American bailout model in favor of allowing the free market to decide companies' fates. The New York Times meanwhile, rising momentarily from its deathbed, supports American policy over Swedish policy for the first time in recent history with this ridiculously one-sided story.

Which makes it all the more wrenching that the Swedish government has responded to Saab’s desperate financial situation by saying, essentially, tough luck. Or, as the enterprise minister, Maud Olofsson, put it recently, “The Swedish state is not prepared to own car factories.”

Such a view might seem jarring, coming as it does from a country with a reputation for a paternalistic view of workers and companies. The “Swedish model” for dealing with a banking crisis — nationalizing the banks, recapitalizing them and selling them — has been much debated lately in the United States, with free-market defenders warning of a slippery slope of Nordic socialism.

The Swedish model is now the American model, with Sweden's government moving towards capitalism.

Governments all over the world are confronting the disintegration of the global automobile market in different ways, with loans, bailouts and takeovers.

But Sweden’s approach has been particularly hard-nosed, and particularly unequivocal.

Why is the government apparently dead set against helping Saab, an iconic brand that stands as a global symbol of Sweden, with Ikea, Volvo and Abba?

While it must be disheartening for a Times writer to back American government over Sweden's, at least the paper retains it's practice of steadfastly refusing to limit pure opinion pieces to the op-ed page.

But then the Times has an ulterior motive, above and beyond its hatred of capitalism. The Old Grey Whore, with stock prices cheaper than its Sunday paper, will certainly be looking for its own bailout money soon. So they lay it on real thick while backing those who want their company bailed out.

That is what Paul Akerlund, the local chairman of the automobile workers’ union, wonders.

“I’m a little surprised,” he said. “They say the market should help itself, but the market has collapsed around the whole world. It’s an extraordinary situation.”

He added, with a note of accusation in his voice, “In Germany, France and England, the government is going in to help the car manufacturers.”

Swedish officials have condemned what they see as protectionism by other European countries that have pledged to prop up their own failing car industries. They have also been scathing about General Motors, Saab’s owner, and the last thing they want is to seem to be bailing out a despised foreign company.

If Sweden changed it's thinking about bailing out a foreign company, it could greatly improve the of the New York Times, which has been America's number one foreign newspaper for decades.

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