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Commercialization of the welfare -a Swedish phenomenon?
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<blockquote data-quote="Imperiuz" data-source="post: 64064152" data-attributes="member: 189581"><p><span style="font-size: 10px">I'd like to bring up an issue that might be quite exclusively Sweidsh. At least that's my feeling, because I often have trouble even explaining the issue to foreigners. </span></p><p><span style="font-size: 10px"></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 10px">The <em>commercialization of the welfare sector</em>, or - depending on your political stance <em>- freedom of choice in the welfare sector</em> is probably the biggest political issue over here. The current centre-right government loves voucher systems and have introduced those in various welfare sectors, from healthcare to schools, employment offices, pharmacies, motor-vehicle inspections, postal services and a few more things. The schooling system, for example, is entirely based on vouchers, were students are treated like customers and both publicly and privately run schools compete for the money they receive from the government through each individual student. Private (called "Free") schools are forbidden from taking any additional fees from their students, but are in return allowed to make profit from the public money they receive.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 10px"></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 10px">The competition has it's advantages. As a student, one can chose schools depending on your own taste. There are schools with more or less homework, schools who offer services like hiking tours into the wild, free laptops, or schools were students play football matches each day. Myself, I could stay at the same place when graduating from elementary to high school, because my school had started to offer both services. But it also has a downside when schools relax on discipline and give students better grades than they deserve for their own competitiveness sake. Not long ago, a public outrage was caused by a documentary about a school brand that had made big profits (around a quarter billion SEK, translates into 28.804.000 &#8364<img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite2" alt=";)" title="Wink ;)" loading="lazy" data-shortname=";)" />. Former students were interviewed revealing how they used to play Counter Strike or World of Warcraft during lessons on the laptops they had been given by the school, and the teachers just pretended they didn't see what was going on. </span></p><p><span style="font-size: 10px"></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 10px">I have experienced this as well. I played quite a lot of Heroes of Might and magic during maths lessons, were one was allowed to bring laptops, and the teacher just ignored it. I'm am not sure on my stance, but around 85% of the Swedes are against profit-making in the welfare sector, but only the radical left (V) and the radical right (SD) are proposing measures against it (they have different solutions for it though).</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 10px"></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 10px">In the documentary I mentioned, </span>they claimed that Sweden is the only country in the world where private companies are are allowed to make a profit from fully tax-funded schools. So that's basically my question: is this true, and is this entire issue a somewhat uniquely Swedish phenomenon, or is it something going in in your country as well?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Imperiuz, post: 64064152, member: 189581"] [SIZE=2]I'd like to bring up an issue that might be quite exclusively Sweidsh. At least that's my feeling, because I often have trouble even explaining the issue to foreigners. The [I]commercialization of the welfare sector[/I], or - depending on your political stance [I]- freedom of choice in the welfare sector[/I] is probably the biggest political issue over here. The current centre-right government loves voucher systems and have introduced those in various welfare sectors, from healthcare to schools, employment offices, pharmacies, motor-vehicle inspections, postal services and a few more things. The schooling system, for example, is entirely based on vouchers, were students are treated like customers and both publicly and privately run schools compete for the money they receive from the government through each individual student. Private (called "Free") schools are forbidden from taking any additional fees from their students, but are in return allowed to make profit from the public money they receive. The competition has it's advantages. As a student, one can chose schools depending on your own taste. There are schools with more or less homework, schools who offer services like hiking tours into the wild, free laptops, or schools were students play football matches each day. Myself, I could stay at the same place when graduating from elementary to high school, because my school had started to offer both services. But it also has a downside when schools relax on discipline and give students better grades than they deserve for their own competitiveness sake. Not long ago, a public outrage was caused by a documentary about a school brand that had made big profits (around a quarter billion SEK, translates into 28.804.000 €). Former students were interviewed revealing how they used to play Counter Strike or World of Warcraft during lessons on the laptops they had been given by the school, and the teachers just pretended they didn't see what was going on. I have experienced this as well. I played quite a lot of Heroes of Might and magic during maths lessons, were one was allowed to bring laptops, and the teacher just ignored it. I'm am not sure on my stance, but around 85% of the Swedes are against profit-making in the welfare sector, but only the radical left (V) and the radical right (SD) are proposing measures against it (they have different solutions for it though). In the documentary I mentioned, [/SIZE]they claimed that Sweden is the only country in the world where private companies are are allowed to make a profit from fully tax-funded schools. So that's basically my question: is this true, and is this entire issue a somewhat uniquely Swedish phenomenon, or is it something going in in your country as well? [/QUOTE]
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