Originally posted by: Carbonyl
Originally posted by: Dari
Originally posted by: freegeeks
Belgium
Workweek - 36 hours - 38 hours - 40 hours depending where you work.
I have 40 days paid vacation (27 days normal + 13 days recuperation because I work 40 hours a week in an 38 hour work week). There is a legal minimum of paid vacation days in Belgium (22 days).
Basically everyone has medical insurance the day he is born until he dies. I don't know if we can keep paying for it but for the moment it works and there is no budget deficit (there is a big national debt from the past though). I have additional medical insurance from my work (work pays the surplus) and when you are sick, you are paid. When I work overtime I'm also paid (depends where you work). I take the train to work everyday and my transportation cost is for 80% covered by my employer. In addition to the legal "state" pension the company I work has an additional pension fund and you can also do additional pension saving that are tax deductible to a certain amount.
I don't claim that "our" system is the best. It works for us for the moment and I'm fairly happy with it.
Wow, you have pensions coming out the wazoo. That is far too many for one person. I don't know how your country can sustain such a system as your countrymen grow older (and stay alive longer) without either 1) increasing taxes, 2) borrowing more money to help sustain such a system and eventually going bankrupt, or 3) scaling it back so that everyone can fend for themselves. While I agree that you have a system that benefits the individual, it is putting a hurting on the firms within your country. As the EU starts to open up its border so that tarriffs and protectionism becomes a thing of the past, the companies in your country will be overwhelm at the competition globalization has to offer. Not only will the competition come from Eastern Europe and the United States, but also from cut-throat East Asian nations (such as Taiwan, China, and S. Korea). You guys have to take serious steps at reform before Brussels opens her gates, or risk being undercut.
I don't think you understand what makes european countries and america to a lesser extent so great and millions every year want to flock to. It's basically the social contract. Where 99% of the people don't have to worry about being expoited, working in unsafe conditions, straving when they no longer are working, egalitarian opportunities for the most part etc etc etc...
Sure China is a wonderful place inside one on the bigger cities, where you have an opportunity to make a fortune but 99% of that country is flat broke and 1% has all the weatlh making it generally an undisrable place to live, unless you are in the 1% crowd. No westerners are immigrating there but millions of chineese leave every year for the west. The prosperity of these western nations results from the people commissioning their governments to look after the common interest not the businessmans intrest exclusivly. The old adage about the rich get richer and the poor get poorer is true under unristricted capitalism, Even happend over here with the robber barrens and great deprssion.
So what is the common intrests is the point of contention really, and it should be settled democratically as it is in france. I think everyone would agree on roads, national defense, and law and order. Most agree on some type of old age benefits and education. Since France spends a fraction of what we do on defense I think they are fine with thier more liberal social policies.
When you say they can't compete I have no idea what you mean. They have an awesome lifestyle and are very high tech and still manufacture more than we do per-capita. French people are smart and educated, which is again part of the social contract, drawing employers from all over the world as in HDl1's example. They also only show less than 3% debt as opposed to the US's irresponsible 4.6% of gdp. As a member of the EU it's capped at 3% by law. If anyone is in huge trouble it's the united states.
Big trouble
You really should travel a bit. Look at the infrastucture of democratic coutries with hadly any taxation or social benefits like Turkey then shoot up to Sweden a high tax state. BIG DIFFERENCE.
If you feel so strongly about the more liberal counties can't compete I urge you to go open a factory/research center in South America and let me know how it goes. I'm interested in the type of personel you'll be able to hire.