Published: 28 Mar 12 13:56 CET | Print version
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/39946/20120328/
In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, Sweden needs to change its constitution to ensure that spendthrift politicians' failure to curb public spending doesn't leave the economy in ruins, argues Jacob Lundberg of the Moderate party's youth wing.
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Now we know that a policy of borrowing and spending other peoples' money is unsustainable and ultimately ruinous, (but that socialist governments do it anyway), these seem sensible measures to keep the left in check. The sensible governments that follow, won't have such a huge financial deficit to clean up, and can actually get down to making the world a better place, instead of paying down the previous government's ruinous debts.
Having said that, the last Social Democrat govenment of Sweden declined the ruinious path, taken by Britain and Greece. But that's not to say the next one will.
Actually, they already did.. The infrastructure investments for the past few years has been unsustainable, going against EU and OECD guidelines for a sustainable development. If you would see society investments (Healthcare, working infrastructure and education) as "borrowing and spending other people's money", then I'll just laugh..
"why wouldn't the next Moderate government do reckless spendings?"
Because they would be constitutionally prevented from doing so by the measures described above. That's the whole point; no future government, left or centre, or right will be able to bankrupt the nation with reckless spending and borrowing. This is what socialist governments have done in Greece, Britain, and probably a whole bunch of other EU countries. As you say, there is nothing to stop a centre government from doing the same thing. These measures will stop them all. How can that be bad?
That criticism isn't againt the article, it was against your first comment that pointed that it would only be leftwing parties that would put on deficits that are too high..
I have nothing against the article, except. that EU already have measurements against thus, The Stability and Growth Pact. The problem is that the countries can, obviously, go around it without consequence.. To to ahead and implement stricter rules in Sweden would just be good :-)
Blessup