
At $39 000, the Tesla Cybertruck will be sold at the same price as Tesla Model 3, a considerably smaller car. It is also extremely competitive price wise against traditional internal combustion engine trucks, which is something I think surprised a lot of people.
Electric cars will usually be more expensive that internal combustion engine cars because batteries are really expensive to make. That is the bulk of the cost of EVs. However, in the long run an EV will often be cheaper because electricity is significantly cheaper than gasoline and EVs require much less maintenance.
How on Earth did this transformation happen? We don’t really know, but I am sure Hollywood could figure out a way this would happen, with their deep expertise in unrealistic superhero backstories.
Here our protagonists Joe and Kaitlyn are not waking up with new cool superhero names and powers. Instead they are waking up as Bjørn and Siri, in this odd new Nordic reality.
How will our American heroes cope with this new Nordic reality? What has changed?
Joe cannot find his car. The garage, driveway and everything are gone! Even the road outside the house is gone.
It is…

Here is the sugar coated version they do want to tell you: In the early 1900s free wheeling capitalism unleashed the creative spirits of free enterprise and made the Nordic economies blossom. It was all good, until at some point in the 1970s reckless socialists took over, wasted all the money and tanked the economy. It sucked but the sane pro-market people got back in charge, deregulated and got everything running smoothly again.
Or at least that is what free market think tanks such as the Heritage Foundation, Cato Institute and Ludwig von Mises Institute would like you to think.

Nordic social democracy is a lot more than just free health care, college and high taxes. In this story I am jotting down random notes from my research into different aspects of Norwegian corporate democracy.
I will use the following sources:
When Social Democrats began taking power in Nordic countries how did spending and economic growth get affected? This is what we will look at in this story.
Comparing GDP growth between countries is quite hard. You could convert the GDP for every country to dollars for each year. But then you will get unnatural fluctuations based fluctuations in currency exchange rates. For this reason I have taken GDP values in local currency for each year and plotted GDP development for each country relative to this.
Thus the GDP for every country is set to 100 in 1960. Thus this graph…

Back in 1974, the social democratic prime minister of Norway, Odvar Nordli saw a need to explain the difference between the type of socialism found in the Soviet Union and the democratic socialism championed by social democrats such as him. Today in the English language media there is a lot of confusion about what democratic socialism and what role it played in the development of Nordic social democracies.
Thus here I have chosen to give an English translation of Odvar Nordli’s words on democratic socialism. The original Norwegian article can be found here: Arbeiderpartiet i dag og i morgen.
Read…

Bernie Sanders in the US and Jeremy Corbyn in the UK both called themselves democratic socialists, and used Nordic countries as a source of inspiration. American conservatives and libertarians loudly opposed this comparison, insisting that Nordic social democrats are not democratic socialists. That can certainly be debated today, but as late as 1982, they most certainly were. Social democrat and democratic socialist were one and the same thing, as it had been since the concept of social democracy arose in the 1800s as a reaction to Marxism. Democratic socialists built the Nordic model.
Related stories:
This is parts of my note taking and research into the role of the state in industrialization of Nordic countries.
Here are some previously treated countries:
Jumping around in different material written about Swedish industrialization and comparing to how Norway and Finland industrialized there are some really start differences
Sweden had an insane number of geniuses inventing all sorts of stuff in the late 1800s laying the foundation for lots of big multinational companies.
Again this is not so much of a story as a dump of various interesting facts about industrialization and economic history of Finland in the postwar years.
My interest here is to study and understand similarities and differences with other Nordic countries such as Norway which I wrote about earlier.
These are notes from University of Oslo: Globalisering og industripolitiske strategier.
As well as from: Finnish Economic and Industrial Growth — 1920 to 1939.
Interesting contrast to my native Norway is on the role of forests. In Norway a lot of early economy growth was built timber and wood products…
As a social democrat I champion collective action, but many, especially in America will challenge this idea. It is after all the land of rugged individualism. Why demand that society should change? Why not take responsibility for yourself? Why not improve yourself? Why not forge your own path?
I think this is the most misunderstood aspect of collectivism. It is this thought that at its heart it is about imploring others to do what you should have done yourself. However even collectivism starts with individual action.
Politics is not made independent of the individual. The point of collectivism is realizing…

Geek dad, living in Oslo, Norway with passion for UX, Julia programming, science, teaching, reading and writing.