In Italy , and probably in other countries, the
prestige of Germany
is steadily rising. This is not surprising. Given the very good performances of
this country in a period of heavy global depression. Nonetheless, I see that
the economic model of Germany
and other socialdemocracies is poorly understood. The “social model” of Europe
– a “third way” between the pure liberism of the United
States and the socialism of Soviet Union – had in fact
two very different declensions: the socialdemocracy of Central Europe, and the
mixed economy of Britain , Italy and partly France . Many believe that Italy has been fundamentally a socialist
country, modelled after the Soviet Union, but our model was rather Britain and its
mixed economy. The sanitary service, for instance, is cleary shaped after the
British Sanitary Service.
Both
socialdemocracies and mixed economies envisage strong state intervention in
economy, but in a very different way. In socialdemocracies enterprise is almost
exclusively private, but there is a strong, progressive taxation that
redistribute wealth from the rich to the poor via a very developed network of universal social services. In mixed
economies there are state enterprises that coexist with private enterprises and
often represent a consistent fraction of national economy. In Italy the
publicly hold IRI represented the largest enterprise in the country, but
coexisted with other big corporations such as FIAT or Ansaldo. In Britain the
fraction of publicly hold enterprises was perhaps even bigger. In mixed
economies taxation is relatively low and not strongly progressive, and social
services are present but less developed than in socialdemocracies. Somebody
could say that taxation is Italy
is very high, but, although in principle it is strongly progressive, in
practice taxes are paid almost exclusively by the lower classes, given the
existence of extensive fiscal evasion in the upper classes.
Today
socialdemocracies not only survive but show very good economic performances.
Mixed economies, with the exception of France ,
have disappeared: public enterprises have been sold and Britain and Italy
have changed from a mixed socialist/liberist model, to an almost completely
liberist economic model with a relatively well developed welfare (the
persistence of a welfare system today is the main difference with USA ). In Britain the transition to a liberist model
happened in the early 80’s, while in Italy
it is more recent and successive to the collapse of the Soviet
Union .
It must be
said that Prodi and Bersani had in mind to follow a German model and to
transform Italy
into a socialdemocracy, but their project failed largely because of the
opposition of PD. The majority of former communist party in fact converted to
liberism after 1989, and never considered the possibility of a socialdemocratic
model, largely, I suspect, because of poor knowledge of the redistributive
model of Central European economies. In Italy ,
before 1989, we had a conflict between socialism and liberism, and few knew
exactly what happened in Sweden ,
Germany , Denmark.
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