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@tauceti80602 жыл бұрын
Can you do a video on Guyana🇬🇾
@freepalestine41922 жыл бұрын
Nicolás Maduro was democratically elected as the President of Venezuela. Granted, he’s nowhere near as good of a leader as Hugo Chávez, but he is not a dictator. If he appears to be a strongman, it’s because Venezuela has been under assault from the USA for decades. A sudden drop in oil prices caused by Saudi Arabia increasing production at the behest of America, and a revolt against the government by Venezuela’s capitalist class destabilized the country, and the government did not have adequate financial reserves to fight back because it was spending most oil revenue to rectify income inequality for a decade. When social unrest caused by inflation shook Venezuelan society to the core, the USA attempted to install Juan Guaidó as puppet dictator of Venezuela. Despite Maduro’s shortcomings, Venezuelans completely rejected Guaidó, and he was never able to seize power, even after the USA made an assassination attempt on Maduro using a helicopter drone carrying a bomb, and sent a small mercenary force to invade Venezuela by sea. Of course, the USA would not dare to attempt such violent interventions in Norway for several reasons, obviously including race. Norway is in Europe surrounded by great powers, while Venezuela is in Latin America, so it is targeted by the Monroe Doctrine. Norway is a member of NATO, while Venezuela is not. If you look into other oil-rich nations, you will see a similar situation. The USA or another western imperialist country has intervened to attempt a takeover. If the local leaders cooperate with the USA, then the people have peace but no freedom. If the local leaders do not cooperate, then the people have freedom but no peace.
@correctionguy76322 жыл бұрын
I realize youre just reading his assesment but you should have adressed the claim of "little to no" education point in late 18th century. There was established some mandatory education already in 1739, and even prior to that had an estimated literacy rate of at least 90%. By comparison california *today* is at 76%.
@gannonpatton28582 жыл бұрын
If you like the authors of The Narrow Corridor, you'd probably like their work "Why Nations Fail". I don't agree with some of their points but it's pretty good.
@mr.priman2 жыл бұрын
You somehow managed to show Crimea as part of russia. Please get some education. Crimea is part of Ukraine
@Pining_for_the_fjords2 жыл бұрын
I'm a Brit and lived in Norway for a year. Despite only having a basic unskilled job and only kind-of speaking the language, I felt more financially secure there than I ever have in the UK.
@KelsaRavenlock2 жыл бұрын
That's because alot of U.K. money ends up in Norway.
@ThisGuyAd.2 жыл бұрын
I did the same but i stayed, and have been here for a decade now. It's the social democratic system that is the golden ticket, the oil is really kept at arms length from the rest of the economy. The UK had a system similar to it in the 1970s and it was the most income equal county in Europe.
@Pining_for_the_fjords2 жыл бұрын
@@ThisGuyAd. I would have happily stayed there for the rest of my life, but I got friendly with a woman back here in England who wasn't keen on Norway's colder climate, so I moved back for her.
@ThisGuyAd.2 жыл бұрын
@@Pining_for_the_fjords I totally get that, it's early July and has pissed it down all week. The government here has been trying to break strikes recently. I will be emigrating again if Norway goes the way of the UK in the 1980s. I can live somewhere hot and have my rights stripped from me.
@Pining_for_the_fjords2 жыл бұрын
@@ThisGuyAd. We were in Oslo recently to visit, and we noticed there were no trains running, but there were bus replacements, then a few weeks later we had mass rail strikes in the UK. I guess everywhere is experiencing financial hardship and anywhere with strong unions will be prone to strikes. Personally I fell in love with Norway for its nature, being close to the mountains and fjords, the living in the north close to Tromsø seeing the aurora in the winter and midnight sun in the summer. I would have still wanted to live there if it was a poor country. Norway's current economic success was just a bonus for me.
@aceundor2 жыл бұрын
Well as a Norwegian with family in Brazil, my conclusion is that the low levels of corruption in Norway is the main driver behind its success. What people often forget is that corruption is much more than brown envelopes with cash going from corporate executives to polititicans. Corruption is for example hiring a friend for a vacancy instead of hiring the best qualified candidate. Part of Norways success can be atributed to our cultural heritage in where we are not relationship focused in our business relationships. We focus on the deal and the results, the relationships are important, but secondary. Foreigners can often regard us as "cold" or "distanced" due to this, but in fact we are not.
@aceundor2 жыл бұрын
@@Ale-ft4re No - that is not it. Norway has never been like the rural areas of France and Germany. Look at the video again. Norway was democratic, organized and industrialized at its independence in 1905. At that point Norway was not a poor country at all. Norway has been amongst the "first world countries" since 1905. As for Brazil, big cities is not the problem. Brazils problems is for another video, but they are related to "o jeitinho brasileiro", not the size of it cities. In Brazil everybody tries to be smarter than the one he or she is dealing with and therfore nobody trusts eachother. In Norway the level of trust is very high and we can leave a shop open an unattended with a box in the middle where people leave their money for what they buy. Trust your neighbour and you will have a wealthy country!
@lucycristinecorreia26242 жыл бұрын
Congrat for your amazing nation! I'm from Brazil, moved to Norway recently, and it seems like a paradise to me. "O jeitinho brasileiro" is really wracking my beloved country.
@Ale-ft4re2 жыл бұрын
@@lucycristinecorreia2624 they shall expel you them since you will destroy their country with your corruption
@aceundor2 жыл бұрын
@@Ale-ft4re the educational level and health of ‘the common man’ is critical to a coutrys success. However trust is even more important.
@HalifaxHercules2 жыл бұрын
Norway also did the smart thing in setting aside some of their oil royalties for a rainy day situation when crude oil futures are low, reinvested some of these royalties into a sovereign wealth fund to prepare for life after oil, and that's how they became rich while other major oil producers did not.
@sreerekha69072 жыл бұрын
I am from India and living in Norway for 15 + yrs(now a Norwegian citizen). Norwegians are so inclusive and strong believes of equality and mostly don't care about religion or god. I think this is their strength. Feel so lucky and proud to live here.Jeg elsker dette landet🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴.
@joelosteen97092 жыл бұрын
Can you give a visa???👋
@pappi1872 жыл бұрын
Why dont u go back to India?
@norway_mallu2 жыл бұрын
Am also from india
@kimjong-un8442 жыл бұрын
Skol from Nagaland.
@milyp.29102 жыл бұрын
Sad to hear that they don’t care about God 😢
@greenboy6542 жыл бұрын
In India, we use Norway as a benchmark of growth while we grow, recently Norway helped India build a geo thermal plan in the Himalayas.
@jonkayl9416 Жыл бұрын
Its a pity that India is going the non democratic direction and run by a Strong Man, If that keeps on going it will lead to a Kleptocracy and not like Norway.
@20chocsaday Жыл бұрын
Even before the discovery of oil, Norway was a country that encouraged others to find their differences between each other and try to reduce them. India was big, turned in on itself, but tried to be a bastion of neutrality.
@EepsyCreepsy Жыл бұрын
Us Norwegians are happy to help
@RichardSteuland8 ай бұрын
My cousin Jeris married Topan Bagchi. Her kids are Norwegian Indian. Her kids are brilliant and have offers from Yale , Harvard and Princeton. Not religious.
@BrianGivensYtube2 жыл бұрын
Norway is like a lottery winner than put most of its winnings in dividend stocks. Great leadership.
@kk440635NORWAY Жыл бұрын
Norway is a good country, but it is not unique. Most countries in the western world, not all western countries, but most have a similar system. Compared to the second and third world, the West has relatively low social differences, but the USA and the UK have large differences Norway is often glorified and seen as the best of the best, which I think is completely wrong Although our country is rich in resources, the population is not rich, not poor either, just working class. The majority are working class. The middle class, the upper class and the poor are a minority, as in most Western countries The amount of income in Norway is high, but people abroad who dream of living in Norway do not check living costs against income. Norway is among the most expensive countries in the West, the cost of living is insanely high, therefore the high amount of income is not relevant to wealth I know a married couple where the husband is Spanish, the wife is Norwegian. They have lived in both Norway and Spain, now they live in Spain. Spain is not as rich in resources as we are, but the people who live there are neither richer nor poorer than Norwegians Measured in amount, they earn 35% less in Spain for similar occupations than in Norway, in return the cost of living is 35% lower, which makes this match, therefore the standard of living is the same. Rights in healthcare are also the same Poor, middle class and rich are a minority in Spain, and it is a minority in Norway. The level of corruption is low compared to the second and third world in Spain, and the level of corruption is low in Norway compared to the second and third world Norwegians are no better off than most other western countries, this is a big misunderstanding Yes, we earn more, but we also have a higher cost of living Something that is also misunderstood is that healthcare is free in Norway, this is not true. When you are admitted to hospital, you pay nothing, and the treatment you receive while you are admitted is free, but for all outpatient treatment you pay a deductible. The healthcare system is partially subsidized by the state, but not free, only admission to a public hospital is free In the last year, Norway has gone downhill. I would call it a financial crisis, something all countries go through once in a while. Interest rates have exploded, electricity is 10 times more expensive than a year ago, the currency has lost a lot of value, and recently food also became much more expensive. Despite all this, there is no index adjustment in the income. The amount of income is still the same now as it was two years ago, we have a much higher cost of living, money is in inflation, interest rates have exploded, but after all this the amount of salary is exactly the same Poverty rate went from 7% of Norway's population to 10% of the population. It is still a minority on the scale, but I still think it is tragic and unfair that it should be like this I also have to mention dental health. One would think that the teeth are not part of the body in Norway, because dental health is not covered by the ordinary healthcare system. Public healthcare is partially subsidized, you pay a deductible, the state pays the rest, dental health is not subsidized, after you turn 18, the state pays 0% of the dental health, so at the dentist you pay 100% of the price yourself Higher education in the public sector is not free either, you pay a compulsory fee each semester. You have to buy your own laptop, you have to buy your own textbooks, and if you don't live near the university, you have to rent a dormitory, which is very expensive, and you also have to pay for electricity and food, and to afford this you have to apply for a student loan, and you have debt for years after you graduate When Norwegians buy houses or flats in working-class standard, they have mortgages for 25 to 35 years on average This post is not intended as a complaint, but as a detailed explanation that Norway is nothing extraordinary, Norway is nothing unique. Money is not everything, and I have no goal of becoming rich, but it is not fun that people think we are so rich when it is not the case, nor is it nice that people think Norway is utopia when it is not the case The rare times I afford a holiday, and the locals ask where I'm from, and I say Norway, then I can't be left alone, then people will sell me the most expensive things they have, restaurants will sell me lobster, if I am in a taxi and they ask where I'm from, then they'll drive me everywhere and give me a long sightseeing trip and show me all possible sights, because they think I'm insanely rich when they hear the word "Norway". I am also told that I am lucky, but what do they really know about my life? How do they know I'm lucky? That and being lucky are to a far greater extent personal experiences than which country you live in. I've always had what I need, but I'm still not lucky, I've been exposed to a lot of bad experiences in life. That's why it's not fun that people think I'm rich and lucky! I consider myself neither lucky nor unlucky, it's subjective, I currently have a job I like with good colleagues, and a few good friends, and good relatives. I earn less in this job than in the previous one, but I enjoy myself better, therefore I feel luckier with this job. But behind me in life I have been treated terribly by many people, I have been exposed to a lot of pain, and I have also been in two car accidents. So even though I live in Norway, I am not immune from experiencing a bad life. It is to a small extent one country that determines whether you are lucky or not, as long as you are not living in war, or starving to death
@kmeanxneth Жыл бұрын
@@kk440635NORWAY nice copypasta :)
@m1kus960 Жыл бұрын
genius, Norway is one of the cheapest countries in the world, if you compare prices and salaries@@kk440635NORWAY
@intermaria Жыл бұрын
If that's the case then Switzerland is like someone worked hard their whole life and still got farther than the lottery winner. At least that's my experience as a Norwegian after experiencing Switzerland
@kmeanxneth Жыл бұрын
@@intermaria Switzerland is like someone who you gived your money but he will never give it back. XD
@carolined59232 жыл бұрын
What a proud nation they must be for having leadership that thought of its people and country, Well done Norway and also for keeping your feet on the ground and head out of the clouds with ego etc. Bravo to its government
@folloeiendomsservicerenhol79002 жыл бұрын
They should look after it’s people.. after all they tax people 40% on wages! And non stop bills from the government.
@SD-tq7ug2 жыл бұрын
Norway and Scandinavia a role model for the world!
@leelea85952 жыл бұрын
@@folloeiendomsservicerenhol7900 the taxes gives us free healthcare, free school good roads, and much more!
@Aubatron2 жыл бұрын
In the rest of the world, how do we promote politicians that put the well being of their country before themselves? That is what really needs to be answered.
@Aubatron2 жыл бұрын
@@SD-tq7ug Not sure if their way of governance is viable for the rest of the world though. For example Norway with a population of 5 million, the USA with a population of 340 million. A lot of the Scandinavian countries built their economy and wealth first, then transitioned over to socialist policies. It is not exactly an easy task for a large country to do the same, especially one with a lot of federal debt. The population of the USA is just too big, and the government too wasteful. Same thing with most other large countries.
@MartinT032 Жыл бұрын
As i recall, Norway's doctrine for spending the newfound oil money was to do exactly the opposite of what the Netherlands did. The Netherlands' economy suffered greatly after excessive spending of their oil money, which was aptly named "The Dutch Desease". This happened a few years before Norway discovered its oil in the North sea, and after witnessing this cationary tale first hand, Norway would adopt a very careful approach to its spending. Instead, most of the surplus oil money would be stored in a fund to act as an insurance for when the oil reserves would eventually run out.
@alejandrolopeztobon16432 жыл бұрын
Dude your videos are insanely good. Well-sourced, well-based, well-paced. I've read and seen documentaries about several of these topics for years and I was surprised about how many new things I've learned by watching your videos.
@CasualScholar2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed:)
@Elrond_Hubbard_12 жыл бұрын
Being Australian, I wonder how much better my country might be if our government took the same approach towards natural resources. We have a population of only 25 million and we have a significant percentage of the entire words ores and minerals. Unfortunately, we followed the American model and we let multi-national corporations take ownership over our resources and take all the profit.
@meminustherandomgooglenumbers2 жыл бұрын
In Chile they have a lot of free enterprise, but the government monopolies certain raw materials and sells them for super cheap to everyone. So if you are Manuel the landscaper buying a wheelbarrow full of gravel, or a multinational building a new HQ, you pay the same low rate for the gravel either way.
@Dwightstjohn-fo8ki2 жыл бұрын
You missed: take ownership, and ship all the profits out of the country.
@andrewtingzhou66682 жыл бұрын
War will come to you if multi-national corporations could not profit by peaceful means. Norway is a small country and was allowed to live like it.
@blakeedwards55702 жыл бұрын
The quality of life in Australia would be very close to Norway. We ranked right up there next to Norway on all of those metrics.
@blakeedwards55702 жыл бұрын
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_Development_Index
@Jon03872 жыл бұрын
My great grandfather left Norway for America in 1906. My family in Norway was really poor, every extra dollar my great grandpa had was shipped back to Norway to support the family that stayed. In fact shipments of money, clothing and even candy was shipped to Norway in support of the family until the 1960’s at that point my great grandfather realized they weren’t so poor anymore after a visit.
@HenrikCOYG2 жыл бұрын
Great Story
@JarkaShadow172 жыл бұрын
Very nice story, I would like to visit Norway one day!
@EEEEEEEE2 жыл бұрын
E
@Random-id4ll2 жыл бұрын
Do you still know your Norwegian family?
@SuperGodblessyou2 жыл бұрын
Almost same story as oversea Chinese thinks about their family back home in China , until we go back and see with our own eyes!
@Arctic_Dude Жыл бұрын
As a Norwegian, I'm impressed by the research you've done for this video.
@tonymurphy62272 жыл бұрын
I worked in Norway on and off for 5 years, and I was told about this. At first I was sceptical about it. A country with no corporate or political corruption stripping its people of their assets, surely not? But as your excellent video explains, Norway got it right.
@aarspar2 жыл бұрын
From all of this, I think the best thing that happened to Norway was that it already had good governance, politically literate population, and a healthy dose of nationalism (idk the exact term but basically it's how politicians think for their country first and for themselves second), the things that many countries could only dream of.
@fred69072 жыл бұрын
There's a lot of bad things not mentioned in this video. It's not all good and glorious. Extreme government spending, globalization (immigration issues), death of the nuclear family (typical western problem), spoiled lazy population and so on. He highlights all the good stuff, but forgets to mention the downside to all the riches. The nationalism you mentioned is dying out rather quickly I'm afraid. I blame that on the politicians, not the money itself. I was born here, so I'm not making shit up.
@stenhansenmaling12812 жыл бұрын
@@fred6907 Im also from Norway and you're kinda just making shit up. The nucelear family consept has never really existed in Norway to begin with so how can it be dying? Also a lot of studies show that norwegians on avarage are harder workers than most other countries, Norway also have very few immigration issues due to its focus on integration. Globalisation is a problem doe since we dont produce enough food in our country to feed the population so if the borders ever close we're screwed
@fred69072 жыл бұрын
@@stenhansenmaling1281 Birth rates and marriages are rapidly declining due to post modern feminism (which hates the nuclear family btw). We work fewer hours than most Europeans, only beaten by a few countries. Ethnical Norwegian will be a minority in the not so distant future, immigration will outnumber birthrates very soon too. Just because our major news outlets don't report it, it still exists. Then again, most Norwegians have their head stuck up their ass...so we kinda deserve it.
@bruxar82852 жыл бұрын
@@stenhansenmaling1281 Thats not whats the most troublesome about the globalization. The main issue is the bureaucracy and politics that come with globalization. Over the last couple of decades, Norway has been losing its political power over themselves, with EU, WEF and other global companies/organizations deciding more and more. The biggest issue with this is that rules the EU decide on, almost every european country has to agree to, even though the decision isn’t necessarily healthy for the given country. The power distribution is way too bureaucratic, with a few people controlling way too much. Elections matter less and less, as the represants in the global organizations make the important decisions of a given country, instead of the elected politicians of that country.
@Google_Does_Evil_Now2 жыл бұрын
They had Genuinely Distributed Democracy. Checks and balances. Most of us have corrupt swines that deserve to be imprison charged with some form of treason against their own people and communities.
@terminatorm134d32 жыл бұрын
Interesting Fact: The picture you see at 7:21 was taken around the date of 20th of April which was the date that city was bombed and burned. The city is Namsos which is my home town and currently where I am. The city was bombed so badly British Prime Minister Winston Churchill used the Term "Namsosed" as a way to describe mass desturction, after the bombing there was pretty much nothing left except a few chimneys. After the defenders realised there was nothing left to defend they fled by sea in what would be known as Norways Dunkirk.
@brettr2 жыл бұрын
What a concept!! Using the country’s income on its citizens instead of offshore companies.. Unlike here in Australia
@blakeedwards55702 жыл бұрын
We did have a huge future fund. And then Wayne Swan spent it on stimulus during the GFC.
@norbertschmitz33582 жыл бұрын
@@blakeedwards5570 The future fund still exists....it was designed to cover federal superannuation pension liabilities. The real scandal is that the gas exporting industries got a deal whereby they were only to be taxed on their profits. Well, they never made a profit...and right now they are sitting on a $ 200 billion tax loss....for ever! So Australia will never get a single cent from our gas resources! And both Labor and Libs are to blame for that!!!! The smart and clever country we are......with our C grade politicians.
@andyl80552 жыл бұрын
I was thinking that, as an Aussie. We have a big country but it just means we have a longer run up to decline when we run out, having sold all our resources for the benefit of a greedy few.
@andyl80552 жыл бұрын
We had a decade of massive revenues that the Howard government blew on… tax cuts for the rich? The hand outs in the second half of his eleven years were so profligate you need a different word.
@norbertschmitz33582 жыл бұрын
@@andyl8055 You are spot on. Both, Gina Rinehart and Andrew Forest are now our 2 richest people. Why? They inherited some Australia iron ore deposits from their fathers and turned them into mines. Not their fault....good luck to them. As good old Allen Bond once said: Australia is a great country, ...you discover a huge gold field.... fill in a form...and it's all yours....tax free😂😂😂 Cheers from Cairns
@plushiie_2 жыл бұрын
One of the only videos that focuses on the groundwork before the oil boom. GDP before 1967 was similar to many other european counties that the time. Fishing and the shipping fleet were massive providers. Another important person is Farok al-kasim, a geologist that moved from Irak, and became on of the loudest speakers warning the government to not allow private companies to just pump and dump the sector. He was actually knightet by the king in 2012 for his efforts back then.
@johnmcmullan9741 Жыл бұрын
But GDP is an awful measure for social welfare. As is the state owning everything and running it for profit rather than public services. And it was the discovery of oil - the curse I'd oil - that ended Norway's brief journey of progress post WWII. Now their schools are falling down and their children get a Micky mouse education with no career prospects, unless they leave Norway. The unavoidable curse of geography for Norway.
@Metalmassacre07 Жыл бұрын
lol Amerimutt telling a Norwegian about his country. You know nothing you fool@@johnmcmullan9741
@StrandedKnight84 Жыл бұрын
@@johnmcmullan9741lol
@The360MlgNoscoper Жыл бұрын
@@johnmcmullan9741 What
@trypt0faani161 Жыл бұрын
@@johnmcmullan9741 umm Norway is consistently ranking in top spots. including HDI, press freedom, anti-corruption and education. what are you on about?
@sh58102 жыл бұрын
I overheard a conversation between a customer and a guy working in my local grocery store in Oslo. The grocery store worker had just come back from holiday, and had spent two weeks traveling the French riviera. I've spent most of my adult life living in the US and the UK so I still find it really striking how people working those types of jobs can still afford relative luxuries like that.
@leelea85952 жыл бұрын
It’s because whatever job u have they are trying to make people’s payments around the same % of what taxes they get! So it’s not may super rich and a lot of poor people! (Sorry for my bad English)
@Fan-zx1lz2 жыл бұрын
@@leelea8595 I want to have this Life. It's my dream. Which Jobs are most needed in Norway?
@pablo82862 жыл бұрын
Two weeks in France sounds like a standard holiday even for the average Eastern European
@More_Row2 жыл бұрын
@@pablo8286 Not even close
@danielhenderson762 Жыл бұрын
@@More_Rowany labor skill will get you a job here. Something this video barely glossed is wages in Norway and how it benefits the system. Unions are very strong and have made the minimum wage very high. There's also lots of laws on salary. If you do physical work, you're entitled to more pay. If you have a particular skill like carpentry (as opposed to grocery store worker), you're entitled to more pay. You make more in thr afternoon, even more in the evening. Weekends net 50% and 100% more. All of this by law. And companies will rarely offer minimum wage. They generally offer more. Even grocery stores. This keeps everybody in work, and taxes are high. Taxes go to free education. Which produces higher skilled workers and entrepreneurs. Which produces more work places. It's a healthy circle. Harald Eia has a TED talk on this and why the high taxes and high minimum wage is the reason Norway has the most millionaires per capita.
@kingbonezai49252 жыл бұрын
I would be interested in you explaining how Norway avoided political corruption. I know you liked to quite “democracy” a lot, but a lot of countries have that claim too, and most democracies are so tired with the upper classes and corruption. I am wondering if you could expound on what makes Norway different.
@adrianbalboa53532 жыл бұрын
Democracy isnt just elections its free and transparent institutions that can weed out corruption.
@kingbonezai49252 жыл бұрын
@@adrianbalboa5353 fair point. But many claim to have democracy when corruption and under table deals are rampant. So what makes Norway the exception to that? That’s what I want to know. (Or even if it is true they are free from corruption, and don’t nearly hide it)
@novigradian12842 жыл бұрын
@@adrianbalboa5353 Isn't that a bit of a chicken and egg problem though? In order to build free and transparent institutions you need democracy - policy makers accountable to the people and who would sculpt the institutions - but in order to not have politicians co opted by powerful interests, you need free and transparent institutions to keep politicians in check.
@michaelkregnes91192 жыл бұрын
@@novigradian1284 You're right.. Transparancy is just a part of the puzzle. You need a climate where politicians do whats best for the country. That i honestly believe derive from our strong unity and trust in eachother. Though we recently have seen episodes of corrupt prominent politicians. Furtunately media dont collab with politicians and they show no mercy for them either..
@Asidders2 жыл бұрын
Politicians are becoming their own "high-tier" citizens now, with rules not applying, and tax breaks or tax fraud becoming the norm.
@wat66252 жыл бұрын
As a norwegian im happy to pay high taxes, because i know that this money is being used to good things
@scandi668810 ай бұрын
Norway doesn't have high personal income tax compared with other nations, like Sweden, Denmark, Netherlands, France, Germany, Japan etc
@wenipertiwi5012 жыл бұрын
Wow norwegians are people with high patriotism, they really build the nation for the people. Kudos for the video
@Anirossa Жыл бұрын
Not really patriotism, but forsight and wanting the best for everyone. patriotism something with more toxic associations and idolising ones nation
@KainYusanagi2 жыл бұрын
This really goes to show how the framework must be laid before another country can realistically utilize the format that Norway has in structuring itself for strong safety nets (in other words, how it's impossible in general to do so entirely); it has actively pursued such at every level, and has the financial backing to do so properly, thanks to its particular exploitation of many factors; something that politicians in many other places would and do revile, because it means that it doesn't get that power and money into THEIR hands, specifically.
@tonysoviet36922 жыл бұрын
Pretty much a case from Why Nations Fail book. Leaders obviously have all the access and resources to the gigantic amount of good governances and economic advises. ALL involves trade-offs and some can't see anything but black and white or the trade offs are obviously not in their favor. I personally don't believe in geographic inequality, but rather the willful ignorance of leaderships. (Remember, bastions of civilization constantly shift around in world's history, it's not that Africa or Middle East countries are always poor, they were once powerful empires.)
@-petrichor-72632 жыл бұрын
Norway is also reliant on tourism to an extent, if the protests continue could Norway suffer?
@ratardobatardo2 жыл бұрын
@@-petrichor-7263 our tourism sector is very very small, it would not affect the economy much
@-petrichor-72632 жыл бұрын
@@ratardobatardo 5%*
@Connor_Roush2 жыл бұрын
Also low ave 1Q doesn’t help.
@truxton10002 жыл бұрын
Between 1905-1920, Norway took the great leap towards becoming an industrial society. The country had as much economic growth as the United States in those years. Norway's gross domestic product increased by 60 per cent, accounting for the highest growth in Western Europe in these fifteen years. It was the waterfall power or electricity that emerged as the major driving force. Norway had easy access to hydropower, and many e-plants came up in different parts of the country. Thus, the country had taken care of an energy source that followed the most modern industry of the time. The electric motor led to an increase in productivity in many different industries. This did not only apply to sawmills, planing mills, wood pulp production, the shipbuilding industry and mining. Electricity came in handy in the furniture, canning, clothing and printing industries. It drove the motorization of shipping, and laid the foundation for extensive whaling and tanking. In 1918, Norway had over twenty different smelters and electrochemical factories. Hafslund started the power station in Sarpsfossen in 1898-1899, and most of the power went to producing the chemical product carbide. In 1908, Norway got its first two aluminum plants. The company Hydro came to rise high above other Norwegian companies. Hydro, which was founded by the founder Sam Eyde in 1905, received a patent for producing nitrogen, and built two fertilizer factories in Notodden and Rjukan. The power station at Vemork became the world's largest. In 1920, Norway was the most electrified country in the world. Two out of three households had electricity. At the same time, it was only a third in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Sweden.
@sergiomardinefraulob98032 жыл бұрын
Excellent, Motorman. Hydropower couldn't be exported easily and Norway had to use it in their industries.
@truxton10002 жыл бұрын
@@sergiomardinefraulob9803 That’s right, it was a lot of it, and it was cheap as chips. Heavy industries in Norway had a major advantage. But now all this has changed. As the corrupt and stupid politicians had signed a deal with the EU and UK it has been built several cables that can export this cheap electricity for high prices in other European countries. The result of this is that prices for electricity in Norway has increased ALOT the last few years in Norway. So private people and companies are being shafted. So the days of cheap electricity in Norway is over. People are seriously angry about this.
@tessjuel2 жыл бұрын
@@truxton1000 The days of cheap electricity is over? I'm looking at my own electricity bills for the last few months: In July I had two apartments (busy moving from one to the other) Electricity bills for both combined: NOK 604.16 (slightly less than 60 USD) August: NOK 337.37 (33 USD) September: NOK 227.73 (22 USD) October so far (with three days left): NOK 512 (50 USD) Both my new and my old apartment are modern, more than big enough for me, heated with electricity only and located in the parts of Norway with the highest electricity prices. I wouldn't call that expensive. I do try to save on electricity but I'm not too frantic about it. I use a space heater rather than the floor heating, keep the room temperatur at 20C rather than 21, switch off the lights in rooms I don't use, don't run the dishwasher or washing machine until they're full, don't spend more time than necessary in the shower... Nothing more extreme than that. --- That being said, electricity for households is subsidised at the moment so those numbers aren't the actual prices, it's what I had to pay myself. Small and medium sized businesses do not get any subsidies and many of them are really struggling.
@truxton10002 жыл бұрын
@@tessjuel Well electricity in Norway will never return to what it used to be but forever be connected with continental prices. For now I understand there is some subsidies but for sure these will disappear slowly but surely. And I’m sure you don’t own a cabin in Norway as anyone owning one will for sure disagreeing with you, as I’m sure you know that people with a cabin pay much more than for a house. And companies will for sure go bankrupt in Norway this winter as they get no support from the socialist government.
@vizioncs505 Жыл бұрын
Get what ure saying but 1/3rd of united states population is still 10x more than 2/3rds of norways at the time. Sweden historically had twice the population of Norway, big difference supporting and sustaining 2m people compared to 5m ish even if u add the factor of 2/3rds instead of 1/3rd, it would basically even out to the same ratio more or less.
@arvehalseth1490 Жыл бұрын
As an Norwegian 🇳🇴🇳🇴 economist with a strong interest in history, I must say you have done your homework well.
@zyriuz22 жыл бұрын
My dad once said "noway is so filled with hills, mountains, and valleys that if you'd somehow manage to flatten all that surface area like you do with a crumpled paper they would be one of the largest countries on earth"
@sanjinred Жыл бұрын
And it has the second largest coast line in the world after Canada, pretty big indeed.
@hugornne3556 Жыл бұрын
And I'm pretty sure that your father was spot on in that statement. What I don't understand is that we have the second longest national coastline in the world after Canada. WTF! How is that possible??
@sanjinred Жыл бұрын
@@hugornne3556 Its all the fjords and «krinkelkroks»😹
@NinaLanyon Жыл бұрын
Going the long way round from Oslo to Nordkapp is a very long way. Just a straight line from Kristiansand to Nordkapp is 1 600 km. And then to quote Slartibartfast there are all those 'crinkly edges', the fjords! @@hugornne3556
@The360MlgNoscoper Жыл бұрын
@@hugornne3556 Fractals
@Klimbo932 жыл бұрын
Overall every Norway national system (political, economical, laboral, educational, industrial, exterior) seems to behave in the most humble, smart and observant kind of ways. Literally a "I watch and learn, and take careful decisions, for I am not immortal, but my future could be"
@Fan-zx1lz2 жыл бұрын
Well said.
@hugornne3556 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic! I've never saw things in that perspective.😊 May I ask the orgine of that last quotation? It surely can't be you that took it from the top of your own head?..or could it?🤔
@Al3xandeer2 жыл бұрын
Norway is insanely rich because: 1. Norwegian culture frowns upon flaunting wealth. Thus rich people avoid driving Bentleys and Rolls Royce like in Gulf states. 2. A lot of Norwegian wealth is simply saved. E.g. Norway has a higher GDP per capita than the US, but Norway is saving a large chunk of generated wealth each year. 3. The rich simply are not as rich in Norway as in other comparably rich countries because the wealth is more evenly distributed. 4. Norway spend a lot of money on maintaining a spread population and maintaining its own agriculture. This is costly, but also means e.g. that food is very safe in Norway.
@marque_iii71252 жыл бұрын
Well said
@MaxSMoke7772 жыл бұрын
Your #3 is completely wrong. Here's a video explaining why: kzbin.info/www/bejne/haWXopd5qJpnkKc
@marque_iii71252 жыл бұрын
@@MaxSMoke777 Nope, #3 is wholly accurate. The video you are referring to applies to different macroeconomic circumstances. In Norway, plumbers and surgeons make about the same. And plumbers in Norway are richer than financial analysts in Greece and most other Western countries.
@sarahbailey85242 жыл бұрын
@@MaxSMoke777 Exactly what Marque _III said. You can't base your analysis on one video source based on the Dutch economy
@RealCherry80852 жыл бұрын
5: Oil & Gas hungry rich neighbours like Germany, Sweden UK, France etc.
@khaledadams43292 жыл бұрын
As a Canadian, I'd like to see more of our natural resources refined and developed into usable products, instead of liquidated and sold to the highest bidder.
@nikoneko7982 жыл бұрын
ive been saying this for years, we've been building pipelines to texas to refine our oil, and its all being done by amrican companies, when we should have been investing money in our own refineries.. same goes for most of our other natural resources.
@antr74932 жыл бұрын
@@nikoneko798 ya know what's completely dumb is that we(USA) export and import oil??? Why? Like Canada just keep it in the country and take care of our citizens first
@shanemathews41772 жыл бұрын
Being from alberta, it always pisses me off when we look at how much we have pissed away in Alberta
@nickkraw12 жыл бұрын
That would require pipelines and the Eastern Provinces not hating Alberta lol.
@B-...2 жыл бұрын
@@nickkraw1 The National Energy Program by Trudeau was trying to do exactly what Norway did. Alberta shot it into oblivion. We only have ourselves to blame as we left the oil to be given away free by the provincial government. They based their fund on ours and Conservative's squandered it.
@Thufir8612 жыл бұрын
Norway's nationalistic philosophy towards their resources literally started an avalanche of economic growth and prosperity for its nationals. In my country, Ghana, and other mineral rich african nations, foreign multinationals take advantage of the greed of our politicians and lobby for legislations that make them the sole owners of firms that exploit these natural resources whiles paying little to no tax through tax exemptions. I am a small business owner, and I pay more tax (25% + extra levies) than foreign mining companies who only pay 5% on total revenue earned from mining activities as royalties. The West and China have currently caught us in a chokehold of debt, with our current debt to gdp ratio in excess of 80% and more than 50% of new loans being used to service previous debt at the expense of investments into education, healthcare and infrastructure. Neocolonization is in full play in Africa
@Tjalve702 жыл бұрын
It's interesting to hear this from a Ghanaian. Norway's first industrialization came from hydro power. And Ghana also built a huge hydro electric plant. But Norway passed a law of escheat, declaring that hydro power plants return to government ownership after a certain number of years. To my knowledge, in Ghana, the government took up a huge loan to build the dam, and was then forced to agree to a contract selling the majority of the power cheaply to the company that gave the loan. So these two countries COULD have been quite similar. But the politicians made different choices. In Norway, the oil companies pay an ADDITIONAL 50% tax on their profits. This is in addition to the normal company tax of 28%, totaling 78% tax for oil companies. In Ghana, the government allow companies to exploit the natural resources, and paying very little back. The Norwegian model might not be perfect for the world. But it might be perfect for some other resource rich countries. If they have the needed democratic traditions to make it work.
@elvishiekios88262 жыл бұрын
USA owes 30 trl$ on a 20 tril$ economy and Japan has also massive debt and an aging population but both are still prosperous .PATRIOTIC LEADERSHIP IS WHAT COUNTS!
@michaelfroelich95602 жыл бұрын
If you were the President of Ghana would you do things differently, or would you do as all the other leaders in such places do things?
@Thufir8612 жыл бұрын
@@Tjalve70 You couldn't have put this any better. I am very confident that Ghana could have achieved the needed democratic traditions to make this work, but, unfortunately, our democracy is not, and has never been, devoid external influences. Our young democracy was caught in the throes of the Cold war where democratically elected leaders were overthrown because of a mere suspicion of being biased towards either side of the warring parties (Russia and USA). The CIA has recently declassified documents which explicate their involvement and motives for many of the coup d'etats that plagued Ghana and several other African countries in the past. The instabilities created an obvious opportunity for western corporations. Whiles there were inconsistencies in our democracies over those years, mineral exploitation however did not suffer any breakages. The situation is very complex in this part of the world. Perhaps we the younger generations can do somethings different. But we are still heavily dependent on foreign aid though, just as we were when our democracy was in the cradle stages. And so long as that remains the case they are going to have strong indirect influence in how my country is governed.
@Thufir8612 жыл бұрын
@@michaelfroelich9560 Great question, Michael. Fortunately my generation is smarter, but unfortunately our state is still heavily dependent on foreign aid which gives foreign nations strong, indirect influence on our policy direction. If I were President I would implement policies which would focus more on the benefits for Ghanaians. I'd clearly learn from the blueprints of countries such as Norway, UAE etc., but I would also factor in measures that may be unique since the variables in Africa are not exactly same as in the other countries I mentioned. But Ultimately I believe that our total liberation would come only when there is true independence. So long as other nations (The west, France, China) still hold a strong indirect grip on the governments in Africa, It is going to be extremely difficult for even the most well meaning Presidents to cause drastic transformation.
@htz72372 жыл бұрын
I'd like to hear your idea about the crucial topic not explained in this video: how did Norway form its political atmosphere? You cannot attribute it all to Norwegains' luck to have "good" politicians. I believe that there must be some more profound and fundamental factors.
@nasseq2 жыл бұрын
high trust society built on the backs of an educate population
@REDnBLACKnRED2 жыл бұрын
Here's my take on it. It has a lot to do with how politics evolved in Denmark and Sweden as well because Norway was first controlled by Denmark and then Sweden before becoming independent only relatively recently in 1905, by which point it had many of the democratic institutions in place that were similar to its neighbours. And both Danish and Swedish society often reflected each other since they competed with each other (they were, for example, much earlier to industrialise compared to the other nordic countries). The region also then witnessed Sweden's meteoric growth in the decades following WW2 and its social democratic movement, which influenced political thought in all the Nordic countries (they have all in some regard surpassed Sweden now). The history of the region as a whole is important to understand. Norway may be very rich today but all its Nordic neighbours are also relatively rich and very successful democracies with relatively similar governments. A lot has to do with decentralisation of power within the society early on. Even before democracy, the aristocracy (between the people and the government/king) in Scandinavia never concentrated as much power within itself as it did in other parts of Europe and the world (this is often seen as a less evolved society in some contexts). This meant that common people held relatively more say in public matters compared to their other European counterparts. Culturally, social good and sharing resources have always been important in these societies. This loosely evolved into strong labour unions which further gained a central position in society in the 1930's allowing high wags, low exploitation, and a productive economy. With a weak aristocracy and a strong working class making way for social policies (most importantly an importance placed on free education and healthcare), the societies were able to develop a skilled workforce with relatively low income inequalities, but high living standards across the board (which is somewhat true to this day). Now of course it is important to factor in the natural resources these countries had at their disposal pre-industrialisation (in which regard, pre-oil in Norway, Denmark with its food industry, and Sweden with timber and iron ore, were able to come out ahead) and strong trade relations with other European countries that allowed the governments to fund all this. This is an oversimplification of course and there are several other factors that went to making these countries what they are today. But the point I'm trying to make is that it is a confluence of cultural, structural and economic factors unique to these countries that allowed them to develop their strong, socially-responsible democracies. Sweden in some ways has always been the more experimental Scandinavian sibling, at least politically speaking (it has many firsts to its name, most famously, introducing right to information in the 18th century, almost 150 years before most other western counties did in the 20th century). And that inclination I think reflects in Sweden being the first to sway farthest away from the now-famous Nordic model, with sweeping privatisation (although it has also happened to a lesser extent in all its neighbours) and growing capitalist inclination in recent decades due to not being able to sustain its social welfare schemes for its large (in Scandinavian terms) population through taxation alone. Norway is able to avoid this thanks to its well managed and highly lucrative oil resource.
@ahmadhalabiah37142 жыл бұрын
Nice Question Watch Why Are The Nordics So Rich? By History Scope And How Denmark invented Social Democracy By Kraut
@wardwyseur2 жыл бұрын
unions m8
@axelfoley14062 жыл бұрын
Geography is huge factor.
@jasonhaven71702 жыл бұрын
The oil curse is also known as Dutch Disease, but there's no informational KZbinrs who do videos on the Netherlands and the effects the Groningen gas fields had on them and why it's called Dutch Disease. Most videos on this topic are about Norway, Venezuela or Middle Eastern countries
@@bramdekleer2824 There's an English wikipedia entry entitled "dutch disease". Basically the effect is one industry starts to boom, the local currency starts to appreciate in value, imports become cheaper for the local population but exports in other sectors become uncompetitive because of exchange rates. Also a "non tradable" service sector (services like healthcare, construction, hairdressing) starts to grow, which leads to a degree of deindustrialisation.
@exsandgrounder2 жыл бұрын
@@Snipeyou1 See my other comment!
@kennedykepler34712 жыл бұрын
As a Brazilian i am very grateful to live in Norway with the opportunety and safety we have here🙏🇧🇻❤
@ToreDL872 жыл бұрын
Grateful to have you here ❤
@bernarddonald8203 Жыл бұрын
Building wealth involves developing good habits like regularly putting money away in intervals for solid investments. Financial management is a crucial topic that most tend to shy away from, and ends up haunting them in the near future. Putting our time and effort in activities and investments that will yield a profitable return in the future is what we should be aiming for. Success depends on the actions or steps you take to achieve it. "You're not going to remember those expensive shoes you bought ten years ago, but you will remember every single morning when you look at your bank account that extra 0 in there. I promise, that's going to be way more fun to look at everyday", I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life
@stephenadiela-xi6nd Жыл бұрын
You're absolutely right, to be a successful in life required not only hard work but awareness and sometime opportunity at the moment, investment remains the best way to start.
@godfreybarinor-dl3fq Жыл бұрын
@@stephenadiela-xi6ndI agree with you. Investment is the key to sustaining your financial longevity. And not just any investment but an investment with guaranteed return.
@chrisharrison-ir5wb Жыл бұрын
yeah investment is the key to sustaining your financial longevity but venturing into any legit investment or business without a proper guidance of an expert can lead to great loss too.
@rahmatumustaph1609 Жыл бұрын
@@chrisharrison-ir5wbExactly and many of us don't know where to invest our money so we invest it on wrong place and to the wrong people
@rifkatuumar1734 Жыл бұрын
@@rahmatumustaph1609 Obviously talking about been successful, I know I am blessed if not I wouldn't have met someone who is as spectacular as Debra Barton
@santiagobg972 жыл бұрын
I am literally writing my Master Thesis about this specific difference of outcomes between Norway and Venezuela, contrasting both caes with the development theories out there. I think that in the end of this video there is a very valuable statement: A strong democracy must be in place before the arrival of such income. Because a strong democracy implies strong institutions, and strong institutions make it harder (yet not impossible) for corruption to spread (although cases have been seen), it is a variable that should be considered in the analysis. Good work here, cheers.
@pmurnion2 жыл бұрын
In your thesis you might consider that countries do not live in an isolated bubble. Consider how Norway would be if a superpower European country constantly interfered in Norway affairs and was currently trying to destroy Norway with punitive sanctions. That would be an interesting thesis.
@buzzinggz5562 жыл бұрын
Venezuelan people are lazy Norwegian people are hardworking
@leighfoulkes72972 жыл бұрын
The US would never allow Venezuela to have a proper democracy and they would never allow them to become a developed country. Why? Well, isn't it obvious? You have a country with a large amount of oil and the potential to become the wealthiest in South America and possible North America too. Why would the US want competition in either North or South America. Can you imagine a superpower in South America?
@ennui97452 жыл бұрын
@@leighfoulkes7297 Implying that Maduro's government is a democracy lmfao.
@tiefensucht2 жыл бұрын
On the other hand, there is the US. I wonder if they they have some special tax for their oil- or gas companies? If not, the taxpayer even has to pay for them because of the negative consequences to the nature.
@truxton10002 жыл бұрын
The beginning of this video paint the totally wrong picture on the economics in Norway in the 1800's. The industrial revolution started in Norway in around 1850, and Norway was never "poor" in relations to other European countries, and certainly not in relation to the rest of the world. Education was pretty good and had started already in the 1700's, most people were literate, literacy in Norway was in the 1800's among the best in the world. In terms of Norway's economy in the late 1800's it was around middle in Europe, of course behind highly industrial nations like UK, Germany and France, but not as poor as south and east European countries. For example Norway had in the 1800's one of the largest shipping fleets in the world.These are the facts, not sure how these videos just take these "truths" out of thin air or from quoting someone that once said something, which obviously was wrong. The fact is that Norway would have been a rich country even without the oil, as the oil industries would of course had been replaced with other kind of industry, not as profitable as pumping oil and gas but still.
@sylkvass12 жыл бұрын
Shhh, a story where someone evolved from poor to rich sells better🤣
@martinkase58422 жыл бұрын
Yeah, remember my history teacher said this in vg1 and vg2. The poor myth was a small time frame that got stuck in due to political rhetoric from AP.
@Splett_man2 жыл бұрын
@@martinkase5842 A lot of people in Norway seems to believe that Norway was super poor in the first half of the 1900s.
@jfarinhote2 жыл бұрын
@@Splett_man the perfect example of a lie told several times without double checking.
@VeggieRice2 жыл бұрын
@@Splett_man such as whom? what subset of people living in Norway didn't get any kind of education? confused by your claim here
@Strykehjerne2 жыл бұрын
finally someone who did his homework, and included the powerful effects of the shipping/hydropower democratic and scarcity lessons that enabled Norway to deal with the oil in this way. mostly you seem to get people who think Norway was established in 1978.. ..
@randijohansen56832 жыл бұрын
I totally agree. Big hugs from Oslo💞
@richardjones20062 жыл бұрын
well said, the number of "socialists" in the UK asking why we don't have a sovereign wealth fund should take a look at this. Small population, Marshall plan money, more energy produced than required by HEP, country doing great and THEN oil n gas.
@Tjalve702 жыл бұрын
@@richardjones2006 One big difference between Norway and UK, is that Norway had such a small population, and such a small economy when we found oil, that we COULDN*T spend all of the money on our own economy, or the economy would be totally broken. And our politicians realized this. While UK had such a large population, and large economy, that you COULD spend all of the money on your economy. And so you did it.
@nieron2 жыл бұрын
As a Norwegian I must say that it's the Norwegian government who has the money and controls our "Oil Fund", not the population...
@heavymetalboi Жыл бұрын
Government is Vox Populi
@mathildebergsaker2276 Жыл бұрын
And who controls who is in government?
@Lacrosse24712 жыл бұрын
Please keep up the good work - you deserve more recognition for the kind of quality videos you put out
@TheRorsach2 жыл бұрын
It's going to be very interesting to see how we transition away from oil, we have a golden opportunity to maintain a technology advantage or develop strong energy technology
@REDnBLACKnRED2 жыл бұрын
I think you'll be just fine. In terms of infrastructure, the society is well positioned for post-oil productivity. Education is high and good quality. There are alternative sectors of the economy that are strong too. I suspect Norway will need to join the EU after oil. And will probably end up more in line with other Scandinavian neighbours in terms of wealth, which is now inflated due to oil. But that's not so bad considering Sweden and Denmark are doing pretty well for themselves also.
@-_James_-2 жыл бұрын
Norway's "oil" industry has been earning way more from providing services than pulling oil out of the ground for some time now. Services which are equally applicable to the renewable energy sectors. Maritime services and technologies are also equally applicable to other transport sectors including space. Norway will do just fine in a post-oil world.
@REDnBLACKnRED2 жыл бұрын
@@-_James_- The factor that will affect all those sectors that doesn't affect oil is demand and competition. The competence for these technologies is also being built in several other countries, meaning less demand and more competition.. Oil however, not everyone has but needs. Norway will still be fine, but in all likeliness its economy will shrink a bit and be more in line with other Northern European countries.
@SebHaarfagre2 жыл бұрын
@@-_James_- Yeah it's quite fascinating... parts of the oil revenues goes towards funding of renewable energy and technology.
@fred69072 жыл бұрын
@@REDnBLACKnRED Without oil we will have a huge problem. The national budget is in a HUGE deficit without oil subsidies, increasing every year. And I wouldn't use Sweden/Denmark as rolemodels. They are looking more like middle eastern countries nowadays. Joining EU will only make it even worse, with all their crazy immigration policies.
@dougmcqueen82342 жыл бұрын
The last line in this video is a gem. Economics being about managing scarcity and how luck is a scarcity. Very enlightening overall - I had never heard the term oil curse before and this is a good explanation.
@alksi12 жыл бұрын
I went to work from Finland to Norway to a fish produce factory. Was basically gutting fish with zero experience, and got way more money back then than i do now as an engineer. Never have i made such a salary again.
@Fan-zx1lz2 жыл бұрын
I want to go there Norway. Which Jobs are in demand ?
@trygveevensen1712 жыл бұрын
@@Fan-zx1lz teachers, nurses, customer service, software developers, carpenters and construction engineers to name a few
@zainulabdin172011 ай бұрын
@@Fan-zx1lzwhat about aviation security officer jobs scope in Norway?
@Aa-hy9ko2 жыл бұрын
This video contains several of the typical errors about Norwegian history. Two important points: 1. Norway was doing quite well economically long time before the oil, at least from the early 1900s (just look up any youtube video about GDP development of European countries). It is often forgotten that Norway also have had abundant cheap electricity from hydropower, which started what is in Norway referred to as the 2nd industrial revolution in the early 1900s. 2. Video say the population was poorly educated. However, literacy in Norway was very good compared to most countries in Europe. This was because after 1736 it was not possible for a person to be confirmed in church without being able to read. This is an important explanation for a thriving civil society and well functioning democracy.
@richardprice59782 жыл бұрын
thank you my forefathers on my mother's side were well read individuals and more than one was bilingual in sweed/Norwegian and English and couldn't fully speak-french&Latin but other than that was considered fluent i on the other hand struggling with just English 😢 as it means i can't really read anything about them ect. without having help
@Gilthwixt12 жыл бұрын
The video straight up mentions hydroelectric power and Norway's early industrial revolution but notes it was still middle of the pack relative to the rest of Europe. Did you even watch the video?
@JulieMikalson2 жыл бұрын
@@Gilthwixt1 Yes and - it says almost 75% of the wealth from hydro power was taken by other countries. Inequality was reduced rapidly over time compared to other countries.
@Janshevik2 жыл бұрын
I still don't get why people think Scandinavia was poor and uneducated in the past, but in that period even in Central Europe things like literacy wasn't something for granted at all, not to mention anywhere outside that.
@kronop88842 жыл бұрын
@@Janshevik Literacy perhaps was good but Sweden as well as Norway , not to mention the Grand duchy of Finland was really poor compared to most other European states if you look at the period before the industrial revolution and even beyond that. Norway GDP Per capita was lower than the other Scandinavian countries historically and only caught up in the early 1980's and then took on a trajectory on its own by strength of oil income.
@baldurelitraustason6622 жыл бұрын
Great video. This really shows why good governance is so important to build a healthy state, it doesn't matter if your neck deep in money if you don't know how to spend it correctly. Also congratulations on 100k subscribers!
@Hectico22572 жыл бұрын
You could have the smartest politicians on the planet and still end up with a poor economy. It's not a lack of knowledge it's the politicians willingness spend it "properly"
@CoreyANeal20002 жыл бұрын
If you look back to the past and see nations in very similar situations to you and see what they did to get to a better a situation. You can copy that to get out of your own situation. Depending on your Geography and resources and population. This also depends on what's happening in the future too. And what your goals for the future are too.
@Hectico22572 жыл бұрын
@@CoreyANeal2000 bruh, running an economy is not like balancing your personal budget it just ain't
@CoreyANeal20002 жыл бұрын
@@Hectico2257 I know that. Looking to the future you can't go down the oil path, because of Climate Change. I'm trying to say a lot of the options in the past aren't options anymore because or how the world has changed. Though a lot of new options have come into view, because of how things have changed. Though delaying getting rid of older options like relying so much on oil is a thing because we're still in a transition from it.
@Ruudiii2 жыл бұрын
@@CoreyANeal2000 Dubai is a great example of this. They rushed the use of the oil money, built a huge city, and in 40 years they'll be empty and forced to live on tourists and other incomes.
@espenstorm7372 жыл бұрын
Another key factor in Norways development is the strong influence the labor movement has had on the politics, especially after WW2. The ties between the trade unions and the ruling labor party has been strong, and they still are.
@TheAccidentalViking2 жыл бұрын
Norway has a massive labour union movement and participation. The industrialists are forced to deal with its labour force because they have collective power that can not be denied.
@francismarion64002 жыл бұрын
A negative not a positive. Capitalism is the economic driver for Norway, not the ability of the uneducated to organize.
@williamthebonquerer91812 жыл бұрын
In the uk unions were their strongest in the 70s and that was our worst decade
@blackhawk7r2212 жыл бұрын
Strong, but not bad enough for labor to drive companies offshore.
@Ryan_hey2 жыл бұрын
@@francismarion6400 No, that's a positive. Without workers unionized (Educated or uneducated...), unfavorable conditions are produced. The social democracy they have today is because of strong reforms that work AGAINST the profit-oriented drive of capitalism. Without those social reforms, you have capitalism unrestrained (i.e. see America as an example, which is a country devoid of affordable healthcare/education/etc, but has a majority of world's richest people). But, sure, it's a positive if you're an aristocrat who wants to hoard your wealth.
@Norseman832 жыл бұрын
As a Norwegian, I am very grateful to live in the best country in the world. It is very beautiful to live here!
@AslakAsp2 жыл бұрын
For fedrelandet
@gorkhalibabu58602 жыл бұрын
Yo you got no idea of rest of the world.Think Australia and newzeeland. Much better than norway
@Fan-zx1lz2 жыл бұрын
@@gorkhalibabu5860 No. They are Much worse than Norway in any aspect.
@forgedwithsteel Жыл бұрын
@@gorkhalibabu5860oof nah Australia is mid. I will give you nyz
@haroldjanser8361 Жыл бұрын
Looks Great to Me. Watch your Borders
@MarisolFerreiraMarysoul2 жыл бұрын
As Venezuelan i’ve for long time thought of oil as the worst thing that ever happened to Venezuela. We had so much riches beyond oil, instead of pushing forward all sectors of economy, we became single dependent of oil and those our doom. I believe that have we not slept on the fruits of late 70s early 80s rich country “fame”, we would have made other sectors of the economy thrive… agriculture (coffee, cacao, fruits, everything you can think of, could be grown in this country + meat and fish too boot), tourism (with the most beautiful Caribbean sites and islands, the amazon, the Andes…), other natural resources as iron ore, coal, bauxite, gold, nickel and diamonds could have been developed to more profiting levels…. such a rich country, and it breaks my heart that it has never reached its full potential and probably will never. Too much damaged has already been done, relaying on the miracles of Oil.
@pedrofernandes41482 жыл бұрын
As a not so old Venezuelan, the country I knew was one to laugh its way out of everything. Everything was handled as a joke first and barely addressed later. I know this isn't the reality everywhere and I'm sure there was a pretty aware class somewhere, but it was very hard to find and I feel that we didn't take seriously what we should have. I'm not talking about the highly educated minority, but everyone else, which were the ones to accept corruption as the default and allowed the megalomaniacs to get to power after. Looking back at history, we had all the signs at plain sight but yet they were dismissed.
@bardo00072 жыл бұрын
You have good food in Venezuela, we have a Venezuelan restaurant in Norway, believe it or not. Crazy expensive there as all food in Norway.
@pedrofernandes41482 жыл бұрын
@A R Dude, quit the narrative. I am Venezuelan, the local government did this to themselves. They stole everything there was to steal, deviated public funding to personal accounts and infrastructure got frozen in time. Stole entire companies from private owners and then sent them to bankruptcy due to mismanagement. With no production came no exports and poor foreign investments. The US only started to apply sanctions back on 2017 when all this damage was already done.
@juanm85822 жыл бұрын
@A R Why do you people keep pushing for this "agenda" when its simply not true? Every single Venezuelan (specially abroad) will tell you the gringos had nothign to do with our downfall. They HELPED us by buying our OIL for more than 40 years. How do you think we got SO rich? lol. I remember in 2001, when half the fucking mountain came down on the people of the state of Vargas, and killed 200.000 people. The US offered to send troops to our aid, and by God, we needed them. Chavez refused and FOR WHAT? He never helped those people, he never picked up the bodies, the rubble....He was more interested in his stupid ideology than helping us. Him, Maduro and ALL that supported them are to blame. Hope they all burn in hell.
@lucianboar34892 жыл бұрын
@Prkau telek and the Norwegians are a Lutheran culture, where people are more serious, especially with the climate they have do deal with. You have to run a tight ship in that climate, otherwise you starve. In Venezuela it's growing season all the time, people are bound to be more chill.
@TkB972 жыл бұрын
You forgot our public tax records. Anyone in Norway can check how much another citizen is paying in tax. Therefor living in luxury with illegal money is almost impossible in Norway. Our health care is awesome yes. But we also have an INSANE extra tax on products that may harm you. Like a 20pk of cigarettes is close to 20$. Same goes for alcohol. We even have a higher tax on candy. These kind of things makes it a lot easier for our government to pay for medical bills. Essentially you're paying for your own medical bills, you just never see it. Same with oil. We have one of the most expensive fuel prices in the world. Not because oil is expensive, simply because the tax is. As always, Brain>Muscles
@sroberts6052 жыл бұрын
So, you can't have fun via usual routes like over-eating, drinking, driving, but you can by being nosey about your neighbour's taxes! Just kidding, honestly, Norway should give lessons in democracy worldwide.
@TDeclinator2 жыл бұрын
Thats a deal breaker for me, anyone can check taxes. Damn
@VeggieRice2 жыл бұрын
just FYI the rate of tax you pay on cigarettes is comparable to what people living in cities in the US pay & high price has had little effect on consumption rates. Are new smokers smoking less than they otherwise might have? maybe, but existing smokers are just putting more money in the company's pockets ($ here from tobacco sale DOES NOT go to healthcare--there is medical attention available as a retail service, but no *healthcare system* in the US)
@SK-gu3hb2 жыл бұрын
@@VeggieRice The extra money goes to the goverment...
@SK-gu3hb2 жыл бұрын
@@TDeclinator If anyone is to check taxes, you have to log in with your personal ID and the person you are looking up, is able to see whos been checking their record But the newspaper might often have some public lists of the wealthiest people in their regional area though.
@ProjectPlugTTV2 жыл бұрын
Stumbled into this video and immediately went and binged all your videos. You make great content man, please keep up the good work.
@kvistulv2 жыл бұрын
Norway beeing "very poor" in the 18th and 19th century is not really accurate. Everywhere was poor, but compared to most other countries, Norway was doing fine. A bit below some of the richest Western European countries, but not comparatively poorer than most other places. This is basically an old myth, it's been thoroughly debunked several times. And in the late 19th century Norway was growing rapidly already
@amariner52 жыл бұрын
They were poor enough to immigrate to the US, and be at the bottom. They did well, and Norwegian communities prospered. But yes, the immigrants were poor.
@perperald212 жыл бұрын
@@amariner5 That is incorrect, most of the immigrants from 1870 and onwards were just looking for a quick buck, and 40% of the ones emigrating after 1870 came back to Norway, several went over several times. I live in a town in Norway where 75% of all students in the middle school is American citizens, most of them have never been in the USA (but they may use American English as their home language). This is because their parents of grandparents went over to (mostly) Brooklyn and worked as floor layers, in the 1950's and 1960's, and stayed there for some years, got US citizenship, and then returned home. Som children were born in the US, others were born in Norway, and because their father or mother were US citizens that did not matter. And some of these had children that also became US citizens through a parent (that might never had been in the US)
@kimmogensen48882 жыл бұрын
@@amariner5 just because there are people migrating does not mean the country is poor, which countries did not have many poor people in 1860? Norway was not as rich as Denmark or Sweden, but they had also occupied Norway for many hundred years, so no wonder it took some time to catch up, but there were also Danes and Swedes who migrated to the USA, both because they were poor, but mostly because of the dream of trying your luck in the USA.
@AGS3632 жыл бұрын
Long story short: The rule of law was again the right solution (combined with self-discipline for good measure).
@thebeckwourth91332 жыл бұрын
Law student spotted?
@Untilitpases2 жыл бұрын
The rule of law is a byproduct of a balance of powers/distributed power. Law itself is a sentence in a piece of paper. So yes, but you'll have to dig deeper for the cause. I lean on Jared Diamond's angle. Geography > demographics > economy > power dynamics.
@Al3xandeer2 жыл бұрын
@@Untilitpases False. The rule of law is not only a by-product but something educated individuals, civil servants and other institutions actively uphold. It's also not a sentence on a piece of paper. That's the vast minority of law (at least in common law jurisdictions). And Jared Diamond's angle is grossly inaccurate. The correlation between geography and power is highly contested. But the rule of law is absolutely an important factor. Without it, Norway wouldn't have retained and grown its wealth.
@layseebalsam2 жыл бұрын
What always missing in these videos is how the economic framework restricts politicians. Below the society is a set of strict rules that controls everything from public spending and budgeting, to formation of salaries. Norway developed advanced macro economic models after WW2, eliminating politicians opportunity to "believe" that something will be smart, e.g huge tax reliefs. As our current PM said, the Labour Party would work for social reforms "within the framework of the economy". It's the economic model that is the real reason for success.
@georgedelvalle45882 жыл бұрын
Would you rather pay high taxes or die from curable diseases? Because that’s what neoliberalizing the government means.
@KapteinSabeltan2 жыл бұрын
This is actually a very good summary, well done. I studied economics history. Especially the comment about oil being the turbocharger. Without oil we would still do well. Somewhere in the area of how Island, Sweden, Denmark and Finland are doing. Like other nations that invest in education and has a good framework of political stability, industry and law. (Oh, and we were not poor, we did above average in Europe the whole time, where else did you think that huge fleet of ships came from🤷🏼♂️) But your points still remains👍
@V3ntilator2 жыл бұрын
Yeah. The oil is just a safety net. Norway works without it.
@Gherzahn2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the addendum. Frustrating myth that Norway was poor before we got oil.
@ericalorraine79432 жыл бұрын
Well said! I am also here to learn how to invest after listening to a lady on tv talk about the importance of investing and how she made 7 figure in 3 month, somehow the video taught me nothing and left me even more confused, I'm a newbie and I'm open to ideas on how to invest for retirement
@davidhudson30012 жыл бұрын
@@ericalorraine7943Think long term, personally i ventured into the market so i won’t be stranded after i retire. A colleague of mine introduced me to CFA " Priscilla Dearmin-Turner " who drew out retirement plans and they all aligned with what i wanted and had to pick one plan and with her exit and entry strategies on commodities , securities and digital assets, my portfolio has really been diversified with good ROI. I am really impressed by how much i have achieved
@alhajishehu70372 жыл бұрын
Despite the economic crisis and the rate of unemployment now is the best time to invest
@GabrielPaguidian-xv4ml11 ай бұрын
I’m from Norway and i live in Norway. It’s a really Nice country!
@zainulabdin172011 ай бұрын
Great. U are lucky one ❤
@koslo27462 жыл бұрын
It's important to point out that other Nordic countries share many of the same social, political and economic features even though they don't have oil or the extreme wealth it generates. The standard of living is generally high, inequality lower and these countries top the charts for a number of social metrics. In other words, oil didn't make Norway the kind of country it is today but it did give Norway an enormous boost in terms of overall standard of living, infrastructure and security. The key question going forward is whether Norway can wean itself off of oil and gas revenue in a controlled way on its own terms while investing in new industries.
@lawrenceralph74812 жыл бұрын
Norway need not worry about loss of fossil fuel revenue. The economic utility of fossil fuel is simply too valuable to a society to eliminate. Enforced scarcity will only lead to higher producer revenues.
@agffans57252 жыл бұрын
What makes the Nordic countries differ from everywhere else, is thinking 2 steps ahead and making plans for future progress and backsets, while other countries tend to get surprised, on the back foot, overwhelmed and having no actual plan when a problem arrive and disaster strikes. So they often make panic solutions, instead of being prepared to deal with the problem at hand and also prepare for the next step ahead like the Nordic countries would do.
@agffans57252 жыл бұрын
@@lawrenceralph7481 .. I'm from Denmark and we were among the founding members of NATO, so please keep your lack of knowledge to yourself, the Nordic countries are also among the bigger supporters of Ukraine, with Denmark also providing pre-war training of Ukrainian military since 2016 (Operation Orbital) and still ongoing, while Sweden have been Part of Operation Unifier since 2018, also providing training for Ukrainian soldiers. Here is the aid Ukraine have received from the Nordic countries so far : Military and humanitarian aid : around $750 million worth (more if you also count aid donated through UN and the Red Cross ) Anti tank weapons : An unspecified secret number of Carl Gustaf M3 and M4 anti-tank weapons (donated by Denmark and Sweden) 11,500 AT4 light anti-tank weapons. 8,200 M72 LAW EC (Enhanced Capacity) anti-tank weapons Missiles and heavy weaponry : 1 or 2 Mobile Land Based Harpoon missile systems (with 2 harpoon missile firing platforms each) including an unspecified number of RGM-84 Harpoon anti-ship missiles 22 M109A3GN 155mm self-propelled howitzers 3 M270 MLRS self-propelled rocked launcers 300 upgraded FIM-92 Stinger anti-aircraft missile systems 100 French-produced Mistral anti-aircraft missiles and undisclosed number of launchers An unspecified secret number of Robot 17 (Swedish anti-ship version of AGM-114 Hellfire) other weaponry : 50 upgraded M113 armored personnel carriers. 25 Sky-Watch tactical drones for reconnaissance and information gathering 2,500 assault rifles with 150,000 cartridges An unspecified number of Barrett M82 rifles, with munitions. An unspecified number of support-weapons (which some sources state are machineguns). An unspecified number of anti-tank mines, 120mm M/10 mortars and thousands of mortar shells other equipment : 12,000 helmets. 10,500 bulletproof vests 1,000 gas masks 220,000 field rations An unspecified amount and type of mine-clearance equipment. 1 fully equipped mobile field hospital 100 stretchers, and equipment for two emergency medical care stations 1,700 treatments against tetanus/lockjaw (requested via WHO) 700 first-aid field kits 2,000 sleeping bags 10,000 sleeping pads 40,000 liters of milk requested by the Ukrainian embassy in Oslo
@brianhalljr6152 жыл бұрын
I love how you whites think. So detailed about the self interest of your own clans. Other races should adopt the idea and model it to there own cultural backgrounds. Spark another renaissance for another race.
@SnillhundReal2 жыл бұрын
@@brianhalljr615 what?
@MrPanzerDragoon2 жыл бұрын
Took my wife to Norway (Bergen) for our honeymoon. Such a beautiful country!
@arvidm49132 жыл бұрын
You took her to the most rainy city in Europe? 😉 No but it's a great place!
@cashflownpv2 жыл бұрын
@@arvidm4913 Brilliant move actually. If it's always raining he stays inside and since it's their honeymoon well you know
@-BigIi-2 жыл бұрын
@@cashflownpv 🙄😏 got it all figured out:))
@Al3xandeer2 жыл бұрын
Well done! Greetings from Norway🇳🇴
@marque_iii71252 жыл бұрын
Well done indeed
@sarahbailey85242 жыл бұрын
Norge!
@angeladorotheakasnermerkel65282 жыл бұрын
😁😁
@thebeckwourth91332 жыл бұрын
🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴
@Naztash3 ай бұрын
Major missing point: Norway was able to transport their entire gold reserve to England in WW2. As string of luck delayed the initial invasion. Which was a major contributing factor to how they were able to be a founding member of NATO and keep going.
@marcusmartinez78552 жыл бұрын
Very well done video and easy to understand. Clearly, having leadership think more ‘long-term’ is key to this type of success story. Not many think beyond the N10 years and Norway set the benchmark!
@Aidan_Au2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for taking my suggestion to make this video! I would love to see Finland next
@balpreetsingh68342 жыл бұрын
Norway was already relatively well-off before oil was discovered, and had a strong democracy.
@bestestAIsongs2 жыл бұрын
proof?
@bestestAIsongs2 жыл бұрын
even Greece had a strong democracy. In fact, they invented it. Doesn't mean much
@balpreetsingh68342 жыл бұрын
@@bestestAIsongs democracy index
@Al3xandeer2 жыл бұрын
@@bestestAIsongs How does it matter that Greece allegedly invented democracy? It's not an indication of its current democratic health. Norway had an exceptionally strong and practically effective legal framework in relation to transparency and accountability before and during the time of the exploration of oil
@ChrMuslimThor2 жыл бұрын
@@bestestAIsongs It's discussed in the video. did you bother too watch it?
@davidlubkowski71752 жыл бұрын
Amazing video, keep it up! All countries should try for long-term goals and sustainability.
@ne0tic2 жыл бұрын
This is honestly one of the best 'produced' videos I have seen on KZbin! Great work man, sub well earned :)
@42enelu2 жыл бұрын
Australian raised in norway here!👋 Just wanted to say thanks for teaching me more than 12 years of history classes in this country has ever taught me about norway’s history.
@kingace61862 жыл бұрын
Before watching this video. I have always thought the difference between the petrostates of Venezuela & Norway was the way the government handled the socio-economic aspects of exporting oil. Venezuela is fatally dependent on one resource so they have an extremely undiversified economy -- vulnerable to the fluxations of the price of oil. Meanwhile, Norway also exports fish, ships, manufactured goods, rare earth elements, & chemicals -- while the wealth accumulated from petroleum-related exports is saved for a rainy day fund or for social programs (essentially, spending responsibly). So while countries like Venezuela fall victim to the resource curse, countries like Norway become wealthy & democratic. It is a story that stresses the importance of proper, accountable, government oversight over the economy and resource management.
@truxton10002 жыл бұрын
The problem in countries like Venezuela is generally low education among people, a population that is a mish mash of immigration from different parts of the world plus the local low educated indigenous people, creating a platform where power struggle and chaos creates huge corruption and generally low trust in society, a culture countries like Norway put behind them 1000 years ago.
@okipo34432 жыл бұрын
👍 same principled as in a house hold,if you spend everything and you get in debt eventually its gona catch up
@kingace61862 жыл бұрын
@@okipo3443 I was actually thinking the same. It is a problem happening in America right now. Due to the stimulus checks, people have had a lot more money to spend, causing bad habits to develop. The key for any country or household is strategic money managament.
@kingace61862 жыл бұрын
@@truxton1000 I agree with you. A lack of education, side by side w/ blissful ignorance, is determent to any society -- especially a rich society. But what did you mean by that last line about Norway?
@truxton10002 жыл бұрын
@@kingace6186 Norway had civil wars that ended around that time, meaning they then had a homogeneous population that respected each other and made the foundation to what later on would become a civilised nation where people accepted and understood that compromises are needed to create a well functioning state. This was generally the case for all countries in Northern Europe.
@acdb-41452 жыл бұрын
I'm Venezuelan, and seen what it's like to live in such a corrupted state. My family emigrated years ago, and every time my parents hear politicians wanting to create a better safety net or ensure no one ever goes broke from paying a hospital bill, they assume that these so-called "socialist" and "leftist" ideas would turn the US into another Venezuela. Especially since the dictators call themselves socialist, when really all they are is greedy. Venezuela Does have state-sponsored healthcare and other stuff, but the government isn't giving it nearly enough, especially now
@nyancoin41462 жыл бұрын
I'm Venezuelan and I feel so sad by watching what we could be 😭
@someoneinthecrowd43132 жыл бұрын
Squandered opportunities.
@ToreDL872 жыл бұрын
Absolutely not having fun on Venezuela's bill, I'll tell you that much. As for me I have nothing to speak of, quite content that way too, nobody can take what I don't have = Nothing to get worked up/depressed about.
@juanfergames83502 жыл бұрын
The fact that Venezuela was comparable with Norway ~40 years ago is just 😭
@afr655362 жыл бұрын
Oil accounts for around 15% of the Norwegian GDP last time I checked. Denmark, a neighboring country without oil, is also doing well. I think this video puts too much emphasis on oil.
@perperald212 жыл бұрын
DEnmark has oil, and had much more before, but they pumped most of it in the 1980s, Danes are not very bright
@armandomagallanes9500 Жыл бұрын
Great video. SO EDUCATIONAL!
@markhirstwood41902 жыл бұрын
Their wealth is in their happy hearts, their eyes, smiles, hair, skin, height, legs, voices, sports, music, dance, style, taste, design, coziness and simply being with each other in such a beautiful, amazing landscape. I've been four times, totalling about 5 months, various regions. Hill walking, eating fish, fresh sea air, many factors make Norwegian health pretty great overall. Leg health and calf size relate to brain function apparently and I believe it. R-L48 took over Scandinavia around 1,700 BCE, probably by invitation. R-L48 and I1 blended to some degree, becoming coastal North Sea Germanic-Scandinavians. From this combination of factors there was warriorship, boats, runes, farming, metalsmithing, etc. Norway isn't home to a lot of treasure hoards like Sweden, Denmark and to some degree, England. The Norwegian way seems to be like the old Viking saying: 'Start where you are, use what you have, do what you can.' It's something like how Westerners might view the Japanese, rebuilding after so many disasters and thriving. There is some overlap in taste, design, decor, 'Japandi' (Japanese-Scandi). I found myself viewing the people in Rogaland especially, to be 'Norse-samurai'. Norway is not perfect but I prefer it in most ways to Canada and America. One thing to note about the habits of the 'Norskis' - a long history of estimating how much food and firewood would be needed to get through the winter is key. This gives many of them good self-pacing likely due to inherited DNA fear of running out of resources and managing things in a more responsible way than many in other situations around the world. www.pinterest.ca/markharrisonhir/soul-of-norway/
@ChrMuslimThor2 жыл бұрын
Very well done, I'm surprised you managed too touch upon all the critical factors in such a short video.
@slawomirhering37702 жыл бұрын
Not to mention graveyard in Oslo is packed with Masonic statutes going back 100 years industrialists. Olso architecture 100 years back quite magnificiant all ready there they were rich at least in Oslo! Once again everything is set up as Switzerland ,Luxemburg ,Monaco, Norway and many other Nations as powerful Elits wanted not as people. And Norway wealth found has several time lost billions missmanagment in reality my opinion Banking Cartel own it and invest back into Oslo and othere things. Nothing is as people think they are selling arms abroad also and everyone is silance as big or bigger then the oil. Nothing makes sens they don't use money from oil keept in founds. Yeah right, some of them they lose steel and invest in other sources thier own. But try to say that to Norwegian they religiously belive in the cartoon story, all those money comes from the biggest taxes in the world as in the case Sweeden and Danmark. They allowed childeren agency to take them away from the parents and in reality it is deep dark shit behind it is creepy.🧟♂️ The goverment give heroine for free insted educate people and get them out of it they create it and control it. I know I have witness myself living accross whole Norway.It works until it does not as obeying WHO and covid19 crap. I am from Poland as we often live and work there. I like certein caracteristic about Norway but some are deep rooted in them that are bizzare. They are some how deep entangle into predudice and hipnotised toword Polish it is not thier fault. They have made it to them all those we have great history and they have their time d8sgracefull not so long. And have some ugly staff inner breading within families all across the counties and they are strange...🤫
@jeremyweems49162 жыл бұрын
They also don't seem to include religious beliefs in their laws, and culture in general. Typically the most peaceful and happy countries are the least religious.
@diazinth2 жыл бұрын
@@slawomirhering3770 that's a lot of incoherent rambling that in the end says absolutely nothing of value. What fantasy world do you live in?
@frankhaugen2 жыл бұрын
I like that this video shows how important "nation building" is. Nations that have robust bureaucracies, like we in Norway had, can weather changes better than others, mostly because bureaucracy abhors change, and so decisions become deliberate and long-term
@RS-ls7mm2 жыл бұрын
Bureaucracies stagnate. Their inability to handle change is usually their downfall. Seems to be a fundamental flaw in humans, when things get too easy is when you should be concerned. Look at the US, it got too easy, now no one does anything and its coming apart.
@sroberts6052 жыл бұрын
Good point, lets hope our civil service keeps things afloat while the politicians play games, here in the UK.
@wimpie1332 жыл бұрын
One thing which wasn't mentioned, but which is very important and the base of everything: Norway has like nearly the whole coast line, only leaving scratch for Sweden, Denmark and Russia. Also, you can compare this by winning the lottery. You can spend it on expensive cars, parties and a very wealthy lifestyle. Or you can spend your money wisely and invest it.
@spiegel32692 жыл бұрын
I was just in Norway literally a week before this video was posted. I was on a cruise that went through the fjords from bottom to top. The country is stunningly beautiful but of course expensive as fuck.
@HenrikCOYG2 жыл бұрын
Did you stop in any Cities ?
@tuvabru-nost15922 жыл бұрын
Split in two it is. Half of us poor and suffering and scared to speak. The rich government writes the story
@forferdeilig2 жыл бұрын
@@tuvabru-nost1592 it does depend a bit on how you define poor, poorer than average for the country or poorer than average for the world, or poorer than average for another country.
@joseenoel80932 жыл бұрын
Thought fvcking was cheap, depends who you fvck I guess, I'd mice there just to avoid my shit Canadian family 👪, married ok and my kids are great!
@More_Row2 жыл бұрын
@@forferdeilig Being poor in Norway makes you invisible. There are of course social nets but sometimes the nets have holes in them.
@IronWarrior862 жыл бұрын
Take note Scotland, this is what you missed out on by being part of the UK when oil was discovered in your territorial waters.
@exsandgrounder2 жыл бұрын
If Scotland was independent, its government would not necessarily have used oil revenues any better than the UK government has done. The set of circumstances that have made Norway rich are unique to Norway.
@Untilitpases2 жыл бұрын
As if London would allow such a chance under its nose.
@kestutisvedegys78202 жыл бұрын
@@exsandgrounder Looking at Scotland's government id say yes they would have made it for the people. Scotland's government officials are much more educated and experienced the Britain's ones that's for sure. I mean didn't Britain's just had 45 resignations in 24 hours from their parliament.
@retron47402 жыл бұрын
Answer: they used the money to help the people and the economy not the rich elites. Simple as that
@fusionreactor71792 жыл бұрын
Helping people is a shallow way of putting it. Implies throwing money at your population.
@charlibravo3712 жыл бұрын
Yeah most people don't understand that even if it's just a few dollars, spreading it to the people is far far better than concentrating it on a few.
@SenseAddict2 жыл бұрын
Answer : Norway has no minimum wage, business friendly, and high reserves.
@KnafaLover2 жыл бұрын
@@SenseAddict No minimum wage because everyone is in a union.
@eeddie252 жыл бұрын
Damn answer for damn people. Question: How to become rich? Answer: Just don't be poor. Simple as that. Thanks!
@FikretErdeniz2 жыл бұрын
14:57 "Unfortunately it appears strong democracy needs to have already been established before being blessed with oil, otherwise politicians and strong men jockey for power seeking short term gains at the expense of the future." This quote sums up everything. Democracy. It is what every nation needs.
@titodalessandro19092 жыл бұрын
As plain and simple as I could say it, Norway’s government is a good government. Norway’s people care about Their peoples future
@fredriks912 жыл бұрын
One extra explanation and national recourse : Trust. A lot of economists etc say that Russians could have the same GDP per capita with our trust if they had the same level of trust in each other and institutions. This makes transactions go smoothly in the economy. Also, a lot of people say that it's easy when the population is homogeneous. Well as of today, one fifth of our population is either first second or third generation immigrant and all in all the integration is going great. It was also a Desi foreigner that schetched up the nationalization of the oil recourse. FYI, I'm a Norwegian with some political experience and economic education
@hamzaayaz3572 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your post and that you mentioned that it was a Desi immigrant. I especially appreciate you used the appropriate term of Desi.
@SGrahamArt2 жыл бұрын
I'm going to use this as an example of where Scotland can go once we're out of the UK. Everything about Norway is so much closer to the dreams, aspirations and political leanings of Scotland than the UK will ever be capable of. There are those that say Scotland is too small, too poor, too weak to go it alone. For those people, I refer them to Norway.
@-k57032 жыл бұрын
Do Scottish people feel that they want to be on their own?
@matthewbeesley58502 жыл бұрын
Norway also remains out of the EU. Scottish separatists seem hellbent on surrendering to the EU. If you do, expect Brussels rather than Westminster to dictate Scotland's energy policy. The smarter move is to leave both the UK and the EU, rather than trade one for the other.
@SGrahamArt2 жыл бұрын
@@matthewbeesley5850 Yes indeed, but while Norway is not in the EU, it is still a part of the EEA, the EFTA and Schengen. A lot better than England which is hell bent on cutting itself off from all of Europe. An independent Scotland would never be as isolationist as England. That's just suicide. We're watching that now in slow motion. Besides, the control WM has over Scotland dwarfs any 'control' the EU would have.
@floridaflora112 жыл бұрын
Most informative. Beautiful videos of natural features and man made structures. Thanks for making this and sharing it with the world. You're doing good work.
@salganik2 жыл бұрын
Norway was so "poor" so its GDP PPP was the highest in the World already in the 1930s almost 40 years prior to oil discovery. Poor Norway is a myth.
@thebeckwourth91332 жыл бұрын
Amazing. Thank you for this
@gullfeber2 жыл бұрын
even among the highest during the 18th century. Second biggest trading fleet in the world
@salganik2 жыл бұрын
@@gullfeber that's arguable. In the 18th century, its GDP was close to the World's average and Russia, being 2-3 times lower than for UK or Netherlands. In the 19th century, Norwegian GDP was already similar to that of most Western European countries including the UK, Germany, and the Netherlands. After becoming independent and the start of socialist reforms Norway started to catch up in the 1920s and overcome the UK in the 1930s. Numbers from Bairoch and Maddison may disagree. Nevertheless, it is impossible to refer to Norway with similar GDP per capita to the UK or the Netherlands in 19-20 centuries as a "poor" country. Norwegian GDP after 1920s was always with +-20% of Swedish or Danish, after or before oil was discovered in 1970s. Shame that the video is spreading obvious misinformation.
@geoffreycharles63302 жыл бұрын
@@salganik the bigger question here is why Russia with her immeasurable natural resources is where she is...
@salganik2 жыл бұрын
@@geoffreycharles6330 probably no simple answer here. Both nominal GDP of the Russian Empire and USSR were around half of Western European for a long time, so it's not only Communism's fault. But after the 1990s Russian growth became even worse, so it's a question towards the current political system. The big differences between Norway and Russia are (at least) strong working unions, educational reforms and no imperialism.
@darrenskjoelsvold2 жыл бұрын
I would also say that culture had a lot to do with how things turned out too. You do mention the strong democracy of Norway but culturally Norwegians are more cooperative and community is more important as well. So Norway wanted the prosperity to last and had a longer vision and the people didn't get greedy either.
@patrickkirby65802 жыл бұрын
Another Norwegian in the comments said that Norwegians values business more than relationships and many foreigners see Norwegians as “cold”
@darrenskjoelsvold2 жыл бұрын
@@patrickkirby6580 well as for seeing Norwegians as cold I can sorta understand that. But the whole "business rather than relationships" that is not a monolithic thing and understand that people are people. But I must say a job well done is its own reward.
@ysteinlangaker4730 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for speaking so well about us. 🌹🌹🌹
@Aidan_Au2 жыл бұрын
It's also worth mentioning that Norway knows that oil will run out. So they put a lot of emphasis and incentives on clean energy. There're a lot of Teslas and electric vehicles in Norway.
@JaKingScomez2 жыл бұрын
How does that help their economy?
@cupcakzbacpud95022 жыл бұрын
@@JaKingScomez planning for the future?
@wazzup2332 жыл бұрын
@@JaKingScomez they don't those raw materials for electric vehicles like Tesla are came from the minerals in the Congo which are poor and there are many Congolese people are working on an inhumane conditions to their country's mines.
@danielkristiansen22982 жыл бұрын
Eh, no, our politicians are making no plans for the end of oil, and they are not planning to end oil either. We are still actively searching for new oil fields. Norway is only "green" because we export a lot of our pollution to the 2nd and 3rd world.
@More_Row2 жыл бұрын
@@cupcakzbacpud9502 Electric vehicles ain't planning for the future.
@carlojones86102 жыл бұрын
Norway didn't suffer the western political aggression from their oil. Norway is not a fanatic nation bent on ancient religions. Norway has decent leadership.
@Untilitpases2 жыл бұрын
5:26 Wait... That escalated quickly. Maritime trade is not something that an uneducated society can quikly develop to the point of generating a fleet that was the 4th largest in the world. It takes a lot of knowhow, manpower, resources and wealth to do so. How do you get from uneducated, agrarian society to one that develops and controls the 4th largest fleet?
@norway42862 жыл бұрын
Because Norway was not as poor as he depicted in the beginning it was middle of the road in terms of European countries with a high amount of sailors and a sizeable merchant navy. Things like literacy had been high for a long time (beating a lot of other countries in Europe). Without oil Norway would probably be similar to Denmark and Sweden today.
@truxton10002 жыл бұрын
The video is not telling the proper picture on what Norway was in the 1800's, industrial revolution started around 1850, education was already good long before that, Norway was never "the poorest country in Europe", no, it was average. It's a myth that Norway was poor before oil and gas was found, a very hard to get rid of myth.
@Untilitpases2 жыл бұрын
@@truxton1000 I believe so. If you study history, anthropology or linguistics, maritime trade is often something that requires specialised knowledge. So much so that whole countries would leave off a caste of people for seafaring purposes even when they invaded. Modern day turkish words for sea related activities and objects have greek roots and long been generational activities from families of greek origins. Balkan countries often borrowed italian vocabulary wholestock for seafaring activities. The list of inventions connected to the sea is impressive: Astronomy, math, cartography, metallurgy, food preservation, pharmacology & medicine, bookeeping & finance, even the stock exchange and insurance sector are byproducts of it. Also, most innovations came from sea related activities as it would connect you to the world. (As in Italy's, Spain's, Japan's case, middle east etc.) Even rich nations had a hard time developing it. Germany, France etc, for all the riches and advancement, they struggled with naval fleets and never were as successful at controlling the sea. So Norway being able to grow a naval merchant fleet of worldly proportions in less then a century smells like missing story.
@truxton10002 жыл бұрын
@@Untilitpases Actually Norway's shipping history goes back at least 12-1300 years ago when they traveled between Scandinavian countries, and of course during viking age to all of Europe and even America. Most people connect vikings with raids and war, but of course it was trade routes as well. The coast was those days highways, and it stayed like that until even our time. Shipping is not the only way of transporting in modern days, but it's still the future as it's much cheaper to transport on the sea than on the road and in the air, only railway can maybe compete in terms of cost per mile. It irritates me insanely when these videos present Norway as "poor before the oil" it is totally wrong.
@Untilitpases2 жыл бұрын
@@truxton1000 yep. Adam Smith literally takes the case study of shipping (and access to navigable rivers etc) to be one of the main differentiators that cause the wealth of nations difference. You can transfer a lot more, with far less cost, and even far less escorting back in the days.
@coffaytalks Жыл бұрын
This is one of the best videos explaining how we got to where we are now.
@seb4uchinky12 жыл бұрын
10 years rolled out for me in Norway and I learnt how this country has succeeded. Key is the people. If a person get so much money in country like India or US , all they do is spend lavishly . I have seen super wealthy norwegians sitting alone on top of mountains in their good old cottages(they call it Hytte) , such modest life. Norwegians dont take too much risks, extra careful about future savings and not very family centric to squander money for one person or family...rest is history
@ccpanel2 жыл бұрын
except for the cold.... ahhh the cold.
@nutsackmania2 жыл бұрын
bruh you get that like for a highly diversified economy to thrive ppl need to spend their money, right? like, the concept of velocity of money? you're so simple, so naive, so cute.
@XPOL12X2 жыл бұрын
Important to keep in mind that when oil was found, Norway was an integral member of NATO/ poviding significant surveillance and intelligence on the Sovjet Union and a staging area for intelligence operations into Sovjet as well naval surveillance. Norway was deeply integrated with US and UK security interests and had a very long and intimate history with those countries. Norway is the only country mentioned in the video to have this kind of relationship. If Norway didn`t, then UK/US would likely have forced agreements upon Norway and simply take what they wanted. The Norwegian government was smart and did alot of right things, but US oil corporations were also partly held in check by a US government that saw technology exchange and a strong norwegian state/government (bordering on the sovjet union) as an important asset. Venezuela never meant shit to anyone.
@Hotstad Жыл бұрын
LOL! Interersting
@PRmoustache882 жыл бұрын
The average Norwegian is very ethical and intelligent. Prosperity and freedom flow from the morality of its citizens.
@Untilitpases2 жыл бұрын
After centuries of pillaging + Being neutral against the Nazis ... they grew a conscience. Norways luck is in many ways tied to it's geography. Arable land = population&riches concentration = political uneveness. Also arable &unbroken land = easy for armies to control.
@RealErk2 жыл бұрын
@@Untilitpases Neutral against the nazis? What are you talking about
@tadejhlavacek4042 жыл бұрын
@@Untilitpases Norway was conquered in ww2 by Nazi Germany, there were some interesting sea battles going on at that time. I think you meant Sweden when you opened your mouth.
@RS-ls7mm2 жыл бұрын
Ethical? Not if you know any history. Lots of looting and wars. Its only when they got rich is when they started to grow a conscience. Now they are getting complacent, since its so easy, is when you should be really concerned. That's the path to stagnation (like the US).
@Untilitpases2 жыл бұрын
@@RealErk They were neutral during both world wars. Dante once quipped: The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who in a period of moral crisis maintain their neutrality.
@mrtinythumb53632 жыл бұрын
Fun fact. Norways power is no longer for Norwegians. It's sold to many other countries. And now the Norwegian people suffer because of sky high energy prices.
@Fusionprospects2 жыл бұрын
THIS
@SageOfHeaven2 жыл бұрын
Ironically, in Norway, showing off your wealth or bragging about yourself is considered very rude. I like that, it creates norms that say that wealth and station does not make you more worth than others. BUT that also makes it so that you grab any chance you get at stalking forums or youtube vids to see someone brag about your country! :P
@honkhonk80092 жыл бұрын
In America, wealth and family mean nothing aswell. But people saying its being "rude" implies that they actually do CARE about it. Thats why at best, no one really cares if you have a lambo or if you have a super mansion. They treat you the same. Bragging your MERIT though is looked up upon though. KZbinrs and other clowns in a lambo are gonna be looked at as fucking retards. But if you see warren buffet roll down in his corolla or with an old ass mustang, your gonna be fine with it. If you see kanye west roll down in his tank, your also gonna be fine cus its been earned. But if you see Hunter Biden in anything other than a civic, your prolly gonna get mad.
@TheBarser2 жыл бұрын
Its the jante law. Same here in Denmark. Show offs is disliked.
@SageOfHeaven2 жыл бұрын
@A R I wonder how many times our population it has too. But then again, Saudi kills people so there is that.
@honkhonk80092 жыл бұрын
@@TheBarser Putting society ahead of the individual sounds wayy to patriotic for even us though. America tries to be collectivist at times, but ends up being ultra individualistic at the end lol.
@TheBarser2 жыл бұрын
@@honkhonk8009 well I think the result of the Nordics compared with the US speaks for itself. The average joe and poor guy is better of here, and the rich better off in america.
@Thats_quite_cool2 жыл бұрын
This video came out at the perfect time as I am on holiday in Norway right now!
@MemTMCR2 жыл бұрын
enjoy your wallet while it lasts
@Thats_quite_cool2 жыл бұрын
@@MemTMCR oh yeah it’s insane, just bought a beer for the equivalent of €11.20
@hasselnttper37302 жыл бұрын
@@Thats_quite_cool I assume you're Dutch? I wouldn't buy more than a beer or two at bar/resturant prices haha. Go to the supermarket or vinmonopolet if you're looking for (more) reasonable prices. You can always drink a bit before heading to the bar to save some money! FYI: shops can't sell alcohol after 20:00 on weekdays and 18:00 on saturday. Vinmonopolet closes even earlier on most days.
@Thats_quite_cool2 жыл бұрын
@@hasselnttper3730 I am Dutch indeed. The weird thing is that even the supermarket prices were what we pay at bars here. You’ve got a beautiful country but damn those prices XD.
@hasselnttper37302 жыл бұрын
@@Thats_quite_cool Yeah, prices are totally insane. A beer that costs 30 NOK in the supermarket would only cost 13 NOK without all the alcohol and sales taxes. Bars are forced to charge north of 80 NOK for a beer. Politicians on the left were discussing raising fuel prices by €1.3/liter before the prices shot up due to Russia & Ukraine. They love making life as expensive as possible. I love the Netherlands, but it's a bit flat for Norwegians like myself. That being said, I've only been to Amsterdam, which is seen more like a tourist attraction by the Dutch people I've spoken to. I also went to Antwerp in Belgium, but I prefer Amsterdam. Ohh, and your beer is far superior at a lower price!
@trygve.2 жыл бұрын
Norway actually offered a trade with Sweden when we found oil, if they shared Volvo with us, we would share the oil with them (simplified heavily) They declined the offer and now "Vi kan kjøpe hele Sverige om vi vil"
@Marthe5352 жыл бұрын
vi har jo et poeng med det
@Marthe5352 жыл бұрын
det er ikke et bra poeng men det er jo morsomt å gjøre nar av svenskene
@Marthe5352 жыл бұрын
for non norwegian ''like its not a good reason but its fun to make jokes about the swedes''
@mephisto6486 Жыл бұрын
As a german that never visited Norway I want to wish you a wonderful day
@Beaheadoeverybody Жыл бұрын
All countries should focus on equality sadly my country Peru is not focus on it but I love Norway because it does focus on equality helping all of it's people for the better
@elgiganten61542 жыл бұрын
Swedish GDP = 537,6 billion USD. (No oil) Norway GDP = 362 bilion (with oil ) Denmark 355 billion Finland 271,2 bilion
@johnhenrix38942 жыл бұрын
Educating the entire population is really the key.
@sethp262 жыл бұрын
And having that population be really low helps that be possible
@CaptainDeston2 жыл бұрын
Depends on the education. There's 'education' then there's a general culture of competency that actually teaches people.
@sethp262 жыл бұрын
@@CaptainDeston the latter becomes possible with the former
@kestutisvedegys78202 жыл бұрын
@@sethp26 Not really. We have systems made for high population not one or two individuals so saying "they are more educated because they have less people" is nonsensical. Richest country on Earth US for example has more then enough resources to have extremely well educated populace, but they chose not too since they in need of workers not leaders. Less question you asks in those Capicorupt countries the better is for the owner class and so education made bad on purpose.
@francismarion64002 жыл бұрын
@@kestutisvedegys7820 But its the public school teachers turning out the dummies.
@mjribes2 жыл бұрын
There is a Scandinavian mentality to this. They live in the far north where, for millennia, they have had to plan for the future in order to survive harsh winters. They could not just live hand to mouth and for the now. That is the exact opposite to Africa and South America.