Tag Archives: netherlands

Dutch coalition negotiations: Democracy fail?

Generally speaking I am a fan of the Dutch political system. There is way less corruption than in the American system, and I get the impression that the politicians here are, well, smarter. That being said, I have major issues with the current coalition negotiation process. My main gripe is that it completely ignores what the majority of people in the Netherlands voted for.

After the election in June, the biggest parties by total votes were VVD (Mark Rutte) and PvdA (Job Cohen), with the PVV (Geert Wilders) coming in third and the CDA (Maxime Verhagen) rounding out the top four (see table below). NB: I’ve only included the biggest parties in the election. There are a couple small guys who made it into parliament, but their strategic importance is negligible.

Dutch Election ResultsData from NU.nl and NOS

I am fine with all of this. But then came the coalition-formation.

The process works like this: the Queen appoints an ‘informateur’ who interviews the parties to determine who could govern together based on their party programs, or what that party would like to accomplish if they came into power. The informateur asks if parties are willing to compromise on certain points, which points they won’t compromise on, etc. The ruling (typically majority) coalition then determines the cabinet of ministers and the prime minister.

The Queen also suggests which coalition possibilities the informateur should investigate first. In this election, she advised to look into a right-wing cabinet, since VVD was the biggest party and PVV was the biggest winner in terms of seats gained. My problems begin here. If you want a government that reflects the majority of your population, the most logical first choice would be a middle cabinet of VVD and PvdA (as part of a “middle cabinet”). Not VVD-PVV.

Let me explain where I’m coming from. I am not experienced in coalition governments, but in a democracy, the majority rules. The two biggest parties should lead the governing coalition. What if these two parties don’t agree or don’t want to govern with each other, like the VVD and PvdA? It is indeed a difficult situation, but less likely to happen if there is heavy pressure from the beginning of the formation for these two parties to work together. I mean, look at how hard the VVD and CDA are trying with the PVV, even though prominent members of both parties are against working with Wilders.

For old-times’ sake, let’s go through a timeline of the attempted coalitions.

Click for larger image. Data from NOS

You can see from the figure that a middle cabinet was never seriously investigated because of PvdA’s declaration that they ‘saw nothing’ in the prospect. This was a serious blunder for the PvdA, but I think it would not have happened if there was serious pressure from the get-go. I’m willing to bet Cohen said it for strategic reasons, not because of irreconcilable differences.

Furthermore, and this is just a guess, there is not much overlap between the people who identify with the PVV and any other party. Between PvdA, D66 and Groenlinks, for example, the overlap is quite high (I wouldn’t be surprised if D66 and Groenlinks would just merge into one party). The PVV has a very strong anti-immigration message, which fits maybe with the VVD’s tough stance on crime, but economically-speaking, VVD and PVV got nothing in common. The PVV has more in common with the SP in this regard (they both want to keep the retirement age at 65 instead of 67, although Wilders has already broken this promise at the request of the VVD). My point is that a coalition that includes VVD-PvdA-CDA would be more agreeable to those who voted for D66 or Groenlinks. If it’s VVD-CDA-PVV, nobody’s happy except the PVV voters. Seriously.

A final point of annoyance, if your goal is to have a coalition with the biggest party and the party who won the most seats, it seems that the smallest party or the party who lost the most seats would be excluded. But no. The CDA lost 20 seats in the last election and is the 4th biggest party, but still have a central role in the cabinet formation. But not the PvdA, who only lost 3 seats and is the 2nd biggest party.

Guys, get it together. The PVV gained a ton of seats, but they are still 3rd. Let’s stop worrying about being ‘undemocratic’ if we exclude them, and worry more about ignoring the almost 2 million people who voted for the PvdA.

Anyway, we are at day 80 in cabinet negotiations with still no end in sight. This could mean a whole new election if the deadlock continues. Volgende keer beter.

BP, security cameras, Dutch elections, spring, mint

Taken from my cameraphone on the train. It says, roughly, “At BP we consider ourselves professional and clean. We shouldn’t have then falsified our safety procedures to cut costs. We shouldn’t have said that the biggest oil disaster in the US is relatively small in comparison with the upper level of the ocean. And we have a lot of work to do to clean up the mess. Therefore we offer our apologies.” However, the asterisk at the top refers to a note at the bottom (which sadly didn’t make it into the picture) that says “But you guys wanted cheap oil.” Are they running ads like this in the US? Even with the asterisk?

If you want to get famous, stand in front of one of the city of Amsterdam’s surveillance cameras on Saturday for an audition. Directors will be sitting in the reviewing stations that day, and if they like what see, they will (somehow) get in touch with you. I presume.

The Netherlands just had their parliamentary elections yesterday. The center-right party won big time. The Christians lost big-time. Labor stayed pretty much where they were. The party of Geert Wilders almost tripled the number of seats his party has in the second chamber of parliament. More here (in English).

It’s nice and warm here.

I love my new mint plant.

Dirty Nederland

Update: After 2 months of demonstrations and dirty train stations, the ‘schoonmaker’ strike has ended. In place of 2x .20 cent raises over the next two years, the workers will receive a .35 cent raise for a wage of 10.35 per hour. The workers will also have the opportunity to take Dutch lessons.

It is now uncertain whether the Amsterdam city workers will strike during Koninginnedag. But at least there’ll be no more overflowing garbage cans at the stations.

Foto WFA, Olivier Middendorp; Found here.

***

Since early February there has been a “schoonmaker staking” or strike by the workers contracted by the national railroad company, NS, to clean the train stations (including the big ones like Amsterdam, Utrecht Centraal and Schiphol). The street cleaners in the city of Amsterdam have since also joined the strike. The workers are asking for two 2% raises — one this year and one next year (2X .20 eurocents), language classes so they can improve their Dutch, travel reimbursement, etc. This at a time when the government is thinking of lowering the minimum wage 10%.

At the beginning of the strike, the train stations were noticeably dirtier and it quickly progressed to downright filthy. Then again, it was a train station. I imagine demand is pretty inelastic – if you have to travel by train to go to work every day, a dirty floor probably won’t stop you. You could of course drive to work instead, but then you have to brave Dutch highways and you might not even have a car. In any case, I was not planning on altering my commute on account of dirty floors and litter. Also, I have not noticed the streets of Amsterdam being dirtier at all.

So where’s the pressure going to come from?

At first, I thought it would be from the tenants within the train stations. It’s not a tragedy if the train station is dirty, but if you’re a restaurant located within a train station, you might lose some customers. Walking through Utrecht Centraal last month, the smell of the Chinese and Surinamese restaurants made me gag a little. Not exactly good for business. A couple weeks later, however, everything smelled back to normal. If that smell would have persisted, then tenants most definitely would have applied more pressure. But it seems they either hired a temporary company or there are a couple strikebreakers, because the foulness has stayed a pretty constant level since mid-March (although admittedly still pretty nasty). It actually isn’t even dirty at all in Schiphol, which is nice for all those stranded passengers spending the night due to that f*cking ashcloud.

As for the city of Amsterdam, the cleaners have recently announced they will not clean up the city for a week after Koninginnedag. That’s like no one cleaning up Times Square a week after New Years. Actually, it’s worse.

According to the labor union, FNV, this has been the longest strike since 1933. At a certain point, the cleaners will need an income again, and maybe that’s what the NS is waiting for.

With all the different stakeholders and macroeconomic considerations, I have no idea how this will turn out. A few weeks ago, the employers tried to end the demonstrations by offering employees 25 euro gift certificates. So if that’s any indication, we can surely expect this strike to continue.

State of the Union

So sometimes I watch this Dutch late-night talk show called Pauw&Witteman. Today they had a well-known scholar of American affairs on the program to talk about the recent State of the Union. His name is Maarten van Rossem.

I’ve been trying to find English translations of Van Rossem in Amerika, a tv-series he presented about Christianity in the US (funded by the evangelical broadcasting association in the Netherlands), but no luck yet. I’ll send a few copies back home once I find it. In any case, this is a rough translation of something he said about the yesterday’s State of the Union speech:

“If Obama has indeed made a mistake, it is that he’s not tough enough. He has enormous trust in the ability of people to reason intelligently. But you can’t have that when you’re dealing with the Republican party.”

One thing I like about the Netherlands, is that there really isn’t a huge ‘RIGHT vs LEFT’ thing. They’re just left. They want universal healthcare and they don’t give a crap if a gay couple gets married. Not one crap. (Well, the majority doesn’t.)

Which one hand is a bit strange. Some political parties here are clearly Christian — the Christian Democrats (CDA) and the Christian Union (ChristenUnie) are both in the coalition — but even they are not as hardcore about religion as the evangelicals back home. At least from my perspective. But could you imagine a political party in the US with the word “Christian” in its name? No, you cannot.

There was a young chap on a tv news program the other day from the youth organization of the ChristenUnie, and at first I thought, “Well, he’s going to say something I probably don’t agree with.” (Gunshy after I saw that clip from American tv where some preacher said the earthquake in Haiti was the consequence of a pact Haitians made with the devil.) Do you know what he came on the program to talk about? Ear plugs. That night clubs should have ear plug dispensers next to the condom dispensers in order to lower the risk of hearing damage for young people.

That is the best picture of the Netherlands I can give. Practical to the point of absurdity.

P.S. ChristenUnie has a nice website in English. Go to http://www.christenunie.nl and click on the Union Jack in the corner. The phrase ‘obedience to God’ gets repeated a lot, which is a bit disturbing, but their program is pretty standard – http://www.christenunie.nl/en/page/9490. I especially like this quote I found on the site, which starts out sounding like familiar rhetoric, and then throws a surprise punch at the end.

“The ChristianUnion is principled in its beliefs that it is not up to humans to decide over matters regarding life or death. Society should care passionately about all life and all creation. In practice this also means we are very committed to the protection of the environment.”

Also, if you are interested in reading more about Dutch political parties (for whatever reason), here are some search terms: CDA, PvdA (social democrats), D66 (center), SP (socialist), VVD (the closest thing to right-wing here), PVV (party of Gert Wilders).

Why you should never visit Holland in November

Amsterdam is no cesspool

I found something I really liked today. Actually, I found it way earlier, but this was the first chance I had to post it.

Fox News aired a segment last December which said that Amsterdam (and “the Netherlands” as a whole –by the way, I love how people think Amsterdam is the Netherlands. It’s not a very big country, but it is by no means homogeneous) was a failed experiment is social- and soft-drug tolerance. That organized crime had taken over everything and the city was a ‘cesspool.’

Now, some of what Bill O’Reilly said was true: the Netherlands is becoming more conservative. Three things.

One, it is mainly in response to the immigration; namely, culture clashes between native Dutch and immigrant Muslims. Native Dutch feel that the conservative Muslims are antithetical to their liberal way of life, and they resent that. Thus, a backlash against immigration in general.

Two, there is also a stronger Christian movement in the Netherlands lately, which I will not try to explain, because I have no idea why it’s popped up (religious fundamentalism is currently a worldwide phenomenon, it seems).

(I really want to rant about how religion and morality are two different things and it is completely possible to be moral without being religious. There may be many good moral ideals in Christianity, but I’d rather have an atheist who independently and thoroughly questioned and developed moral and ethical ideals than a Christian who takes that process for granted because their already ‘a Christian’.)

Three, many coffee shops are indeed being closed in Amsterdam and in many border cities. The government has set up a commission to make recommendations on how to reform its drug tolerance policy, which will address parliament in September or October.

The border cities are closing shop especially because drug tourists from Belgium and France invade relatively quiet, low-key cities. That may be the case for Amsterdam as well, as DRUG TOURISM, not native Dutch visitors, get out of control. The commission has considered the shops for ‘member’s only’ to solve the problem. Here is an article on the issue. I believe the story was originally written by the AFP news wire (France’s version of the Associated Press).

The article quotes the commission: “Coffee shops should again become what they were originally meant to be: vending points for local users and not large-scale suppliers to consumers from neighboring countries,” said the body. “In some aspects, the situation has gotten out of hand,” it added.

Anyway, back to O’Reilly’s segment. A film student from Amsterdam has posted a response to the news clip that is the definition of short and sweet. Unfortunately, I cannot post video, but here is the link to the O’Reilly clip, and the student’s response.

I will also post the videos on facebook. Really, guys, I’m always busting on Dutch people for stereotyping America without ever stepping foot in its borders. Don’t bash Amsterdam or the Dutch for their ‘rampant prostitution, drug abuse and organized crime’ until you’ve crossed a canal or two. There is more to the city than the (tiny) red-light district.

Year One – Bijna Klaar

For report 2

My first school year is almost over (2 weeks!) — and I’m in the midst of 201 group projects, papers and books. However, I need to take a break and make a confession: I just got super excited when I realized my NeoOffice spreadsheet had a function-optimization solver. Presently, I don’t need to optimize anything; but, it’s good to know it’s there.

The polder model or Uncle Sam?

A few friends have sent me the article “Going Dutch” that was recently in The NY Times magazine. In the article, American author Russell Shorto describes his life in Amsterdam and what he digs about the Dutch.

Interestingly enough, a Dutch author who has lived in New York City for almost 10 years has written a reply to that article titled “Going Dutch? Not So Fast!”

They are both posted below if anyone is interested in the back-and-forth. The “Going Dutch” article is a bit long (much longer than the reply), and I imagine many of you will just skim it. Just in case you miss it, this is his most important and most relevant (for non-expat Americans) point:

“Maybe we Americans have set up a false dichotomy. Over the course of the 20th century, American politics became entrenched in two positions, which remain fixed in many minds: the old left-wing idea of vast and direct government control of social welfare, and the right-wing determination to dismantle any advances toward it, privatize the system and leave people to their own devices.”

Enjoy!

Going Dutch
By RUSSELL SHORTO
Published: April 29, 2009

PICTURE ME, IF YOU WILL, as I settle at my desk to begin my workday, and feel free to use a Vermeer image as your template. The pale-yellow light that gives Dutch paintings their special glow suffuses the room. The interior is simple, with high walls and beams across the ceiling. The view through the windows of the 17th-century house in which I have my apartment is of similarly gabled buildings lining the other side of one of Amsterdam’s oldest canals. Only instead of a plump maid or a raffish soldier at the center of the canvas, you should substitute a sleep-rumpled writer squinting at a laptop.

For 18 months now I’ve been playing the part of the American in Holland, alternately settling into or bristling against the European way of life. Many of the features of that life are enriching. History echoes from every edifice as you move through your day. The bicycle is not a means of recreation but a genuine form of transportation. A nearby movie house sells not popcorn but demitasses of espresso and glasses of Dutch gin from behind a wood-paneled bar, which somehow makes you feel sane and adult and enfolded in civilization.

Then there are the features of European life that grate on an American sensibility, like the three-inch leeway that drivers deign to grant you on the highway, or the cling film you get from the supermarket, which clings only to itself. But such annoyances pale in comparison to one other. For the first few months I was haunted by a number: 52. It reverberated in my head; I felt myself a prisoner trying to escape its bars. For it represents the rate at which the income I earn, as a writer and as the director of an institute, is to be taxed. To be plain: more than half of my modest haul, I learned on arrival, was to be swallowed by the Dutch welfare state. Nothing in my time here has made me feel so much like an American as my reaction to this number. I am politically left of center in most ways, but from the time 52 entered my brain, I felt a chorus of voices rise up within my soul, none of which I knew I had internalized, each a ghostly simulacrum of a right-wing, supply-side icon: Ronald Reagan, Jack Kemp, Rush Limbaugh. The grim words this chorus chanted in defense of my hard-earned income I recognized as copied from Charlton Heston’s N.R.A. rallying cry about prying his gun from his cold, dead hands.

And yet as the months rolled along, I found the defiant anger softening by intervals, thanks to a succession of little events and awarenesses. One came not long ago. Logging into my bank account, I noted with fleeting but pleasant confusion the arrival of two mysterious payments of 316 euros (about $410) each. The remarks line said “accommodation schoolbooks.” My confusion was not total. On looking at the payor — the Sociale Verzekeringsbank, or Social Insurance Bank — I nodded with sage if partial understanding. Our paths had crossed several times before. I have two daughters, you see. Every quarter, the SVB quietly drops $665 into my account with the one-word explanation kinderbijslag, or child benefit. As the SVB’s Web site cheerily informed me when I went there in bewilderment after the first deposit: “Babies are expensive. Nappies, clothes, the pram . . . all these things cost money. The Dutch government provides for child benefit to help you with the costs of bringing up your child.” Any parents living in the country receive quarterly payments until their children turn 18. And thanks to a recently passed law, the state now gives parents a hand in paying for school materials.

Payments arrive from other sources too. Friends who have small children report that the government can reimburse as much as 70 percent of the cost of day care, which totals around $14,000 per child per year. In late May of last year an unexpected $4,265 arrived in my account: vakantiegeld. Vacation money. This money materializes in the bank accounts of virtually everyone in the country just before the summer holidays; you get from your employer an amount totaling 8 percent of your annual salary, which is meant to cover plane tickets, surfing lessons, tapas: vacations. And we aren’t talking about a mere “paid vacation” — this is on top of the salary you continue to receive during the weeks you’re off skydiving or snorkeling. And by law every employer is required to give a minimum of four weeks’ vacation. For that matter, even if you are unemployed you still receive a base amount of vakantiegeld from the government, the reasoning being that if you can’t go on vacation, you’ll get depressed and despondent and you’ll never get a job.

Such things are easy for an American to ridicule; you don’t have to be a Fox News commentator to sneer at what, in the midst of a global financial crisis, seems like Socialism Gone Wild. And stating it as I’ve done above — we’ll consume half your salary and every once in a while toss you a few euros in return — it seems like a pretty raw deal.

But there’s more to it. First, as in the United States, income tax in the Netherlands is a bendy concept: with a good accountant, you can rack up deductions and exploit loopholes. And while the top income-tax rate in the United States is 35 percent, the numbers are a bit misleading. “People coming from the U.S. to the Netherlands focus on that difference, and on that 52 percent,” said Constanze Woelfle, an American accountant based in the Netherlands whose clients are mostly American expats. “But consider that the Dutch rate includes social security, which in the U.S. is an additional 6.2 percent. Then in the U.S. you have state and local taxes, and much higher real estate taxes. If you were to add all those up, you would get close to the 52 percent.”

But to ponder relative tax rates is only to trace the surface of a deeper story. In fact, as my time abroad has coincided with the crumpling of basic elements of the American economic and social systems, and as politicians, commentators and ordinary Americans have cast about for remedies or potential new models, I have found myself not only giving the Dutch system a personal test drive but also wondering whether some form of it could be adopted by my country. One subtext of the World Economic Forum at Davos in January was the question of whether, amid the derailing of American-style capitalism as we have known it, the European approach, which marries capitalism and social welfare, and which in times of economic crisis seems to offer more stability both to individuals and to society, could suit the United States. President Obama’s initial budget called for a $634 billion fund over the next 10 years for revamping the health care system: an attempt to make good on his campaign promise of moving toward universal coverage, which of course is a basic component of the European social system. Two years ago, the Bush administration sent an emissary to examine the Dutch health care system in particular, thanks to its novel blend of public and private elements.

With the political atmosphere in Washington in flux, there is no saying what kinds of changes will come. But most people seem to agree that something has to happen. And in talking both with American expats and with experts in the Dutch system, I hear the same thing over and over: American perceptions of European-style social welfare are seriously skewed. The system in which I have embedded myself has its faults, some of them lampoonable. But does the cartoon image of it — encapsulated in the dread slur “socialism,” which is being lobbed in American political circles like a bomb — match reality? Is there, maybe, a significant upside that is worth exploring?

LET’S FOCUS FIRST ON the slur. I spent my initial months in Amsterdam under the impression that I was living in a quasi-socialistic system, built upon ideas that originated in the brains of Marx and Engels. This was one of the puzzling features of the Netherlands. It is and has long been a highly capitalistic country — the Dutch pioneered the multinational corporation and advanced the concept of shares of stock, and last year the country was the third-largest investor in U.S. businesses — and yet it has what I had been led to believe was a vast, socialistic welfare state. How can these polar-opposite value systems coexist?

A short stroll from my apartment suggests the outlines of an answer. In about six minutes you reach the Dam, the wide plaza that is the Times Square of Amsterdam. It is no misnomer: after groups of settlers decided, around 1200, to make their homes at this spot where the Amstel River flowed into the inland bay called the IJ, they blocked up the river in order to control the water (hence the city’s name: Amstel . . . Dam). Beneath the Dam is, thus, an actual dam. The square is the center of the city’s history. Rembrandt, Spinoza and troops of Dutch Masters-looking gents trod these paving stones in the 17th century. One grim day in May 1945, just after the Nazis surrendered the city but before they left, German soldiers fired into the celebrating crowds on the square, killing 20 people.

The Dam is therefore a reminder not only of the country’s past but also of its ceaseless battle with water. And that battle turns out to be the key to understanding the Netherlands’ blend of free market and social welfare. The Low Countries never developed a fully feudal system of aristocratic landowners and serfs. Rather, sailors, merchants and farmers bought shares in trading ships and in cooperatives to protect the land from the sea, a development that led to the creation of one of the world’s first stock markets and helped fuel the Dutch golden age. Today the country remains among the most free-market-oriented in Europe.

At the same time, water also played a part in the development of the welfare system. To get an authoritative primer on the Dutch social-welfare state, I sat down with Geert Mak, perhaps the country’s pre-eminent author, to whose books the Dutch themselves turn to understand their history. The Dutch call their collectivist mentality and way of politics-by-consensus the “polder model,” after the areas of low land systematically reclaimed from the sea. “People think of the polder model as a romantic idea” and assume its origins are more myth than fact, Mak told me. “But if you look at records of the Middle Ages, you see it was a real thing. Everyone had to deal with water. With a polder, the big problem is pumping the water. But in most cases your land lies in the middle of the country, so where are you going to pump it? To someone else’s land. And then they have to do the same thing, and their neighbor does, too. So what you see in the records are these extraordinarily complicated deals. All of this had to be done together.”

There were political movements in the 20th century — like the sexual and social revolutions of the ’60s — that gave the country its reputation for no-holds-barred liberalism. But by Mak’s reckoning these developments were little more than varnish on the surface. The nation today embodies a centuries-old inclination toward collectivism, which one writer characterized as “the democracy of dry feet.”

“We are still in the polder, always searching for agreement among all parties,” Heino van Essen, former chairman of PGGM, one of the largest Dutch pension funds, told me. “Even our pension system is collectivist, in which employers, employees and the government collaborate.” The collaboration goes all the way to the top, where something called the Social Economic Council — consisting of trade-union, business and government representatives — advises the government on major issues. “It’s possible because our trade unions still play a prominent role,” said Alexander Rinnooy Kan, the chairman of the council. “In the U.S., the relationship between employers and unions is adversarial, but here we’ve learned there’s a joint interest in working together.”

There is another historical base to the Dutch social-welfare system, which curiously has been overlooked by American conservatives in their insistence on seeing such a system as a threat to their values. It is rooted in religion. “These were deeply religious people, who had a real commitment to looking after the poor,” Mak said of his ancestors. “They built orphanages and hospitals. The churches had a system of relief, which eventually was taken over by the state. So Americans should get over ‘socialism.’ This system developed not after Karl Marx, but after Martin Luther and Francis of Assisi.”

IF “SOCIALISM” IS THEN something of a straw man — if rather than political ideology, religious values and a tradition of cooperation are what lie beneath the modern social-welfare system — maybe it’s worth asking a simple question of such a system: What does it feel like to live in it?

In 1992, Julie Phillips flew from her home in New York to visit a friend from college who lived in Amsterdam. She found that she liked the city. “You don’t know any nice, single, straight men here, do you?” she asked her friend. He said he knew one and introduced her to Jan. Julie married Jan, and Amsterdam became her home. Julie is a friend of mine, part of my American expat cabal in Amsterdam. She’s a fellow writer, and the second of her two children, Jooske, was born at home. Julie told me she isn’t a “hard-core granola type,” but giving birth at home, with the help of a midwife, is a longstanding Dutch tradition, so, she said, “I was very when-in-Rome about it.” She is now a fan of home birth. “It was incredibly pleasant,” she said. Bart (“one of the Netherlands’ only male midwives,” according to Phillips) showed up at her door at 11 in the morning. The baby was born a few hours later. “It was just me and Bart and Jan. Later, I was with the baby in the bedroom, listening to them yakking in the kitchen. I thought, Here I am with my baby in my bed, and everyone is having a nice time in my house.”

The Netherlands has universal health care, which means that, unlike in the United States, virtually everyone is covered, and of course social welfare, broadly understood, begins at the beginning. In Julie and Jan’s case, although he was a struggling translator and she was a struggling writer, their insurance covered prenatal care, the birth of their children and after-care, which began with seven days of five-hours-per-day home assistance. “That means someone comes and does your laundry, vacuums and teaches you how to care for a newborn,” Julie said. Then began the regimen of regular checkups for the baby at the public health clinic. After that the heavily subsidized day care kicked in, which, Julie told me, “is huge, in that it helps me live as a writer who doesn’t make a lot of money.”

The Dutch health care system was drastically revamped in 2006, and its new incarnation has come in for a lot of international scrutiny. “The previous system was actually introduced in 1944 by the Germans, while they were paying our country a visit,” said Hans Hoogervorst, the former minister of public health who developed and implemented the new system three years ago. The old system involved a vast patchwork of insurers and depended on heavy government regulation to keep costs down. Hoogervorst — a conservative economist and devout believer in the powers of the free market — wanted to streamline and privatize the system, to offer consumers their choice of insurers and plans but also to ensure that certain conditions were maintained via regulation and oversight. It is illegal in the current system for an insurance company to refuse to accept a client, or to charge more for a client based on age or health. Where in the United States insurance companies try to wriggle out of covering chronically ill patients, in the Dutch system the government oversees a fund from which insurers that take on more high-cost clients can be compensated. It seems to work. A study by the Commonwealth Fund found that 54 percent of chronically ill patients in the United States avoided some form of medical attention in 2008 because of costs, while only 7 percent of chronically ill people in the Netherlands did so for financial reasons.

The Dutch are free-marketers, but they also have a keen sense of fairness. As Hoogervorst noted, “The average Dutch person finds it completely unacceptable that people with more money would get better health care.” The solution to balancing these opposing tendencies was to have one guaranteed base level of coverage in the new health scheme, to which people can add supplemental coverage that they pay extra for. Each insurance company offers its own packages of supplements.

Nobody thinks the Dutch health care system is perfect. Many people complain that the new insurance costs more than the old. “That’s true, but that’s because the old system just didn’t charge enough, so society ended up paying for it in other ways,” said Anais Rubingh, who works as a general practitioner in Amsterdam. The complaint I hear from some expat Americans is that while the Dutch system covers everyone, and does a good job with broken bones and ruptured appendixes, it falls behind American care when it comes to conditions that involve complicated procedures. Hoogervorst acknowledged this — to a point. “There is no doubt the U.S. has the best medical care in the world — for those who can pay the top prices,” he said. “I’m sure the top 5 percent of hospitals there are better than the top 5 percent here. But with that exception, I would say overall quality is the same in the two countries.”

Indeed, my nonscientific analysis — culled from my own experience and that of other expats whom I’ve badgered — translates into a clear endorsement. My friend Colin Campbell, an American writer, has been in the Netherlands for four years with his wife and their two children. “Over the course of four years, four human beings end up going to a lot of different doctors,” he said. “The amazing thing is that virtually every experience has been more pleasant than in the U.S. There you have the bureaucracy, the endless forms, the fear of malpractice suits. Here you just go in and see your doctor. It shows that it doesn’t have to be complicated. I wish every single U.S. congressman could come to Amsterdam and live here for a while and see what happens medically.”

I’ve found that many differences between the American and Dutch systems are more cultural than anything else. The Dutch system has a more old-fashioned, personal feel. Nearly all G.P.’s in the country make house calls to infirm or elderly patients. My G.P., like many others, devotes one hour per day to walk-in visits. But as an American who has been freelance most of his career, I find that the outrageously significant difference between the two systems is the cost. In the United States, for a family of four, I paid about $1,400 a month for a policy that didn’t include dental care and was so filled with co-pays, deductibles and exceptions that I routinely found myself replaying in my mind the Monty Python skit in which the man complains about his insurance claim and the agent says, “In your policy it states quite clearly that no claim you make will be paid.” A similar Dutch policy, by contrast, cost 300 euros a month (about $390), with no co-pays, and included dental coverage; about 90 percent of the cost of my daughter’s braces was covered.

HEALTH CARE IS MAYBE the most distinguishable part of social welfare, but the more time I spend in the Netherlands, the less separable health care becomes from the whole. Which is to say that to comprehend this system is to enter a different state of mind. People have a matter-of-fact belief not in government — in my experience the Dutch complain about government as frequently as Americans do — but in society. As my Dutch teacher, Armelle Meijerink, said: “We look at the American system, and all the uninsured, and we can’t believe that a developed country chooses for that. I have a lot of American students, and when we talk about this, they always say, Yes, but we pay less tax. That’s the end of the discussion for them. I guess that’s a pioneer’s attitude.”

Decent housing is another area where the Dutch are in broad agreement. As does nearly every Western nation, the Netherlands has a public housing system, in which qualified people get apartments for below-market rents. About one-third of all dwellings in the country are “social housing.” But here again, attitudes are different from those in the United States. I was surprised to learn, for example, that a friend who is a successful psychologist lives in a social-housing apartment, which he has had since his student days. It turns out the term does not have the stigma attached to it that “public housing” does in the United States. (“In the U.S., public housing is a last resort, but here it’s just a good, cheap house,” said Fred Martin, an official at Impuls, an Amsterdam social-services organization.) Beyond that, while my friend obviously can afford to pay more than his bargain-basement rent of 360 euros ($470), the system doesn’t require him to move on, and one reason is that there is perceived to be a value in keeping a mix of income levels in the units.

Social housing differs from much of the public housing in the United States in that the government does not own or manage the properties. Rather, each is owned by an independent real estate cooperative. The system is not-for-profit, but it pays for itself. The housing market, then, is actually two real estate markets running alongside each other, one of which operates at government-mandated cheaper rates.

This points up something that seems to be overlooked when Americans dismiss European-style social-welfare systems: they are not necessarily state-run or state-financed. Rather, these societies have chosen to combine the various entities that play a role in social well-being — individuals, corporations, government, nongovernmental entities like unions and churches — in different ways, in an effort to balance individual freedom and overall social security.

So here is a little epiphany I had through the experience of living in Europe. Maybe we Americans have set up a false dichotomy. Over the course of the 20th century, American politics became entrenched in two positions, which remain fixed in many minds: the old left-wing idea of vast and direct government control of social welfare, and the right-wing determination to dismantle any advances toward it, privatize the system and leave people to their own devices. In Europe, meanwhile, the postwar cradle-to-grave idea of a welfare state gave way in the past few decades to some quite sophisticated mixing of public and private. And whether in health care, housing or the pension system (there actually is still a thriving pension system in the Netherlands, which covers about 80 percent of workers), the Dutch have proved to be particularly skilled at finding mixes that work.

O.K., ENOUGH EUPHORIA. It’s true that I have grown to appreciate many aspects of this system. But honesty compels me to reveal another side. There is a mood that settles into me here, deepening by degrees until its deepness has become darkness. It happens typically on a Sunday afternoon. I’ll be strolling through a neighborhood on the outskirts of Amsterdam, or cycling in a nearby small town, and the calm, bland streets and succession of broad windows giving views onto identical interiors will awaken in my mind a line from Camus’s “Myth of Sisyphus” that struck me to the core when I first read it as an undergraduate: “A man is talking on the telephone behind a glass partition; you cannot hear him, but you see his incomprehensible dumb show: you wonder why he is alive.”

Something about this place rekindles the existential rage of my youth. Why are we here? How does a person achieve contact with his soul? Or in somewhat less grandiose terms: What do you do with yourself on a lazy Sunday afternoon? You pop into a shop. You sit at a cafe and read. You linger in a bookstore. Is this not why we have cities? Alas, such activity is largely impossible on a Sunday in my adopted city. A collusion of two forces in the mid-20th century — the workers’ movement and the church — resulted in a policy of restricted business hours, and the conservative Dutch system is resistant to change. The supermarket in my tiny hometown in western Pennsylvania is open 24 hours a day. I challenge you to find anything open 24 hours a day in this supposedly world-class city. Indeed, most shops close by 6 p.m. — precisely when people leaving work might actually want to patronize them.

This rant has a couple of deeper points behind it. For one, the sameness suggests a homogeneous population, which the Netherlands long had. A broad social-welfare system works if everyone assumes that everyone else is playing by the same rules. Newcomers, with different ways of life and expectations, threaten it. This is one reason the recent waves of non-Western immigration have caused so much disturbance. Can such a system work in a truly multiethnic society?
Then, too, one downside of a collectivist society, of which the Dutch themselves complain, is that people tend to become slaves to consensus and conformity. I asked a management consultant and a longtime American expat, Buford Alexander, former director of McKinsey & Company in the Netherlands, for his thoughts on this. “If you tell a Dutch person you’re going to raise his taxes by 500 euros and that it will go to help the poor, he’ll say O.K.,” he said. “But if you say he’s going to get a 500-euro tax cut, with the idea that he will give it to the poor, he won’t do it. The Dutch don’t do such things on their own. They believe they should be handled by the system. To an American, that’s a lack of individual initiative.”

Another corollary of collectivist thinking is a cultural tendency not to stand out or excel. “Just be normal” is a national saying, and in an earlier era children were taught, in effect, that “if you were born a dime, you’ll never be a quarter” — the very antithesis of the American ideal of upward mobility. There seem to be fewer risk-takers here. Those who do go out on a limb or otherwise follow their own internal music — the architect Rem Koolhaas, say, or Vincent Van Gogh — tend to leave.

So where does this get us? If the collectivist Dutch social system arises from the waters of Dutch history, how applicable is it to American society, which was shaped by the wagon train and the endless frontier? And why would a nation raised on “You can go your own way” and “Be all that you can be” even want to go Dutch?

To the first point, there are notable similarities between the two countries. The Dutch approach to social welfare grew out of its blend of a private-enterprise tradition and a deep religious tradition. The ways in which the United States seeks to fix its social system surely stem from its own strong tradition of religious values, and also from a desire to blend those values with its commitment to private enterprise.

And while I certainly wouldn’t wish the whole Dutch system on the United States, I think it’s worth pondering how the best bits might fit. One pretty good reason is this: The Dutch seem to be happier than we are. A 2007 Unicef study of the well-being of children in 21 developed countries ranked Dutch children at the top and American children second from the bottom. And children’s happiness is surely dependent on adult contentment. I used to think the commodious, built-in, paid vacations that Europeans enjoy translated into societies where nobody wants to work and everyone is waiting for the next holiday. That is not the case here. I’ve found that Dutch people take both their work and their time off seriously. Indeed, the two go together. I almost never get a work-related e-mail message from a Dutch person on the weekend, while e-mail from American editors, publicists and the like trickle in at any time. The fact that the Dutch work only during work hours does not seem to make them less productive, but more. I’m constantly struck by how calm and fresh the people I work with regularly seem to be.

I’m not the only American to note this. “The thing that impressed me from Day 1, 25 years ago, is the sense of community,” said Buford Alexander, the former McKinsey director. “They know how to work and how to live. That’s why I stayed.”

Geert Mak, the Dutch author, insisted that happiness is tied directly to the social system. We were sitting at his favorite cafe, a hangout of Dutch journalists since the end of World War II, and the genial, old-wood setting of the place, as well as its location, around the corner from the Dam and the center of the city’s history, added a bit of luster to his words and reminded me, for the thousandth time, why I’m still here, despite the downside. “One problem with the American system,” he said, “is that if you lose your job and are without an income, that’s not just bad for you but for the economy. Our system has more security. And I think it makes our quality of life better. My American friends say they live in the best country in the world, and in a lot of ways they are right. But they always have to worry: ‘What happens to my family if I have a heart attack? What happens when I turn 65 or 70?’ America is the land of the free. But I think we are freer.”

http://www.nrc.nl/international/opinion/article2248923.ece/Going_Dutch_Not_So_Fast%21_

Going Dutch? Not So Fast!

NRC columnist Heleen Mees begs to disagree with Russell Shorto’s raving article in The New York Times about the benefits of living in the Dutch welfare state. Mees, who lives in New York, has recently published a book in which she argues that European welfare states would do well to look to opportunity-based societies like New York for inspiration.

In his elegantly written essay Going Dutch (The New York Times Magazine, April 29), Russell Shorto sounds the praises of the Dutch welfare state. He raves about the ‘kinderbijslag,’ or child benefit, he receives quarterly and the annual check to cover the expenses for his children’s schoolbooks.

Of course Shorto loves the welfare state. The top income-tax rate of 52 percent for all income above 65,000 dollar doesn’t hurt him. As an expatriate Shorto’s income tax is reduced by 30 percent for a period of ten years. Other mortals in the Netherlands, however, face a marginal tax rate of over 55 percent on every euro earned, not to mention the 7 dollar they pay for a gallon of gasoline and the 19 percent value added tax on all goods and services they purchase.

More importantly, the Dutch welfare state isn’t as beneficial to low-skilled immigrants as it is to Russell Shorto. In fact, it has suffocated the large group of non-western immigrants (mostly from Morocco and Turkey) who came to the Netherlands over the past decades to seek their fortune.

Though one would assume that a caring state should be able to ensure a higher quality of life than an “uncaring” state, in actual practice this isn’t the case at all.
Due to the high cost of labour (20-25 dollars per hour at minimum wage level) many low-skilled immigrants can’t find a job and are forced to spend their lives in subsidised isolation. In the Netherlands, immigrants and people of immigrant background in the 15 to 65 age group are four times more likely to live on public assistance than other people in that age group; they are also over-represented in the crime statistics.

In New York it is exactly the other way around. Immigrants commit less crime and are less often unemployed. The gross minimum wage is lower than in the Netherlands at 7.25 dollars, but thanks to the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) people with annual incomes up to 37,000 dollars actually end up with more money after taxes than before.

The EITC is dependent on a person’s salary and family situation and is capped at 4,800 dollars per year. This way the gross cost of labour is kept down and more jobs are created in the bottom segment of the market, both in the public and in the private sector.

Take my building in Brooklyn. The Sweeney Building, an 85 apartments complex, employs six people on a full-time basis and two on a part-time basis. My gym in Chelsea employs one-hundred people full-time and fifty part-time. These jobs simply don’t exist in the Netherlands. Instead there is a labyrinth of benefits whose main use is to camouflage how many people under 65 are living on welfare.

It is this system that allowed Amsterdam mayor Rob Cohen to say at a Henri Polak reading on May 14 that the Netherlands are doing a pretty good job in terms of employment, despite the fact that more than half a million people under 65 are living on some type of state benefit. If the crisis persists, and chances are that it will, this number will likely increase to two million people, or a quarter of the working population.

Neither is the Netherlands the placid, stable country that Shorto makes it out to be. Since the turn of the century the Netherlands has experienced a rise in anti-immigrant sentiments and an unprecedented outburst of political violence.

In May 2002 Pim Fortuyn, a right-wing politician with an anti-immigrant message, was shot and killed. According to opinion polls Fortuyn had stood a chance to become the country’s next prime minister in the national elections that were held a week later.

In November 2004 the Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh was brutally murdered by Mohammed Bouyeri, a Muslim extremist, after he had released the anti-Islam film Submission in collaboration with Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the Somali-born Islam critic. On Van Gogh’s body a letter was pinned containing a death threat to Hirsi Ali who subsequently had to flee the country.

On April 30 the Dutch traditionally celebrate Queen’s Day. This year the national holiday parade was interrupted as a 38-year-old Dutchman slammed his car into the crowd, killing six bystanders. The bald driver, who died of his injuries a day after the attack, admitted to police that he had been aiming for the royal family.

In recent years queen Beatrix and her family have been actively trying to lessen tensions between the different groups in Dutch society, much so to the disgruntlement of Geert Wilders, the political leader of the right-wing Freedom Party.

Wilders, who has compared the Koran to Mein Kampf, and blamed Islamic texts for inciting the 9/11 attacks, declared last December that the queen could no longer be part of government because she had called for tolerance in her Christmas address to the nation. If elections were held today, according to some polls, Wilders’ Freedom Party would win the most seats in parliament.

Russell Shorto is rather disingenuous in portraying the Dutch welfare state as a fairy tale come true without ever mentioning Fortuyn, Van Gogh (other than the famous painter) or Wilders. Shorto is a sojourner, and he doesn’t need to worry about what lies ahead for the country that I grew up in.

Up north

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One of the benefits of being so far north is all the light we get in the spring and summer. Of course, we pay for it in the fall and winter. But now it’s nice.

I took this pic from my window at 9 p.m. without flash.

I like it here.

De Keukenhof

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I uploaded some nice pics from this afternoon’s Keukenhof excursion. De Keukenhof is a park that is open during the spring, and completely filled with flowers.

David and I went with a few people from his work (who are in the special “Foreign employees and Dutch people with foreign partners” club). I met a few other Americans who work in his office, and it was a lot of fun. And we got in for free.

I also have pics from my trip to the Baltics, but those will come later. Stay tuned.