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There is a lot one could say about your post but I'd like to point out that the stuff about Swedish unemployment is a bit simplistic.
Sweden used to have persistently low unemployment until the financial crisis in the early nineties. This then shot up and eventually started trending down.
But as this downward trend started another did as well, namely mass immigration of unskilled labour, beginning with the Iraq war and continuing til this day.
Unemployment among ethnic Europeans in Sweden is in fact low and labour force participation is extremely high.
Perhaps it is the fault of social democracy that Sweden has been unable to integrate low skill, culturally hostile immigrants coming faster than at any point in US history or perhaps it's due to other factors...
Yes, as I said, causation in social sciences is hard. For my overall claim, what is important is not that we know that Sweden's welfare state causes its structurally high unemployment rate (in spite of its considerable spending on active labour market policies) but that a right-wing utilitarian could make a case that it does. In a brief part of a brief comment, I naturally cannot make that case rigorously.
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