Per Kornhall is a widely published Swedish scholar of education. He wrote this post for the blog. Sweden and Chile are the two nations that decided to introduce privatization into significant parts of their national school system. The results are alarming. Since the same free-market forces are at work in the United States, it is important to follow events and trends in those nations.
The school experiment that split Sweden
Sweden is often seen in the United States as part of a homogeneous Nordic sphere; small cold countries with midnight sun, fair-skinned population, small social democratic idylls with equal free healthcare, good schools and a high standard of living. The reality is never as simple as our prejudices and one of the things that now characterizes Sweden is that we in important areas of society have left the common Nordic tradition of a cohesive school.
The Swedish school was built on a liberal and social democratic basis, starting with an elementary school reform in 1878 and then with careful and scientific work to design a “School for all”. The unit school that would serve the entire population was launched in the 1960s and all pieces were in place in the late 1970s. It was a building where thorough investigations, researchers and politicians were used and collaborated. One of the countries that looked at Sweden and tried to emulate the system that was built was Finland. But because Finland, unlike Sweden, had a poor economy after World War II, it took them a little longer to build a similar system. We will return to them.
When a Swedish school minister, Göran Persson, in a reform proposal in 1990 wanted to summarize the Swedish school’s situation, he wrote that it was a world leader in knowledge and above all in equivalence. He brags that in Sweden it does not matter which school you go to. The quality of education was the same all over the country, in all schools, and he believed that it was the strong central control of the school that had had this effect.
But the strange thing about this text is that it is part of a reform proposal that begins the great Swedish school experiment. This is the text where this successful Swedish equivalent school begins to be dismantled. The first step was that the state backed away and handed over responsibility for the teachers ‘and principals’ appointments, and salaries to the country’s 290 municipalities.
At the same time, a change was made in the school’s control system. New Public Management had begun to spread around the world and the Swedish school’s rigid rule management was to be replaced by goal management and the teachers would go from a well-paid collective with predictable salary development to individualized salaries. Governance and collective was to be replaced by competition and individuality. And it did not stop at teachers’ salaries.
In 1992, due to the municipalization, the school was in somewhat of a limbo state. The decentralization was carried out (despite strong protests from teachers), and the state authority that had so far managed the school system was dismantled. At that time Sweden got a prime minister, Carl Bildt, with strong connections to the United States. Among other things, he had been educated in the United States on an American scholarship. (He collaborated early in his career with US authorities so that they had access to otherwise secret information about talks before a government was formed in Sweden, for example). He now led a government with a clear ambition for a system change and a revolutionary neoliberal agenda. An agenda that stipulated that citizens should become customers in a welfare market system.
The new government was taking advantage of the vacuum in the school area and quickly implemented a private school reform that was taken directly from Rose and Milton Friedman’s book “Freedom to Chose”. It was a reform that stood in stark contrast to previous reforms in the school area in Sweden. It was not preceded by any investigation and does not contain any calculations of consequences. It was a system change they wanted, and they did not want to waste time on details and investigations (as can be seen in this interesting document from the time: http://kornhall.net/resources/Odd/OECD-1992.pdf).
School systems are large and slow systems. The consequences of the changes in the regulation first began to become visible only on a small scale and have since grown to become very powerful in the last decades. In addition to a small increase in the last two times of the PISA survey, Sweden, for example, between 2000 and 2012 was the country that fell the most of all countries in results. This created a PISA shock in Sweden which led mostly to the teaching staff being blamed for this.
But really, it was obvious in the OECD analyses what had happened, namely that what had been the Swedish school’s great pride: equality, had begun to deteriorate. What drove the fall in Swedish results in PISA was that the low-achieving students had started to perform much worse. It became clear that the school–that was based on the basic values of both the French Revolution, Protestantism and Social Democracy on the equal value of all human beings–no longer existed. The differences between schools have increased dramatically. This at the same time as the status of the teaching profession declined and an increasingly serious shortage of teachers was established.
But, an interesting thing about the Swedish market experiment is that we have a control group. Finland, which I mentioned earlier, more or less copied the Swedish system but did not follow Sweden’s into the neoliberal agenda. In recent decades, Finland has also dazzled the world with its results in PISA and other surveys, both in terms of results and not least in terms of equivalence. It really doesn’t matter which school you go to in Finland. In all schools, you are met by qualitative teaching delivered by a skilled and motivated teaching staff. So we have a control group. We know that the Swedish reforms led to an overall worse system. Yet so far there are no real attempts to turn back the clock in Sweden. I will come back to why at the end of this post.
What were the decisions that were made in the early 1990s and what were their consequences? I have already mentioned the municipalization, the abolition of regulations in favor of goal management, and the individualization of the teaching staff. What the neoliberal government led by Carl Bildt added to this was that it opened up state funding of schools for private schools, also such that were run for profit. In the case of establishment of private schools, the responsibility was moved away from the municipalities so that whoever wanted to start a school could do that wherever they wanted without local authorities being able to say anything about it. It was the principles of the free market that should apply. The private schools get paid as much per pupil as the pupils of the municipal schools in that municipality receive on average. Instead of placing students in the nearest school, school choice was also introduced.
So what has happened to the national school system in Sweden is that from being a societal commitment to ensuring that every child has a good school in their vicinity, it became a school market. Parents “buy” an education through their school choice and the school vouchers that follow the student. This voucher is the only funding a school in a typical municipality in Sweden has as income. You do not balance at all according to class size, fixed costs or any such variable. The only mechanism that remains to ensure that the school’s compensatory mission is not too compromised is a writing in the national Educational Act that the municipalities should weight school fees so that children with tougher conditions have a higher one. But there is no national control over what such a distribution should look like.
It may be important to say this again. Sweden thus went from a nationally equivalent and high-performing school system to a mediocre and unequal school market. A market where it is important for everyone, public as well as private, to relate to the fact that parents and students are customers.
This has for example led to extensive grade inflation. Since grades become something you can compete with, there is pressure on teachers to set high grades. This had, for example, the consequence that during the period in which the fall in knowledge results was shown by the OECD in PISA surveys, the average grade rose in Sweden.
Two other important consequences of the market are the shortage of teachers and a galloping segregation. In a typical Swedish city today, children from well-educated parents gather in for profit private schools, while working class children and immigrants attend the schools of the public school system.
In fact, this division is also what gives rise to the profits of the large private school groups. Tuition fees have become a lucrative asset. Take in many students, hire a few cheap teachers and you have money ticking into your account. But the equation is based on the fact that you attract children to your school who are relatively easy to teach, i.e. children of highly educated people. These children do not need as many resources. Which enables you to make a profit in schools.
And we’re talking about a lot of money. We are talking about tens of millions of dollars per school group in pure profit per year. The incentive to make money in schools is so strong that it is expected that for the capital Stockholm, the majority of students will soon go to such groups’ schools rather than to public ones. Then the school system in Stockholm will no longer be public but be mainly privately owned.
In addition to a shortage of teachers (30% of those who teach Swedish K1-9 are now not trained teachers), reduced knowledge results, inequality and segregation, the market model has also led to another consequence that strikes at the heart of Swedish public culture and self-image. Sweden has traditionally had very little corruption at the state level. It is a country that is usually among the least corrupt when comparing different countries. One of the reasons, and something that Swedes are usually very proud of, is what is called the principle of openness. That is, everything that is paid for by tax money must be fully transparent. Both as a journalist and as a citizen, you must be able to request the documents you want to see from a municipal or state authority at any time. It should be possible to hold the administration accountable quite simply. But this completely disappeared from the school sector a few months ago.
The Swedish statistical authority suddenly realized that Swedish school statistics should be regarded as trade secrets and thus could not be disclosed or made available. This means that grades and other results from Swedish schools, the institution central to democracy, are now secret. This has upset many, but we do not yet see that this will lead to any major change in the system. Sweden is right now trading transparency for the right to make money on schools.
The contrast to Finland could not be greater, but instead the situation begins to resemble a completely different country. There is only one country that went down the same path as Sweden and that was Chile. Also introduced in Chile, albeit 10 years earlier, and as a result of the US-backed coup d’etat where a school system based on Milton Friedman’s ideas and directed by the so-called Chicago boys (University of Chicago, where Professor Friedman was based). Over time, the school system has also passed into private hands. School choice and school fees and a school market were also introduced there. Here, too, the gaps in the school system grew to finally explode a few years ago in student revolts that forced changes. The consequences of the neoliberal reforms simply became too serious and central elements of the market model are now reversed in Chile, such as the profit motive for running a school.
Despite all the consequences in Sweden which are clearly described also in Swedish governments’ own investigations, in PISA data, in other reports from the OECD and in research, and despite the fact that all teachers’ unions as well as school leaders’ unions agree that the system is not good, there is no real political will to create a change. A majority of parties in the Swedish parliament is for the current system. Why?
One of the answers is a bit up in this text. There are millions of reasons for the companies that make big money on the Swedish model to try to keep the system intact. What has been done in Sweden has not only created a school market but has also let in a completely different driving force in the debate about the school. The school has become an important place for the actors’ lobby organizations, think tanks and networking. They are not prepared to give up their golden calf without a fight. And as long as you have the children of the most influential parents in your schools, you also have no pressure from parents for change in a system that serves the majority worse than it did before.
For our Nordic neighbors, the Swedish situation is now a clear warning signal as to why market and school are not a good combination. In the control group, Finland, just a short boat ride away from Stockholm, children continue to mix in the same schools, being taught by motivated and well-trained teachers. For them, Sweden has become the deterrent example. The outside world needs to be aware that the companies that make money at Swedish schools want to see similar systems in other countries.
In the dark picture I drew, one must remember that Sweden is a relatively rich country. That all children are allowed to go to school, that there is a well-developed preschool, that very many children go on to higher education and so on. Compared to many school systems in the world, it works well, but compared to our Nordic neighbors, we are on a journey towards inequality, larger gaps and polarization, which worries me, teachers, school leaders and a large part of the population. Just recently, a lively debate is also taking place, where the priority of profit interests in the debate is questioned in editorials of right-wing newspapers.
But it took a long time before we got there. The development, both in Sweden and Chile, is a strong warning to other countries not to go the same way.
For more information on how a Swedish school market was established, see Chapter 4 in Frank Adamson et al. (2016). Global Education Reform. How Privatization and Public Investment Influence Education Outcomes. New York. Routledge.
Per Kornhall, per@kornhall.se, http://kornhall.net/styled-8/
I urge public school families and local advocates to read ed reformers, because I don’t think the general public knows how consistently (and lock step) anti-public school this “movement” is.
No one has to “attack” these folks – all you have to do is read the content they push out. It is uniformly and overwhelmingly biased against public schools and uniformly and overwhelmingly cheerleading for charter and private schools.
I don’t think the people employed full time in “ed reform” even see or recognize how anti-public school it is- they’re surrounded by like-minded people and DAILY public school bashing is just accepted as “mainstream” within the movement.
Go look at any of the ed reform sites or full time, paid advocates for ed reform and search for any program, idea or proposal that benefits any student in an existing public school. They offer absolutely nothing to 90% of students and families in this country yet they utterly dominate education policy, to the exclusion of any dissenters.
We somehow ended up with an elite education policy apparatus wholly comprised of people who didn’t attend public schools, don’t use public schools for their own children or grandchildren and have absolute contempt for public schools and public school students and offer them nothing of value.
It’s ludicrous. Why are we in the public paying tens of thousands of public employees to oppose public schools? How can this possibly benefit public school students?
I think the best part of ed reform is the Potemkin “grants” they hand out:
“Today, the U.S. Department of Education announced the five finalists in CTE Mission: CubeSat, a national challenge to build technical skills for careers in space and beyond. Finalists will each receive $5,000 and in-kind prizes that they may use to build CubeSat (cube satellite) prototypes in the second phase of the challenge.”
5000 dollars. It’s a rounding error on Secretary DeVos’ security detail costs.
They have contempt for public schools and public school students. All you have to do is look at the lavish funding and fawning advocacy and marketing and promotion of the charter and voucher schools they support (ideologically) and the shabby way they treat public schools.
It sucks to be a public school family or student in the United States. Our elites have decided public schools are unfashionable and abandoned them.
Ed reform’s single contribution to public school students in the pandemic?
Lobbying for our kids to take standardized tests this year. I have to hand it to them- they’re consistent! Their only contribution to the unfashionable public schools the last 20 years has been pushing for more and more and more testing, and they have not veered from that singular mission in a pandemic.
We should give them the tests. If our kids sit for tests ed reformers will disappear from public schools for another year, and THAT may benefit public school students. Three days of testing may be worth it if it means they’ll all go back to full time promotion of charters and vouchers and stay out of our schools completely.
An abject lesson. If you want great schools, you need
a) equivalent schools, with
b) great teachers with a lot of autonomy
c) who practice qualitative rather than quantitative (“data driven”) pedagogy.
How do you get these four things? And what do they consist of? The answers there are subtle and may seem counterintuitive to those brainwashed by American neoliberalism, but I’ll give a few.
Equivalent schools. You get equivalent schools by having a single, common system of schools that are equally funded and transparently subject to public, not private oversight–i.e., traditional public schools. What these AREN’T: private schools, public/private charter schools, schools where parents spend vouchers that follow the child.
Great teachers. You prepare teachers very well and pay them well. You need people who are actually experts in the subjects that they teach. Requiring master’s degrees (or equivalent demonstrated knowledge) in the subjects to be taught is a great start, there. But to attract the best people–those well-prepared, learned teachers–you have to pay them well enough to make the jobs very competitive, and you have to give teachers enough autonomy that professionals will want to take and stay in those jobs. In other words, they can’t be scripted or micromanaged because the most capable people just won’t, in the long term, put up with such conditions, and people function best in conditions of autonomy. What you want is a high-prestige profession to which entrance is highly competitive because the best and brightest are vying to get into it. See the following description of an ideal English teacher preparation program (I won’t use the term “training program” because teachers are not dogs–roll over, sit up, bark, good boy): https://bobshepherdonline.wordpress.com/2019/04/09/what-should-be-taught-in-an-english-teacher-preparation-program/
Qualitative v. quantitative pedagogy. Pedagogy is the theory and practice of teaching. Teaching is an art involving subtle human interactions with extremely varying persons. It depends essentially, vitally, on relationships established between teachers and students. The great 20th century thinker Herbert Simon, who won a Nobel Prize in Economics but can more profitably and accurately be described as a social philosopher and computer scientist, spent a lifetime elucidating, in work after work, the fact that in human interactions, the important stuff is too subtle and varied to be precisely quantified, standardized, and optimized, and the extreme dangers of attempting to do that. (By the way, the interaction between a student and a text is a human interaction.) Bizarrely, in the US today, we have a lot of business-oriented neoliberal types who loudly proclaim the importance of individual autonomy but want pedagogy and curricula to be universally standardized and mandated and measured. The result: stultifying methods and materials with the life force sucked out of them. Think homes people build themselves for themselves versus khruschoba–those poured concrete slums mass produced in the Soviet Union in the Khrushchev Era.
These brief notes don’t do any of these justice. A book is needed.
Here’s one of the ed reform lobbying groups crowing about getting a massive new expansion of charters in Ohio:
https://fordhaminstitute.org/ohio/commentary/big-steps-forward-ohios-private-school-voucher-programs
What is not mentioned? Ohio lawmakers and the governor got not ONE thing accomplished for the 90% of Ohio students who attend public schools.
Once again public school students are invisible. The ed reform voucher agenda got top priority, while no one in Columbus lifted a finger for public school students.
This is what happens when ed reformers capture you state, folks. They oppose public schools ideologically, and public school students get screwed.
We can’t even manage to pass a public school funding scheme in Ohio but we managed to pass lavish new funding for vouchers and charters!
Another year where public school students are neglected while we all chase ed reform’s ideological goals.
The US is well on its way to following the failing neoliberal market based philosophy of education. As in Sweden once people start making money, a whole lobbying network emerges to keep the money flowing. In our country we have the additional problem that a whole team of billionaires with unlimited funds keep pumping funds into any efforts to expand privatization. It is really a David versus Goliath scenario. If the public refuses to accept the ravages of privatization, if they stand up and vote out those that seek to demolish the common good and dismantle the public system, we may be able to push back against the hostile takeover of the public schools that built our nation. It is going to take a great deal of united effort in order to stop the flow of money into private pockets. It will require a coalition and active engagement of parent, social justice groups, legal experts, unions and informed voters to turn the tide of corrupt privatization.
And THIS is why I despise the Clinton family so much. They (yes, they….Bill and Hillary) came into the WH and hit the gas pedal on the neoliberalism of everything, especially schools. Ronald Reagan was “alarmed” when presented with the fake “A Nation At Risk” document, but wasn’t prepared to do much about it. Bush1 spent his 4 years mopping up the mess of the Reagan years and had very little time to devote to an education agenda. Bill and Hillary were the power brokers of neoliberalism and they worked the whole scheme very well. They started education disruption in Arkansas when Bill was Gov and they brought it with them into the WH.
Reagan was disappointed by “A Nation at Risk” because it did not recommend prayer in schools and vouchers.
Bush1 had an education agenda, but he wasn’t quite sure what it was. He held a national summit of governors and they endorsed six national education goals, written mainly by Bill Clinton.
Goal 1: America will be first in the world in math and science the year 2000.
That was 20 years ago.
Bush and the governors refused to admit that inequality and underfunding were the biggest impediments to education success.
Lincoln famously wrote that the US, coming out of its civil war, would need to be “a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.” We Americans like to see ourselves in these terms, but, as the history of privatization of the public sphere has shown since Reagan, tens of millions of us simply do not believe in the famous words old Abe spoke at Gettysburg. Tens of millions of us want whites to get preferential treatment, or for rich people to get preferential treatment, or for men or people who believe certain things, to get preferential treatment. Or for corporations to get preferential treatment. Or for kids with powerful parents to get preferential treatment. For Americans who believe in such preferential treatment, money talks, nobody walks. Money trumps the vote. Money trumps truth. Money trumps commitment to equality. (And this hatred of equality is not housed solely in the Republican party. Many Dems are just as comfortable with preferential treatment as the any Goldwater Republican.)
The story of the privatization of education in Sweden is just one example of a trend that has been growing for decades. Quality education for every child is not an education problem: it is a political problem. Those who want inequality have been working hard to institutionalize this principle for decades. What we are finding out now is whether there is any real fight in those who believe in equality. As long as some children are treated as problems and as if they are a waste of money, we know which people are really in control.
Isn’t it time to stop being surprised by stories like this one? Isn’t it time to make people with money and power uncomfortable? Isn’t it time to stop worrying about what the wealthy might do if they don’t get what they want? As long as we bow down to Wall Street, we will hear about Swedish tales everywhere we look. Count on it.
And from Mr. Curmudgucation (Peter Greene)
“The free market does not foster superior quality; the free market fosters superior marketing.”
“Since the same free-market forces are at work in the United States, it is important to follow events and trends in those nations.”
Maybe this is why both Sweden and the US have the “herd mentality.”
Not that I am being critical, of course. I herd it was working out just fabulously.
Herd Mentaility
Sweden is believin’
Believin’ in the herd
Older herd is leavin’
That is what I heard
Social media and the Idiot have definitely fostered the heard mentality to get their “facts.”
In admiring Finnish, Danish, & Netherlands school systems, I’ve often thought a key was having a unified ed mission, implemented by centralized school governance. This piece shows what can go wrong. The govt creates and runs an admirable system for 30 yrs. Then a new political wave comes in. With centralization, it’s simple to wave a wand and turn it on its head for the next 30 yrs.
Ed-deformers lavishly funded by crank billionaires have been trying their butts off for 30 yrs to do exactly this to our nation’s pubschsys. Here’s their accomplishment as of the 2019-2020 school year: of 56.6 million US students attending K12, 84% are in traditional publics, 6% are in charters, and the 10% private schools include 1% getting vouchers.
It makes me grateful for two centuries of de-centralized, municipally-run schools. Obviously our system could use serious improvement in terms of equitable funding. Yes we have to keep stomping on the camel’s nose [by now whole face] under the tent. But I’m happy that on the whole, we’re still a messy democratic bunch of individualists.
Thank you. This issue is complex, and reducing it to good versus evil isn’t that helpful, in my opinion.
For all the attacks on Sweden, Sweden is the country that has far more immigrants who are refugees and asylum seekers when compared to Finland.
Those numbers tell us that the siren song of choice hasn’t gotten far.
Milton Friedman was a free market advocate. That is different than “neoliberal”, which now seems to be a term thrown about the way “liberal” was used to demonize politicians in the 1980s.
Many Americans (wrongly) support some aspects of this, and they don’t call themselves “neoliberals” and they certainly don’t believe in Milton Friedman-style economics. It would serve the cause of public education better to try to understand why.
neoliberalism (noun): a political approach that favors free-market capitalism, deregulation, and reduction in government spending. (Oxford Languages)
liberalism (noun): a theory in economics emphasizing individual freedom from restraint and usually based on free competition, the self-regulating market, and the gold standard (Merriam-Webster)
Do you think that when the Republicans attack progressives as “liberals”, this definition is what they mean?
I don’t think Milton Friedman would call himself a “neoliberal”, and putting Milton Friedman and Timothy Kaine in the same category of “neoliberals” makes that word completely meaningless.
Sweden also ignored the pandemic just like traitor, psycho, fraud, and serial-liar Donald Trump did, and the world knows how that turned out for both countries.
“Sweden tops Europe COVID-19 deaths per capita over last seven days”
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-sweden-casualties/sweden-tops-europe-covid-19-deaths-per-capita-over-last-seven-days-idUSKBN22V26A
The “experiment”, which is now officially over, ended by mandatory government rules recently put in place, also failed economically relative to many countries that had lockdowns because Sweden did not provide the sort of economic help to businesses that many other countries in Europe did.
Like the US, they have had nitwits running things. Their chief epidemiologist not only believed herd immunity would save them (he has implied as much with things he has said but now denies it), but also adamantly opposes mask wearing.
Hi From the UK
Sweden didn’t ignore the pandemic. Sadly, they closed their care homes and that is why they had excess deaths rather like the UK. That plus a large BAME population vulnerable due to low levels of vitamin D. Swedish death rate not as bad as portrayed if you check the statistics.
Other Nordic countries better for various reasons, but for example Norway has good oily fish diet generally, so nation by and large has good immune system due to vitamin D in the fish.
USA not nearly as bad as portrayed, but population suffers from obesity issues and vitamin D deficiency, especially again in BAME population. Worst area affected was New York, run by a Democrat governor.
Kind regards
Baldmichael Theresoluteprotector’sson
New York and New Jersey got hit first and bore the brunt before masking became common. Since then, New Yorkers wear masks and practice medical recommendations. The virus is now raging in mostly rural states, with Republican governors who oppose science and medical advice.
“USA not nearly as bad as portrayed”
Not sure what portrayal that refers to but 296,000 people dead seems pretty bad to me.
And anyone who believes otherwise needs to have their head examined to see if there is an empty space where their brain is supposed to be.
What has happened to Sweden? I loved my Volvos (1989, 1993 & 1997–all bought used; my 1993 is still sitting in my driveway {it’s not driveable}). The 1993 240 actually did save my life (I was in a terrible accident & didn’t even get a scratch. I didn’t–but should have–joined the “Volvo Saved My Life Club” {it really does–or did–exist})
Volvo is now owned by a Chinese company, Geely Motors, but Volvo Cars is headquartered in Gothenburg, Sweden–where you may visit & watch your car being built!–but most are made in Belgium, China &, recently, a manufacturing plant opened in South Carolina.
That having been said, our mechanic told us their parts are all from China.
Reblogged this on From experience to meaning… and commented:
Check also the video of a talk by Per here: https://theeconomyofmeaning.com/2016/04/24/this-talk-by-per-kornhall-at-researched-about-education-in-sweden-is-a-mustsee/