Yes, Norway is a very good country to live in, maybe the best one in the world if you can use such a sweeping statement like it's an objective truth. That doesn't mean the country doesn't have its share of problems, although you could argue that we aren't worse off than any other country out there. The video was nice, but it felt kinda artificially utopian ^^; If you look around the country, you won't have problems finding people who aren't having a very "good" life, be it emotionally or in the actual fulfilment of physical needs. Likewise, I'd be surprised if you couldn't find people in most countries in the world who are very happy with their country and their lives in general.
As has been mentioned, if you have a condition that needs medical treatment, it doesn't cost you anything, but some specialised treatment can take months or even years to actually receive because of the queues in the medical system. If you can afford it, there's always private clinics you can go to instead, although there aren't any private major hospitals so the seriousness and range of conditions you can treat privately are relatively limited. Medicine can either be partially paid for by the state or not, but even with partial coverage from the state an elderly person with mulitple conditions that needs treatment can use a large amount of his or her pension on medication per month, and that's on top of other costs of living in one of the most expensive countries in the world. For a person who can work full time though, medicine expenses are usually very manageable. There is a limited scope of medication available; not all medicine available in the world is approved for use here, and due to government funding of some meds, they will often opt for a cheaper medication than one that is more expensive but has less side effects or better symptom relief, sometimes completely barring the "better" medicine from being sold here at all or demanding that the person who wants it has to bear the full cost themselves.
We're also using waaaaaay too much money on our medical system at the moment without getting enough in return for it. The government is currently trying to turn the system around a bit, as we're pouring in more and more money but not actually seeing an appreciable increase in effciency from it.
Some problems are less immediate, but are also pretty much the same all over the world, like the "worrying" trend that people gradually live longer and longer and we might end up with too little labour force to adequately take care of them all a few decades from now. Not to mention the increase in pension expenses when such a time comes. This is one of the main reasons we have our "Norwegian Government Pension Fund", a Sovereign Wealth Fund that is meant to cover a large part of those expenses a couple of decades from now when income from tax and exports can't handle all the expenses that comes with an aging population. Ideally the fund would accumulate enough wealth that the interest and returns alone could cover this, but that is (in my opinion) unlikely to happen.
That our main export income comes from Oil and that it won't last forever isn't something that has gone unnoticed by ourselves either. The standards of our education has been criticised for years because of poor results internationally (yes, we got a high rate of literacy, but knowing how to read isn't exactly enough). There's also a fairly common opinion that we aren't using enough money on research and development in order to give ourselves more legs to stand on in the future, since reliance on fossil fuels isn't viable in the long term as far as income is concerned, and there's also a limit to how much renewable energy we can produce without completely ravaging the entire country's nature and wildlife.
Anyway, I could rant for hours about things that aren't all that good in this country, but it doesn't really matter. Let's just say that while what was shown in the movie clip is entirely true, it's also a very simplified and somewhat one-sided portayal of Norway. I love living here, it's a great country, but not quite as perfect as that movie might make it seem ^^ We don't have all of your problems, but we certainly have our own
I would suspect that the same goes for most countries out there. And yes, we feel the credit crunch here as well (Stardock games are around 50% more expensive now in Norwegian Kroner than they were at the cheapest last year!
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